Anne, Lady Fairfax (born Anne Vere, also known as Anne Fairfax; 1617/1618 – 1665) was an English noblewoman. She was the wife of Thomas Fairfax, 3rd Lord Fairfax of Cameron, commander-in-chief of the New Model Army. She followed her husband as he fought and she was briefly taken prisoner. It is said that she was ejected after heckling the court at the trial of Charles I.
Her husband was placed at the head of the judges who were to try Charles I, but convinced that the King's death was intended, he refused to act. Fairfax did not attend the King's trial (January 1649) but Anne did. When the court called the name of Fairfax, it is said that his wife, Anne Fairfax, said "he had more wit than to be there". Later when the court said that they were acting for "all the good people of England", she shouted ‘No, nor the hundredth part of them!". This resulted in an investigation and Anne was asked or required to leave the court. Jacqueline Eales, ‘Fairfax , Anne, Lady Fairfax (1617/18–1665)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 , accessed 10 April 2017Wedgwood, C.V. The Trial of Charles I (1964) It was said that Anne could not forbear, as Bulstrode Whitelocke says, to exclaim aloud against the proceedings of the High Court of Justice. In February 1649 Fairfax was elected Member of Parliament for Cirencester in the Rump Parliament. In January 1649 John Geree asked Anne and her mother to intercede on the King's behalf to prevent his execution.
Anne's daughter Mary was betrothed to Philip Stanhope, 2nd Earl of Chesterfield, Bruce Yardley, ‘Villiers, George, second duke of Buckingham (1628–1687)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2009, accessed 10 April 2017 but married the royalist George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham when he returned to England in 1657. Anne and her husband had to negotiate a £20,000 surety to allow the release of Mary's husband, George Villiers, from the Tower of London in 1659 after he was arrested.
Lady Anne Fairfax died in Nun Appleton Hall in 1665. Her husband died there six years later.
The Fairfaxes are the main characters in Rosemary Sutcliff's 1959 novel The Rider of the White Horse, and the book views the early stages of the Civil War from Anne Fairfax's point of view. Anne is portrayed as devoted to her husband but unable to secure his undivided attention, partly because of her physical unattractiveness.
Fictional depictions
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