You might think it was his eldest, Susanna, since she got the fancy marriage with the Doctor whereas Judith had to settle for the disreputable vintner. In Shakespeare's will it is Susanna and her husband who are executors and the main beneficiaries, whereas Judith's share is smaller and tied up in trusts to keep it from her no-goodnik husband. But this may not have been Shakespeare's preference--he could have been following his wife's lead. We have nothing in which he actually says he likes Susanna better than Judith.
We cannot be entirely sure. Certainly Judith's husband was much less satisfactory than Susanna's. It has been suggested that one of the conditions of Dr. Hall agreeing to marry Susanna was that the couple would be the primary beneficiaries of the will.
Yes. Hamnet, the oldest of the two and born after Susanna, died of the Plague at the age of eleven. Judith, the youngest of the two born after Hamnet, after marriage was banned from the church because Thomas Quiney (Husband) made another woman pregnant.Shakespeare's wife Anne gave birth to twins in 1595. They were called Hamnet and Judith. They were named after the next-door-neighbours, Hamnet and Judith Sadler, great friends of the Shakespeares.
Judith and Hamnet were William Shakespeare's youngest children. They were twins. No more children came after Judith.
Shakespeare's bequest William Shakespeare famously bequeathed his "second best bed" to his wife, Anne Hathaway. Students of the Bard have argued about whether this was an insult or a compliment. The "second best bed" might have been their marital bed - the best bed being reserved for house guests - and would be a strange token of his love.
bill
Judith Ortiz Cofer was married to Charles John Werren. They had two children together.
Judith Ripka's husband, Ronald Berk, is the father of her children.
Her husband is John cofer.
no. but im her husband
You might think it was his eldest, Susanna, since she got the fancy marriage with the Doctor whereas Judith had to settle for the disreputable vintner. In Shakespeare's will it is Susanna and her husband who are executors and the main beneficiaries, whereas Judith's share is smaller and tied up in trusts to keep it from her no-goodnik husband. But this may not have been Shakespeare's preference--he could have been following his wife's lead. We have nothing in which he actually says he likes Susanna better than Judith.
He was concerned about his daughter Judith, who had married a somewhat unsatisfactory husband in the person of Thomas Quiney. The will was rewritten to make sure that Quiney could not get hold of Judith's inheritance and blow it.
Judy Blume was born Judith Sussman. Blume was the last name of her first husband.
Judy Sheindlin is 75 years old (born Judith Blum, October 21, 1942).
because your husband is to lazy to fix them
We cannot be entirely sure. Certainly Judith's husband was much less satisfactory than Susanna's. It has been suggested that one of the conditions of Dr. Hall agreeing to marry Susanna was that the couple would be the primary beneficiaries of the will.
Judith Ivey's birth name is Ivey, Judith Lee.