A Biographical Dictionary of the Celebrated Women of Every Age and Country/Killigrew, (Katharine)

KILLIGREW, (KATHARINE) fourth Daughter of Sir Anthony Cooke; born at Giddy-hall, in Essex, 1530; was married to Henry Killigrew, Esq. afterwards knighted;

And has had a place justly assigned her among the learned ladies of the age, though she does not appear to have been the author of any distinct and separate treatise. Her natural genius being improved by the same excellent education which was bestowed upon her sisters, she became famous for her knowledge in the Hebrew, Greek, and Latin tongues, and for her skill in poetry. A short specimen of her talent in that art has been preserved by Sir John Harrington and Dr. Thomas Fuller. On the monument erected to her memory, is an inscription composed by herself. Both the small pieces we have mentioned were written in Latin.

The death of lady Killigrew was lamented in various epitaphs. Her sister. Lady Russel, wrote one, partly in Greek and partly in Latin verse. We know not when she died; only it appears, by her father's will, she was living in 1576, and that she lies buried in the church of St. Thomas, in Vintry ward, London, where is an elegant monument erected to her memory.

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