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Charlotte Philiberte “Lott” van Nassau-Beverweerd

Birth
The Hague (Den Haag), Den Haag Municipality, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands
Death
Nov 1702 (aged 53)
Burial
Westminster, City of Westminster, Greater London, England Add to Map
Plot
in the vault at the East end of King Henry 7th's Chapel
Memorial ID
View Source
After the death of her parents she mostly stayed with her sister Emilia, Countess of Ossory, in England. She was kind and intelligent and her second cousin Prince William III of Orange liked her. After his decease in 1702, his successor, Queen Anne, appointed her lady-in-waiting but a few months later she died, unmarried. William's favorite, Hans Willem Bentinck has been in love with her, but that had not resulted in a marriage.

See:
Reinildis van Ditzhuyzen, Oranje-Nassau: Een biografisch woordenboek, Haarlem 2004, 67-68
A.W.E. Dek, Genealogie van het Vorstenhuis Nassau, Zaltbommel 1970, 151
The Lady Charlot Beverwood, fourth daughter of Henry deNassau, Lord of Auverquerque by Elizabeth, daughter of Count de Horn. She was a Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen Anne, and died unmarried. Her sister was buried 1688.
Source: The marriage, baptismal, and burial registers of the collegiate church or abbey of St. Peter, Westminster, edited by Joseph Lemuel Chester, London, 1876
After the death of her parents she mostly stayed with her sister Emilia, Countess of Ossory, in England. She was kind and intelligent and her second cousin Prince William III of Orange liked her. After his decease in 1702, his successor, Queen Anne, appointed her lady-in-waiting but a few months later she died, unmarried. William's favorite, Hans Willem Bentinck has been in love with her, but that had not resulted in a marriage.

See:
Reinildis van Ditzhuyzen, Oranje-Nassau: Een biografisch woordenboek, Haarlem 2004, 67-68
A.W.E. Dek, Genealogie van het Vorstenhuis Nassau, Zaltbommel 1970, 151
The Lady Charlot Beverwood, fourth daughter of Henry deNassau, Lord of Auverquerque by Elizabeth, daughter of Count de Horn. She was a Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen Anne, and died unmarried. Her sister was buried 1688.
Source: The marriage, baptismal, and burial registers of the collegiate church or abbey of St. Peter, Westminster, edited by Joseph Lemuel Chester, London, 1876

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