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  1. Lady Sibell Lygon (10 October 1907 – 31 October 2005) was an English socialite, part of the Bright Young Things. Biography. Lady Sibell Lygon was born on 10 October 1907, the daughter of William Lygon, 7th Earl Beauchamp and Lady Lettice Grosvenor. An incident when Sibell and her sister, Mary, remained closed out of their home ...

  2. 10 de nov. de 2005 · She was born Lady Sibell Lygon, the second daughter of the seventh Earl Beauchamp, who had been Queen Victoria's last Governor of New South Wales and in 1907, when she was born, was Lord...

  3. 15 de mar. de 2010 · Nineteen thirty-one was the year when he would meet and befriend the Lygon girls—Lady Sibell, Lady Mary (known as Maimie), and Lady Dorothy (known as Coote). Their brother Hugh had been an...

  4. William Lygon, 7th Earl Beauchamp, KG, KCMG, CB, KStJ, PC (20 February 1872 – 14 November 1938), styled Viscount Elmley until 1891, was a British Liberal politician. He was Governor of New South Wales between 1899 and 1901, a member of the Liberal administrations of Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman and H. H. Asquith between 1905 and ...

  5. 16 de nov. de 2005 · Lady Sibell Rowley, who has died aged 98, was the last surviving daughter of the 7th Earl Beauchamp, KG, and thus a member of the family that inspired Evelyn Waugh to write his celebrated Roman...

  6. Last of the Madresfield Lygon sisters whose family home inspired Evelyn Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited October 10, 1907 - October 31, 2005 Saturday November 19 2005, 12.00am , The Times

  7. A Gilbert and Sullivan record is heard from the old Portuguese fort. In fact, on the penultimate page of Black Mischief, Waugh prints three verses from The Mikado, the first of which could be interpreted as a reference to Mary, Dorothy and Sibell Lygon.