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・ Charles Brune
・ Charles Brune (cricketer)
・ Charles Brune (politician)
・ Charles Bruneau
・ Charles Brunier
・ Charles Brunner
・ Charles Bruno Blondeau
・ Charles Brunsdon Fletcher
・ Charles Bruton
・ Charles Brutton
・ Charles Bruzon
・ Charles Bryan
・ Charles Brandon, 3rd Duke of Suffolk
・ Charles Brantley Aycock
・ Charles Branwhite
Charles Brasch
・ Charles Brasher
・ Charles Braverman
・ Charles Bravo
・ Charles Bray
・ Charles Bray (glass artist)
・ Charles Brearley House
・ Charles Breckenridge Faris
・ Charles Breese
・ Charles Brehm
・ Charles Breijer
・ Charles Brennan
・ Charles Brenner
・ Charles Brenner (psychiatrist)
・ Charles Brent


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Charles Brasch : ウィキペディア英語版
Charles Brasch
Charles Orwell Brasch (27 July 1909 – 20 May 1973) was a New Zealand poet, literary editor and arts patron. He was the founding editor of the literary journal ''Landfall''.
Brasch was born in Dunedin, the son of lawyer Hyam Brasch (who later changed his name to Henry Brash) and Helene Fels, a member of the prominent Hallenstein family of clothing merchants. He began writing poetry at Waitaki Boys' High School and entered St John's College, Oxford, in 1927 where he gained an 'ignominious third' in Modern History (to his father's disappointment〔http://www.dnzb.org.nz/DNZB/alt_essayBody.asp?essayID=5B40〕). His contemporaries at Oxford included W. H. Auden and Cecil Day-Lewis.
Brasch spent some time working in and studying the field of archaeology before returning to Dunedin in 1931. With private means, he travelled widely in Europe, Asia and the Americas during the 1930s. He spent the Second World War in Britain as a firewatcher and intelligence officer having been exempted from active service on medical grounds.
==Landfall==
Brasch returned to New Zealand in 1946, settling in Dunedin. He had held the ambition of publishing 'a substantial literary journal' in New Zealand for at least 15 years,〔 and in 1947 he founded ''Landfall'', remaining its editor for the next 20 years.〔''Dance of the Peacocks: New Zealanders in exile in the time of Hitler and Mao Tse Tung'' (Vintage 2003) James McNeish〕
In later life he was a substantial patron of arts and letters, and was involved in the establishment of the Robert Burns Fellowship at the University of Otago. He was also a patron and contributor to the Otago Museum; in this he followed in the footsteps of his grandfather, Willi Fels. His significant library, which reflected his interest in literature, art, history and religion, was donated to the University of Otago Library in 1973. The wide and eclectic nature of his reading allowed him to achieve his own substantial output. His archives are housed at the Hocken Library, where over 400 artworks gifted by him can also be seen.
He died of cancer in 1973.

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