Historical Figure
Nell Gwyn
d. 1687
English royal mistress and actress (1650–1687)
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Biography
Eleanor Gwyn was an English stage actress and celebrity figure of the Restoration period. Praised by Samuel Pepys for her comic performances as one of the first actresses on the English stage, she became best known for being a longtime mistress of King Charles II of England.
Timeline
The story of Nell Gwyn, told in moments.
Took the stage at 14 or 15. Samuel Pepys called her "pretty, witty Nell." She played comic roles opposite Charles Hart, who also became her lover.
Caught the eye of King Charles II. By 1670 she was his mistress. She bore him two sons: Charles Beauclerk in 1670 and James Beauclerk in 1671.
Never received a title. Legend says she dangled one son out a window and threatened to drop him unless the King gave the boy a surname. Charles relented with "Beauclerk."
Died at 37, likely of a stroke. Charles II had begged on his deathbed two years earlier: "Let not poor Nelly starve."
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