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Symonds, Mary, 1772-1854
https://lccn.loc.gov/n2021031654 · Person · 1772-1854

Mary Symonds was born in 1772 in Hereford, England, and is known as an artist and letter-writer. In 1801, she accompanied her older sister, Lady Elizabeth Gwillim, the bird artist, and Elizabeth's husband, Sir Henry Gwillim, to India (modern-day Chennai). Both sisters wrote home often about their activities, with vivid descriptions of daily life in India, as well as commentary on Indian culture. Mary particularly enjoyed the many social invitations of British life in Madras during the Company Raj. Like her sister, Mary also painted and some of her works, including those of fish, are part of the works donated by Casey A. Wood to the Blacker Wood Collection at McGill’s Rare Book Library. After her sister died in 1807, Mary and her brother-in-law sailed back to England. In 1809 Mary married John Ramsden, captain of the ship on which she had returned from India.

Symonds, John, active 1762
Person · active 1762

John Symonds was a medical student at University of Edinburgh, beginning in 1762. He studied under Dr. John Rutherford at Edinburgh (1695-1779).

Sylva, Carmen, 1843-1916
Person · 1843-1916

Pauline Elisabeth Ottilie Luise of Wied, widely known by her literary name of Carmen Sylva, was born on December 29, 1843, in Neuwied, Duchy of Nassau.

She was the first Queen of Romania as the wife of King Carol I (1839-1914). They married in 1869, and their only child, a daughter Maria, died in 1874 at age three, an event from which Elisabeth never recovered. She was crowned Queen of Romania in 1881 after Romania was proclaimed a kingdom. In the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878, also known as the Romanian War of Independence, she devoted herself to the care of the wounded and founded the Decoration of the Cross of Queen Elisabeth to reward distinguished service in such work. She fostered the higher education of women in Romania and established societies for various charitable objects. She was the 835th Dame of the Order of Queen Maria Luisa. She founded the National Society for the Blind and was the first royal patron of the Romanian Red Cross. Early distinguished by her excellence as a pianist, organist, and singer, she also showed considerable ability in painting and illuminating. Her lively poetic imagination led her to the path of literature, especially to poetry, folklore, and ballads. In addition to numerous original works, she put into literary form many of the legends current among the Romanian peasantry. As "Carmen Sylva", she wrote poems, plays, novels, short stories, essays, and collections of aphorisms in German, Romanian, French, and English. In 1888, she received the Prix Botta, a prize awarded triennially by the Académie française, for her volume of prose aphorisms “Les Pensees d'une reine” (1882). The Bucharest-born colonizer of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, Julius Popper, was a fan of her work and named some features after her, e.g., Sierra Carmen Silva (Chile), Río Carmen Silva (Argentina, also known as Río Chico), and The Forest path of Carmen Sylva (Šetalište Carmen Sylve) in Opatija, Croatia.

She died on March 2, 1916, in Bucharest, Romania.