Anne Clifford,
Richard T. Spence,
Lady Anne Clifford, Countess of Pembroke, Dorset and Montgomery, was a formidable aristocratic lady who has a place in the history of letters principally because of her near-lifelong pursuit of what she regarded as her rightful baronial titles and estates, entitlements which she largely achieved during nearly forty years of relentless litigation. A consequence of this obsessional effort was that, with professional help (including advice from the antiquaries Roger Dodsworth and Charles Fairfax), she became a remarkable family historian, producing manuscript volumes detailing, or reproducing in full, all the currently available evidence of her family's history and estates. The most notable of these genealogical writings, compiled some years after the principal settlement of her claims in 1643, is her Great Books
, a series of three huge cartularies of which three sets of copies were made (two for Skipton and Appleby Castles and one for her legal advisor Sir Mathew Hale, of Lincoln's Inn), all now reunited in the Cumbria Record Office, Kendal (*Great Books
was made — and copies circulated among the family. Besides
Lady Anne also incorporated in these manuscripts her autobiography, generally entitled
There is, moreover, clear evidence of her love of literature and of reading (or at least of having books read to her). She had a large library, partly inherited from her mother, Lady Margaret Clifford (née Russell). These books have been widely dispersed, but occasional volumes owned by her come to light (
The single best-known tribute to her literary tastes remains the celebrated and frequently reproduced triptych of Lady Anne Clifford, painted c.1647 by Jan van Belcamp (and possibly Peter Lely), of which there are two copies, the principal one formerly in Appleby Castle currently in the Abbot Hall Art Gallery, Kendal. The various books on the shelves shown in this painting, presumably her favourites, include Sidney's
A few extant letters and documents of Lady Clifford can be recorded (