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  1. Seymour Fleming, also known as Lady Worsley, was a British aristocrat and notorious adulteress who ran off with her lover Maurice George Bisset in 1781. She was involved in a scandalous court case, had four children by different fathers, and lived in exile in France during the Revolution.

    • Her Childhood Was Tragic
    • She Was A Risk-Taker
    • Tragedy Made Her An Heiress
    • Her Husband Immediately Betrayed Her
    • Her Marriage Was Doomed from The Start
    • The Law Was Against Her
    • Her Husband Used Her
    • She Gave Him A Passive Aggressive "Gift"
    • Her Marital Life Was A Mess
    • She Ran with A Scandalous Crowd
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    Seymour Fleming entered a world of drama right from the get-go. She was born to the Irish baron Sir John Fleming and Lady Jane Coleman, but her father and two of her sisters died when Seymour was only five years old. That left little Seymour with just her mother and her demure, pretty sister Jane. Wikimedia Commons

    If you looked up the 18th century's definition of the perfect woman, Fleming would not fit the bill. She was highly independent, unafraid to speak her mind, and determined to do as she pleased. Seymour's brazen behavior and saucy quips completely defied expectations for women of the time. The Scandalous Lady W,BBC Two

    Upon their father’s death, Fleming and her sister Jane received a sizeable inheritance. Along with their striking beauty, this recent cash injection made both of them very desirable on the 18th century dating scene. According to the British tabloids, Seymour was worth about 70,000 pounds at the time of her marriage. Not too shabby! Wikimedia Common...

    Fleming’s eventual husband, the baronet Sir Richard Worsley, first came sniffing around the sisters when they were still in their preteen years. But his wooing hid a dark detail:When Worsley initially called on the Fleming girls, he wasn't romancing Seymour, but her sister Jane. Talk about an awkward way to meet. Wikipedia

    Unfortunately for Worsley, he just didn't appeal to prim and proper Jane Fleming. Instead, she trotted off and married the well-to-do Earl of Harrington. But Worsley didn't give up—after all, there was another perfectly good Fleming girl available. He met up with 17-year-old Seymour at the York races and married his consolation prize by 1775. Despi...

    Fleming’s marriage contract was more like a prison sentence. The document was totally skewed in favor of her husband, giving over most of Seymour's wealth to Worsley. When all was said and done, he had total ownership of her and her property until his death, and she had a small allowance of 400 pounds a year for clothing and other incidentals. Her ...

    With his marriage to Fleming, Worsley found himself with everything he’d wanted—and he was eager to show off his new prize. While Seymour was still new and shiny to her hubby, Worsley took her to all the balls, dinners, and parties he could. With the belle of the ball on his arm, Worsley enjoyed some major butt-kissing from his friends and acquaint...

    Worsley was so pleased with his upward marriage that he rewarded himself with a pretty cringey gift: A grandiose portrait not of him and his wife...but just of himself. He posed for the painting while wearing his spiffy military uniform, preening like the gentleman he wanted everyone to see him as. But what about the wife who bankrolled this elabor...

    Marrying Fleming was just the beginning of Worsley’s aspirations. He turned his focus to his career and rose through the government ranks, leaving Seymour neglected. According to Fleming, it took her husband three long months to even get intimate with her after marriage. And that's not even the worst part:On the rare occasion that the couple made i...

    With her husband otherwise occupied, Fleming started looking for new ways to entertain herself. She quickly joined Lady Georgina Devonshireand her fashionable group of friends. Like any pack of Regency mean girls, Georgiana's circle was know for wicked quips, and hard-partying. "The Ton," as they were called, would drink and gamble all night long. ...

    Learn about the life and adventures of Seymour Fleming, aka Lady Worsley, the most notorious woman of the Regency era. From her tragic childhood to her torrid affair, discover the wild facts about this rebel who inspired a play and a lawsuit.

  2. Aug 19, 2015 · Learn about the life and legacy of Seymour Dorothy Fleming, a wealthy heiress who married Sir Richard Worsley and later eloped with her lover Maurice George Bisset. The Scandalous Lady W, a BBC film based on her story, stars Natalie Dormer as a feminist warrior.

  3. Nov 1, 2015 · Learn how Lady Worsley, a wealthy heiress and wife of a military officer, eloped with her lover George Bisset in 1781, after a shocking public trial and a bestselling poem. Discover how this affair inspired the play School for Scandal and the novel Lady Worsley's Whim.

  4. Aug 14, 2015 · Learn about the 18th century heiress who eloped with her lover and defied her husband in a famous court case. See her portrait by Joshua Reynolds and her letters at Harewood House, where she was a step-daughter of the owner.

  5. Watch the true story of Lady Worsley, who eloped with her lover and sparked a legal battle in 18th-century England. Starring Natalie Dormer, Shaun Evans and Richard McCabe, based on Hallie Rubenhold's book.

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  7. Seymour, Lady Worsley. A wealthy and desirable heiress, Seymour Dorothy Fleming married Sir Richard Worsley in 1775 but eloped with her lover, Captain Bisset, six years later.

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