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LADY EMMA HAMILTON
1761 - 1815
Born Amy Lyon in 1761, Great Neston Cheshire the daughter of a blacksmith,
she was calling herself Emily Hart when in 1781, she began to live with
Charles Francis Greville, nephew of her future husband Sir William Hamilton,
British envoy to the Kingdom of Naples. In 1786 Greville sent her to
Naples to be his uncles mistress in return for Hamilton's payment of
Greville's debt's. On Sept. 6. 1791 she and Hamilton were married.
A beautiful woman whose portrait was frequently painted by George Romney,
Lady Emma Hamilton was a great favourite in Neapolitan society and was
the diplomatic intermediary between her husband and her close friend
Queen Maria Carolina of Naples, it was
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said that Lady Hamilton facilitated Nelson's
victory over the French in the Battle of the Nile ( Aug. 1, 1798 ) by
securing Neapolitan permission for his fleet to obtain stores and water
in Sicily.
Lady Hamilton and Nelson, who had met in 1793, became lovers after
his Nile triumph. In1800, when the British government recalled Hamilton,
Nelson returned with him and his wife to England, where she flaunted
her control over the admiral. They had two daughters, one of whom survived
infancy.
After her husband's death ( April 6, 1803 ) she lived with Nelson at
Merton, Surrey. Although she inherited money from both men ( Nelson
was killed at the Battle of Trafalgar Oct. 21, 1805 ), she squandered
most of it, was imprisoned for debt ( 1813 - 14 ) and died ( Jan. 15,
1815 )in impecunious exile in Calais France.
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