Biography of Anne Brontë

Writing is familiar

17 January 1820
28 may 1849
Anne Brontë was born in the village of Thornton, Yorkshire (England) on 17 January 1820 Scarborough. As her two sisters Emily and Charlotte, is the author of novels of romantic content of the Victorian era. Last of six children, his mother Maria Branwell Brontë died on 15 September 1821, when Anne has just one year. Moved his family to Haworth, his father--who was vicar here-trying to find a partner who is a new mother for his numerous offspring, able to look after and educate. After two years, however, a new attempt by choosing one good educational institution that would be able to give their children an adequate education. So the children attend before the Crofton Hall and later at the Clergy Daughter's School.
The four sisters, Mary, Elizabeth, Charlotte and Emily, studying in these institutions in the years 1824 and 1825. After the death of Mary and Elizabeth, Charlotte and Emily are back in the family home. While the four sisters were in school, Anne was educated in the family, where he studied music and drawing. Later continued his education in public school Roe Head School, and after the 1835 under the guidance of sister Charlotte, become Meanwhile teacher.
The two sisters of Anne, Charlotte and Emily, will also be their authors and poets: together formed the trio of the Brontë sisters. Together Anne will publish his poems in 1845, under the pseudonym "Acton Bell". The main novels of Anne Brontë are "Agnes Grey", published in 1847, the Tenant of Wildfell Hall and "The", published in 1848. "Agnes Grey" tells the story of a housekeeper who faces various misfortunes, without losing its moral principles and shows at the same time the difficulties faced by middle-class women who embark on the only profession that give him respectability: the book is totally overshadowed by the masterpiece "Wuthering Heights" (Wuthering Heights) of sister Emily Brontë, released the same year. The second novel of Anne Brontë, The Tenant Of Wildfell Hall "is much more intense: the story of Helen Graham, who escapes from an unhappy marriage, a subject very little guessed according to opinion by Charlotte Brontë, who is Anne's literary agent.
This attitude of Charlotte is due perhaps to a desire to protect her sister, but more likely related to the fact that the ' bad ' character is based on the figure of their wayward brother. The accurate descriptions of the brutality and the alcoholism and the regrettable language used, will not be appreciated by critics. Anne Brontë died in a shelter on the coast of Scarborough (uk)-the place where he had set his novels--just a few days after the junta. There would have to treat form of tuberculosis, the same disease that afflicted that suffered even sisters. Anne is buried at Saint Mary's Churchyard Cemetery.
Article contributed by the team of collaborators.