4-3.:-;.———-_—_ uliet’ Rbméa” I A LECTURER in ancient architecture has won the marriage lottery stakes. Buildings bofiin Dr Christopher Tadgell is to marry one of the nation’s wealthiest widows - Lady Juliet De Chair, 61, who is worth in .excess of £42 million. I Arts-loving Juliet has been married twice I before — to the 6th Marquess of Bristol from whom she was divorced in 1972, and later she became the fourth wife of Tory MP Som- erset De Chair who died two years ago. She has known Christopher, who is in his 50s, for many years and a friend says: ‘They have a lot of interests in common. Christo- pher was a friend of both Juliet and her late husband. He is Australian and a divorcée, but he only became close romantically to her very recently.’ Juliet inherited her wealth from her father, the last Earl Fitzwilliam, who also left her the biggest house in England, 365- roomed Wentworth Woodhouse, in South Yorkshire, and an art collection worth more than £15 million. More modestly, Christopher is a leo- turer at the Canter- bury School of Archi- tecture and is also employed as a guide by travel tour compa- 1 nies specialising in L architectural holidays.