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  1. Edward John Trelawny (1792-1881) was born into a well-established family from Cornwall. He passed a miserable childhood, and at the age of thirteen was enrolled by his father in the British navy. Discharged without a commission after a decade, Trelawny found his way to Italy, where he became part of the circle of expatriates around Byron and Shelley.

  2. Edward Trelawney (c. 1653 – October 1726), of Coldrenick, near Liskeard, Cornwall, was an English clergyman who served as dean and archdeacon of Exeter between 1717 and 1726. [1] Trelawney was the son of Jonathan Trelawny, gentleman of St Germans, Cornwall, [2] and a descendant of Sir Jonathan Trelawny , MP of Trelawne (died 1604) who left the Coldrenick estate to his second son Edward. [3]

  3. 1 de ene. de 1999 · Dismissed by a contemporary as "Lord Byron's jackal," Trelawny (1792-1881), the 19th-century adventurer and companion of the English Romantics, traded on his celebrity as a survivor all his life. He had burned Shelley's drowned body on the beach at Viareggio and accompanied Byron to Greece, reinventing afterward the Missolonghi deathbed scene ...

    • David Crane
  4. Copy of "Edward John Trelawny: Critical Essay" by Edward Sackville-West, 1950 Box 1, Folder 99 "The Poet and the Pirate: A Strange Affinity between Two Rebels" in Courier , page 41, 1963

  5. knarf.english.upenn.edu › People › trelawnyEdward John Trelawny

    Edward John Trelawny, 1792 -1881, English writer. Trelawny entered the Royal Navy at the age of eleven, only to desert and lead a life of adventure (described in his Adventures of a Younger Son, 1831 ). In 1821 he met Percy Bysshe Shelley and Byron in Pisa. After Shelley's death, Trelawny supervised the cremation of his body, and helped to ...

  6. 10 de ene. de 2008 · Pforzheimer copy: Brown bead-grain cloth, gilt lettering on spine, blind embossed decorations, pale yellow endpapers. -- Book label: James Hay, Newcastle;...

  7. Biography. Returned for East Looe on the Trelawny interest, Trelawny was given a job in the victualling office. He spoke on the Government’s side in a debate on supply on 21 Feb. 1727, but voted against the Administration on the civil list arrears in 1729, the Hessians in 1730, and the army in 1732, writing subsequently that he would not be ...