Having travelled with his pregnant wife Fanny to Italy, Hunt began work on the painting.
He was survived by his wife Fanny, who died in 1864, but the couple had no children.
Longfellow undertook the large-scale project in part to combat grief over the death of his wife Fanny in 1861.
He was at Bournemouth with his wife Fanny for three years from 1884, leading the life of an invalid.
His wife Fanny is appalled by this unreconstructed maleness which is called a 'little murder'.
When he disappeared from the police, his wife Fanny was incarcerated at the Grini concentration camp for sixteen months, as a hostage.
His wife Fanny died in 1903.
John initially agrees to do so but is soon swayed by his greedy wife Fanny into giving the girls nothing at all.
His wife Fanny died on October 15, 1878.
He was survived by his wife Fanny and 13 of his 16 children.