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Katharine Elizabeth, Lady Woolley (née Menke; June 1888 – 8 November 1945) was a spy, British military nurse and archaeologist who worked principally at the Mesopotamian site of Ur. She was married to archaeologist Leonard Woolley .
Hannah Woolley, sometimes spelled Wolley (c.1622 – in or after 1675), [1] was an English writer who published early books on household management; she was probably the first person to earn a living doing this.
Lady Worsley may refer to: Ursula St. Barbe (d. 1602) Seymour Dorothy Fleming (1758-1818) whose life was dramatised in the 2015 television film, The Scandalous Lady W; Alexandra Pelham, Lady Worsley (1890-1963) Caroline, Lady Worsley (b. 1934)
Woolley, a street and area in Bradford-on-Avon, Wiltshire; Canada. Mount Woolley, a mountain in Alberta; People and fictional characters. Woolley (surname)
Elizabeth Wolley (née More; 28 April 1552 – 21 January 1600) was one of Queen Elizabeth I's ladies of the Privy Chamber.She was the eldest daughter of Sir William More of Loseley, Surrey, and his second wife, Margaret Daniell, and the wife of the Queen's Latin secretary, Sir John Wolley, and the Queen's Lord Chancellor, Thomas Egerton, 1st Viscount Brackley.
That Lady is a 1955 British-Spanish historical romantic drama film directed by Terence Young and produced by Sy Bartlett and Ray Kinnoch. It stars Olivia de Havilland , Gilbert Roland , and Paul Scofield .
18 is a 1993 Taiwanese experimental film directed by Ho Ping, written by Ho Ping and Kuo Cheng, based on Kuo Cheng's 1991 short story "God's Dice" (上帝的骰子).. The title refers to a popular Taiwanese gambling game played with 4 dice in a rice bowl, with the highest combination (called "18") containing 2 sixes and 2 of any identical number not six (i.e. 1166, 2266, 3366, 4466, and 5566).
A Very Young Lady is a 1941 American comedy film directed by Harold D. Schuster and starring Jane Withers and Nancy Kelly. [1] It was produced and distributed by Twentieth Century Fox . It was based on the play Matura by Ladislas Fodor which had previously been adapted by the studio into the 1936 film Girls' Dormitory .