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Edmund and Campion
* 1581 – Edmund Campion, English Jesuit ( b. 1540 )
** Edmund Campion
In his Historie of Ireland completed 1571, Blessed Edmund Campion gives a description of the hounds used for hunting the wolves on the Dublin and Wicklow mountains.
* 1540 – Edmund Campion, English Jesuit ( d. 1581 )
* January 24 – Edmund Campion, English Jesuit and Roman Catholic martyr ( d. 1581 )
* December 1 – Execution in England of the Jesuit priest Edmund Campion for treason.
** Edmund Campion, English Jesuit ( martyred ) ( b. 1540 )
Byrd's setting of the first four verses of Psalm 78 ( Deus venerunt gentes ) is widely believed to refer to the cruel execution of Fr Edmund Campion in 1581, an event that caused widespread revulsion on the Continent as well as in England.
Writing in 1571, Edmund Campion named the pharaoh Amenophis ; Keating named him Cincris.
Established in 1896, Campion Hall was named after Edmund Campion, an English Jesuit and martyr who had been a fellow at nearby St. John's College.
White, a Roman Catholic, originally intended St John's to provide a source of educated Roman Catholic clerics to support the Counter-Reformation under Queen Mary, and indeed Edmund Campion, the Roman Catholic martyr, studied here.
They kept Raphael Holinshed who employed William Harrison, Richard Stanyhurst, Edmund Campion and John Hooker.
It was built in 1990 as " Gnu Hall " but was dedicated to St. Edmund Campion and the defunct Campion Jesuit High School in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin on November 13, 1993.
Robert's parents were prominent Catholics ; his father had suffered years of imprisonment for his faith, and in 1581 had been tried in Star Chamber alongside William Vaux, 3rd Baron Vaux of Harrowden, and his brother-in-law Sir Thomas Tresham, for harbouring the Jesuit Edmund Campion.
Parsons accompanied Edmund Campion ( who was later canonized ) on Campion's mission to aid English Catholics in 1578.
* St Edmund Campion Primary School ( RC )
For example, in his Two bokes of the histories of Ireland ( 1571 ), Edmund Campion tried to use the myth to establish an ancient right of the British monarch to rule Ireland.
He brushed off a request to secure better treatment for English Catholics, to the dismay of Robert Parsons, given that Edmund Campion was in prison at the time.
** During the English Reformation, many important English and Scottish figures, such as Thomas More, Mary, Queen of Scots and Edmund Campion, were tried and executed for their alleged double loyalty to the Papacy and infidelity to the Crown.
One of the most famous, Saint Edmund Campion was to go on from the College to the Society of Jesus, or the Jesuits.
Under Allen's instructions, the first Jesuits to be sent, Parsons and Edmund Campion, were to work closely with other Roman Catholic priests in England.
de: Edmund Campion

Edmund and poet
The poet and colonist Edmund Spenser wrote that the victims " were brought to such wretchedness as that any stony heart would have rued the same ".
* 1896 – Edmund Blunden, English poet, author and critic ( d. 1974 )
After his death, Gosse was portrayed as a despotic father of uncompromising religious views in Father and Son ( 1907 ), the literary masterpiece of his son, poet and critic Edmund Gosse.
Edmund Spenser, a famous English poet best known for his epic poem ' The Faerie Queene '
** Edmund Cooper, British author & poet ( d. 1982 )
* October 21 – Edmund Waller, English poet ( b. 1606 )
* Edmund Waller of England ( 1606 – 1687 ), Member of Parliament and poet
* March 3 – Edmund Waller, English poet ( d. 1687 )
* January 13 – Edmund Spenser, English poet ( b. 1552 )
** Edmund Bolton, English historian and poet ( d. 1633 )
Edmund Charles Blunden, MC ( 1 November 1896 – 20 January 1974 ) was an English poet, author and critic.
Washington University professor Joseph Lowenstein, with the assistance of several undergraduate students, has been involved in editing, annotating, making a digital archive of the first publication of poet Edmund Spencer's collective works in 100 years.
The English epic poet Edmund Spenser further embellished this myth at the opening of Book V of The Faerie Queene ( 1596 ), where he claims that Astraea left behind " her groome | An yron man ", called Talus.
The church of St John the Divine, Kennington, which was to be described by the poet John Betjeman as " the most magnificent church in South London ", was designed by George Edmund Street ( architect of the Royal Courts of Justice on Strand, London ), and was built between 1871 and 1874.
Sir Edmund William Gosse CB ( 21 September 1849 – 16 May 1928 ) was an English poet, author and critic ; the son of Philip Henry Gosse and Emily Bowes.
Other members of White's graduating year included Edmund Clarence Stedman, the poet and essayist, Wayne MacVeagh, Attorney General of the United States and U. S. Ambassador to Italy, and Hiram Bingham II, the missionary, collectively comprising the so-called " famous class of ' 53 ".
Its most infamous use was by Humphrey Gilbert during the wars against the native Irish in Munster in the 1560s and 1570s, actions which earned the praise of the poet Edmund Spenser in his A View of the Present State of Ireland in 1596.
The poet Edmund Spenser left an account of it:
* Other candidates include Thomas Barlow ( 1607 – 1691 ), bishop of Lincoln ; Timothy Bray ( 1480 – 1539 ), abbot of Heath, Derbyshire ; and Edmund Waller ( 1606 – 1687 ), poet and politician.
The novel partly takes its inspiration from Father and Son, the autobiography of the English poet Edmund Gosse, which describes his relationship with his father, Philip Henry Gosse.
It is the burial place of the author G. K. Chesterton, Edmund Burke and the poet Edmund Waller, for whom a tall stone obelisk was erected over the tomb chest in St Mary and All Saints churchyard.
The well-known poet Edmund Blunden was his tutor at Merton, and regarded his poetic talent highly.
Among her social circle were Edmund Wilson, Berenice Abbott, and the Dadaist artist and poet Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven, whose biography Barnes tried to write but never finished.

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