Yes, Charlotte Bronte had four siblings: Emily, Anne, Branwell, and Maria. They were all writers as well.
Mary I, Elizabeth I and Edward VI are all buried in Westminster Abbey London.
Emily Bronte and Charlotte Bronte were sisters and both were writers. Virginia Woolf was a prominent English writer from the 20th century. Jane Eyre is a novel written by Charlotte Bronte.
The names of the Bronte family were: Emily Bronte (wrote Wuthering Heights) - she was the middle Chile, Charlotte Bronte - oldest (wrote Jane Ayre etc) and Anne (youngest- wrote The Tenant of Wildfell Hall). The father was called Patrick Bronte and was a vicar. The 3 sisters had a brother called Branwell. Bronte was a made-up surname that the father invented to sound more sophisticated. His oringinal name was probably either Brunty or Prunty. He was born in Northern Ireland.
Some famous sisters in literature include the Bennet sisters from Jane Austen's "Pride and Prejudice," the March sisters from Louisa May Alcott's "Little Women," and the Bronte sisters who were all accomplished writers in their own right.
Emily Bronte not only wrote the classic book Wuthering Heights but, also numerous poems. Her and her sisters were some of the most influential women writers of their time, even though they all worked under pseudonyms.
Many people have been buried in Westminster Abbey (formally known as The Collegiate Church of Saint Peter at Westminster). Among these are monarchs/royals, and poets. For a complete list of who is buried there, try one or both of the following links: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Burials_at_Westminster_Abbey http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westminster_Abbey#Buried
Charlotte Bronte was born in the vicarage at Thornton, near Bradford in West Yorkshire (England) about twelve miles from the Bronte Parsonage in Haworth. All the Bronte children were born there, except I think Anne who was born at the Parsonage.
The Whitman massacre happened on November 29th, 1847, in Seattle
Anne Bronte, the youngest child of the Bronte family and author of the novels The Tenant Of Wildfell Hall and Agnes Grey is buried in the graveyard at St Mary's Church in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England. She died here on May 28th 1849 aged just 29 years old. She is the only member of the Bronte family not to be buried in Haworth. This is because she had discovered a fondness for being by the sea at Scarborough and when she fell ill, went with her sister Charlotte to Scarborough in order to rest. The journey there was very precarious, with fears for Anne's life as she was now in the final stages of tuberculosis, the disease which had killed her brother Branwell and her beloved sister Emily the previous year. There had been much speculation as to why her father did not attend the funeral, with a religious feast day being the most widely accepted view.
All three sisters were employed at various times as teachers and governesses. In 1842, Charlotte and Emily went to Brussels to improve their French, but had to return home early after the death of their aunt Elizabeth. Charlotte returned to Brussels an English teacher in 1843-1844. By 1845, the family were back together at Haworth.
The House of Parliament, Westminster, London.