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  1. Edward Fairfax (c. 1580 – 27 January 1635) was an English translator. He translated Torquato Tasso's Jerusalem Delivered. He also wrote an original work on demonology.

  2. Edward Fairfax (born c. 1575, Leeds, Yorkshire, Eng.—died Jan. 27, 1635) was an English poet whose Godfrey of Bulloigne or the Recoverie of Jerusalem (1600), a translation of Gerusalemme liberata, an epic poem by his Italian contemporary Torquato Tasso, won fame and was praised by John Dryden.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. 20 de mar. de 2022 · Edward Fairfax Rochester es un personaje que fue creado por Charlotte Brontë para su novela Jane Eyre publicada en 1847. Este personaje, junto con otros como Mr. Darcy de Orgullo y prejuicio de Jane Austen, ha servido como inspiración de diversos intereses románticos.

  4. 29 de may. de 2018 · Fairfax, Edward (d. 1635) An English scholar of the sixteenth century, translator of Tasso's Gerusalemme Liberata and author of Daemonologia: A Dis-course on Witchcraft, in which he claims that in 1621 two of his daughters were bewitched through the malice of six witches.

  5. Edward Fairfax Rochester (often referred to as Mr Rochester) is a character in Charlotte Brontë's 1847 novel Jane Eyre. The brooding master of Thornfield Hall, Rochester is the employer and eventual husband of the novel's titular protagonist Jane Eyre. He is regarded as an archetypal Byronic hero.

    • Edward Fairfax Rochester
    • Jane Eyre (1847)
  6. 26 de oct. de 2017 · Edward Fairfaxs account of the case he brought against six women in Fewston, North Yorkshire, details ‘the work of Sathan’ he saw. Alison Flood. Thu 26 Oct 2017 01.00 EDT. A rare copy of a...

  7. celm.folger.edu › introductions › FairfaxEdwardCELM: Edward Fairfax

    Fairfax's lost works — and the ‘many valuable manuscripts’ which, according to Brian Fairfax, he ‘has left in the library of Lord Fairfax at Denton, both in verse and prose’ (Atterbury Correspondence, III, 257-8) — eluded the enquiries of a researcher as recently as 1954 (see Charles G. Bell, ‘Edward Fairfax — Base Son and Lost Eclogues’, N&Q, 199 (April 1954), 143-5 ...