Dames of Malta
Dames of Malta are female members of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta. Their male counterparts are the Knights of Malta.
Prominent living Dames of Malta include:
- Anne M. Burke
- Bernadette Castro
- Marie Isobel, Countess Cathcart
- Mary Higgins Clark
- Janne Haaland Matláry
- Freda Payne
- Sharon Rich
- Karen Garver Santorum
- Phyllis Schlafly
- Marianna, Dowager Viscountess Monckton of Brenchley, served as High Sheriff of Kent (1981–82); widow of Gilbert Walter Riversdale Monckton, 2nd Viscount Monckton of Brenchley
- Patricia Mary, Lady Talbot of Malahide (née Riddell)
- Elisabeth von Thurn und Taxis
- Princess Michael of Kent
Deceased Dames of Malta
- Lady Jean Bertie (née Crichton-Stuart), mother of Fra' Andrew Willoughby Ninian Bertie, first Grand Master of the Order of Malta since 1258 to hail from the English-speaking world
- Csilla von Boeselager
- Genevieve Garvan Brady, Dame of the Holy Sepulchre, holder of the Cross Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice, founder of the Carroll Club (“for Catholic business girls”), philanthropist; Board Chairman Girl Scouts of the USA; Vice-President of the Welfare Council of New York
- Virginia A. Dwyer (1921-1997), Director/Deputy Chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the University of Rochester; and a Board member of Eaton Corporation, Schering-Plough, Borden, Southern Company, the Atlantic Companies, and Georgia Power
- Clare Ann Kalkwarf, Vice-President, Brotherhood of Blessed Gérard, the South African Relief Organisation of the Order of Malta; first South African woman to be invested as a Dame of Malta
- Clare Boothe Luce
- Dorothea Angela McElduff (1926–2013), Member of Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre and Dame of Malta
- Emma, Lady Hamilton was awarded Petite Croix de l'Ordre de St. Jean de Jerusalem on 21 December 1799 by Czar Paul I of Russia for her bravery in aiding the starving Maltese during the British blockade of the occupying French. Emma, Lady Hamilton's Maltese Cross is currently on display, though not publicly catalogued, in the National Museum of the Royal Navy, Portsmouth along with the letter of award, written in French, signed by Paul I.[1]
- Mary McShain (née Mary J. Horstmann), great-niece of Bishop Ignatius F. Horstmann (the third Bishop of the Diocese of Cleveland); widow of John McShain
- Regina A. Quick, philanthropist
- Lady Hilda Susan Northcote Swan, late wife of Sir Conrad Swan
- Princess Urraca of Bourbon-Two Sicilies
- Princess Maria Ludwiga Theresia of Bavaria
References
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