Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Ian Campbell (unknown to Mathilda at the time), had had an affair with her mother in the 1920s. They began a relationship shortly after meeting and were married in 1963 at the Registry Office in Horsham, West Sussex. The Duke and Duchess had one child together, Lady Elspeth Campbell, born in 1967. However, Elspeth died within a few days of her ...

  2. 8. Juni 1997 · Mathilda, the Dowager Duchess of Argyll, died Friday at the American Hospital in Paris. She was 70 and had homes in Scotland and Paris. Lord Colin Campbell, her stepson, said she died of a stroke.

  3. 6. Juni 1997 · Campbell. Mathilda, Dowager Duchess of Argyll. Mathilda Coster Mortimer was born on August 20, 1925 in Geneva. Her mother, Tilly Coster, had married Stanley Mortimer, an American land-owner from Lichfield, Connecticut. However, Mathilda was brought up by her grandparents in France, later going to the US to study philosophy at...

  4. Mathilda (1925–1997)Duchess of Argyll. Name variations: Mathilda Campbell; Mathilda Heller; Mathilda Mortimer. Born Mathilda Costner Mortimer in Geneva, Switzerland, on August 20, 1925; died in Paris, France, on June 6, 1997; daughter of Stanley Mortimer of Litchfield, Connecticut; married Clemens Heller (divorced 1961); married Ian Douglas Campbell (1903–1973), 11th duke of Argyll, on ...

  5. 26. Dez. 2021 · F or most of 1991 I was employed as secretary to the Dowager Duchess of Argyll, the fourth and final wife of Ian Campbell, the 11th duke. Mathilda was the wife after the more famous Margaret, the ...

  6. 12. Juni 1997 · Mathilda, Duchess of Argyll; born August 20, 1925; died in Paris, June 5, 1997. ONE of the problems with marrying a duke who has been married several times is that there are often other duchesses ...

  7. 23. Dez. 2021 · Duchess of Argyll. After a string of high profile romances, Margaret married Ian Douglas Campbell, 11th Duke of Argyll, in 1951. Meeting by chance on a train, Argyll told Margaret of some of his experiences as a prisoner of war during World War Two, omitting the fact that the trauma had left him reliant on alcohol and prescription drugs.