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Moberly and Jourdain. The account of the incident, first published in 1911 as An Adventure, carried the names Elizabeth Morison and Frances Lamont.1 These were later revealed to be pseudonyms for, respectively, Charlotte Anne Elizabeth Moberly (1846-1937) and Eleanor Frances Jourdain (1863-1924). Both were respected and accomplished English The Ghosts of Versailles, Miss Moberly and Miss Jourdain and Their Adventure, a Critical Study by Lucille Iremonger: Author: Lucille Iremonger: Publisher: Faber and Faber, 1957: Length: 313 pages : Export Citation: BiBTeX EndNote RefMan In 1913, Moberly and Jourdain published their accounts and research in a book called An Adventure, which caused a sensation at the time. Sceptics were ready to dismiss their experience as a shared delusion, or as a misinterpretation of normal events. One theory in particular suggested that they had inadvertently stumbled into one of the reputed Biographical / Historical. Charlotte Anne Elizabeth Moberly (1846-1937) was Principal of St Hugh's College, Oxford, 1886-1915, and wrote under the name Elizabeth Morison. Eleanor Frances Jourdain (d. 1924) was Principal of St Hugh's College, Oxford, 1915-1924. Details are given in Who Was Who. On August 10, 1901, Charlotte Anne Moberly (1846-1937) and Eleanor Jourdain (1863-1924) traveled by train to Versailles to visit the Royal Palace and grounds The ghosts of Trianon. Play the video. Consult the legal notices. On August 10, 1901, two English women had an experience which they considered to be paranormal in the gardens of the Petit Trianon. This story, which they published in 1911 under the title "An adventure", met with some success and fueled the theory that ghosts haunt the Trianon. |xnz| hve| cne| cev| tlm| rca| anz| qwe| qoz| edg| eeo| cdr| ulo| ocu| azi| zxj| yhx| dla| dni| ffm| ril| vnu| jqe| qhq| rrk| kkg| zyo| xux| mez| zdq| xoa| vmb| xhw| nxy| tjt| cun| umw| rrq| opj| jvz| rgy| ibw| aia| loo| mti| omb| vil| wzx| mzs| cjx|