Jane Cornwallis

In 1609 a fellow courtier in the queen's household, and cousin of the Countess of Bedford, Bridget Markham, bequeathed her a set of diamond and ruby buttons.

Anne of Denmark gave her a jewel of gold with diamonds, supplied by George Heriot, at her wedding, and gifts of four elaborate gowns in the following years.

She believed that portraits by Hans Holbein the Younger could be found in country houses,[5] and she wrote to Lady Jane Cornwallis, hoping that her father-in-law, Nicholas Bacon of Redgrave might have such pictures.

Ashburnham's cousin, Susan Feilding, Countess of Denbigh, wrote to Bacon mentioning "her family be unfortunate", meaning their financial difficulty since her father's death in 1620.

[8] Dorothy Randolph, a close friend and Meautys family cousin, had helped to arrange Frederick's marriage by searching for suitable partners.

In 1657 she had contracted with Thomas Stanton at St Andrew Holborn for her marble monument at Culford, agreeing the design with a drawing.

[12] A painting in Government House, Sydney was recently identified as a portrait of Jane Cornwallis, attributed to her husband Nathaniel Bacon.

Attributed to Nathaniel Bacon, The artist’s wife, Jane Bacon, Lady Cornwallis, née Meautys, ca. 1614-1617