Research topic:Edmund Clarence Stedman

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Mortimer, Edmund, 3rd earl of March

The Oxford Companion to British History | 2002 | | © The Oxford Companion to British History 2002, originally published by Oxford University Press 2002. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Mortimer, Edmund, 3rd earl of March (1352–81). March inherited at the age of 8 and married a daughter of Lionel, duke of Clarence, second son of Edward III, who brought him vast possessions, particularly in Ireland. In 1377, when Richard II succeeded as a child, March was a member of the Regency Council and was influential both in Parliament and in the field, especially in Scottish matters. From 1379 he served as king's lieutenant in Ireland but died in Cork. Through his marriage, March established a family claim to the throne. His great-grandson was Richard, duke of York, whose son gained the throne as Edward IV.

J. A. Cannon

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JOHN CANNON. "Mortimer, Edmund, 3rd earl of March." The Oxford Companion to British History. Oxford University Press. 2002. Encyclopedia.com. 24 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

JOHN CANNON. "Mortimer, Edmund, 3rd earl of March." The Oxford Companion to British History. Oxford University Press. 2002. Encyclopedia.com. (December 24, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O110-MortimerEdmund3rderlfMrch.html

JOHN CANNON. "Mortimer, Edmund, 3rd earl of March." The Oxford Companion to British History. Oxford University Press. 2002. Retrieved December 24, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O110-MortimerEdmund3rderlfMrch.html

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Edmund Clarence Stedman's Black Atlantic.
Magazine article from: Victorian Poetry; 6/22/2005; ; 700+ words ; ...PRECEDENT HE WAS ONLY TOO well aware, Edmund Clarence Stedman began his literary career as a...quite successfully, as a critic. Stedman's breakthrough work in criticism...Victoria's Jubilee; by 1895, Stedman could claim--in the introduction...
E. C. Stedman and the invention of Victorian Poetry.
Magazine article from: Victorian Poetry; 6/22/2005; ; 700+ words ; ...earlier times and places--was Edmund Clarence Stedman's 1875 Victorian Poets. Shortly after its publication, Stedman wrote to Moncure Conway that...reign nearly thirty more years, Stedman emphasized that he had been led...
American Victorian Poetry: the transatlantic poetic.(analysis of Michael Cohen's essay)
Magazine article from: Victorian Poetry; 6/22/2005; ; 700+ words ; ...through the literary labors of Edmund Clarence Stedman, the Wall Street banker whose...might also want to argue that Stedman's most important contribution...Poets of America (1885). What Stedman articulated between "Victorian...
Elizabeth Barrett Browning.(Guide to the year's work)
Magazine article from: Victorian Poetry; 9/22/2004; ; 700+ words ; ...of Victorian Poets (1875) by Edmund Clarence Stedman. This is of particular relevance...in Lost Saints (1996), holds Stedman partly responsible for the idolatry...metamorphosis into a minor woman poet than Stedman's. Bristow argues, provocatively...
Outsourcing "The Raven": retroactive origins.
Magazine article from: Victorian Poetry; 6/22/2005; ; 700+ words ; ...to the magnificent folios of Mallarmd in Paris and Stedman in New York. The journals of America and Europe are...STEPHANE MALLARME, Paris EDUARD ENGEL, Berlin, AND EDMUND CLARENCE STEDMAN, New York, Translator of and Commentators on "The...
A man destined for war.(TRAVEL)(THE CIVIL WAR)
Newspaper article from: The Washington Times; 5/14/2005; 700+ words ; ...in conditions of great danger from opposing fire, was celebrated by "Kearny at Seven Pines," the work of Edmund Clarence Stedman (1833-1908) in which occur the lines: "How he strode his brown steed! How we saw his blade brighten / In...
Lenice Ariss
Newspaper article from: Telegraph - Herald (Dubuque); 10/4/2000; 549 words ; ...have changed her. Yet alone this picture lingers: still she seems to me the fair, young angel of my infancy. Edmund Clarence Stedman Copyright 2000 by Telegraph Herald, All rights Reserved.
Biographical Warfare: Silent Film and the Public Image of Poe.(Critical Essay)
Magazine article from: The Mississippi Quarterly; 12/22/1998; ; 700+ words ; ...biographical recuperation which had enjoyed its first successes in the 1870s and 1880s with the scholarly work of Edmund Clarence Stedman, William F. Gill, George E. Woodberry, John Ingram, and others. The origins of the confusion between Poe...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Edmund Clarence Stedman
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Edmund Clarence Stedman 1833-1908, American banker, poet, and critic, b. Hartford, Conn., attended Yale. A successful Wall St. broker, he...
Stedman, Edmund Clarence
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to American Literature Stedman, Edmund Clarence (1833–1908),was both a poet and a successful Wall Street broker, as may be seen in his most famous work, Pan...
1878-1899: The Arts: Publications
Book article from: American Eras ...went on to edit The Atlantic Monthly in 1890-1898; Edmund Clarence Stedman, Poets of America (Boston & New York: Houghton...influential New York-based poet and literary critic; Stedman and Ellen M. Hutchinson, eds., A Library of American...
Literature: Storming the Genteel
Book article from: American Decades ...their clear, concrete descriptions. In general, however, American poetry from 1900 to 1909 was in what critic Edmund Clarence Stedman (1833-1908) called "a twilight interval." The new age of American poetry did not arrive until after 1912...
Edwin Markham
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography ...Overland Monthly, and Scribner's Magazine. On his first trip east, in 1893, he met William Dean Howells and Edmund Clarence Stedman; both had admired his work. He married his third wife, Anna Murphy, in 1897. On Jan. 15, 1899, the San...

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