- Mitford family - Wikipedia
The Mitford family is an aristocratic British family who became particularly well known in the 1930s for the six Mitford sisters, the daughters of David Freeman-Mitford, 2nd Baron Redesdale, and his wife, Sydney Bowles
- Meet the most glamorous Mitford descendants | Tatler
Meet the glittering Mitford descendants as Outrageous promises to reveal their scandalous story on-screen Recognised for their beauty, eccentricity, conflicting political views and sharp intellect, the Mitford sisters were undoubtedly the ultimate It Girls of the 20th century
- The Mitfords: Six sisters who captured the maelstrom - BBC
Born to Lord and Lady Redesdale, known as Farve and Muv, the six Mitford girls - Nancy, Pamela, Diana, Unity, Jessica and Deborah - experienced an upbringing steeped in eccentricity
- These Mitford sisters scions prove their just as worthy of attention . . .
From Lady Mary Charteris to journalist Nicolas Niarchos, and the late supermodel Stella Tennant, the scions of the aristocratic siblings have exuded the same allure as their grandmothers and
- The Outrageous Mitford Sisters: A Guide to the 20th Century’s Most . . .
As BritBox’s Outrageous premieres in America, here’s a quick crash course on which of the six real-life Mitford sisters is which—and why they’re still captivating us after all these years
- The Mitford Sisters: Scandal, Politics, and Aristocracy in 20th Century . . .
The Mitford family was typical of the English lower country gentry, although it could boast that its family roots go back to the Norman conquest of England Some of the family’s ancestors were also public office-holders in Northumberland, where the family manor house stood in Mitford
- Family tree of David FREEMAN-MITFORD - Geneastar
The Mitford sisters achieved notoriety for their controversial but stylish lives as young people, then for their public political divisions between communism and fascism
- The Mitford Family The Cotswolds | A Tale Revealed
A junior line, with seats at Newton Park, Northumberland, and Exbury House, Hampshire descended via the historian William Mitford to his great-great-great-granddaughters, the “Mitford sisters”
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