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・ Edmund Hobhouse
・ Edmund Hockridge
・ Edmund Hodgson Smart
・ Edmund Hoefer
・ Edmund Hoffmeister
・ Edmund Hogan
・ Edmund Holland, 4th Earl of Kent
・ Edmund Hood
・ Edmund Hooper
・ Edmund Hooper (organist)
・ Edmund Horan
・ Edmund Horne
・ Edmund Hort New
・ Edmund Horton
・ Edmund Hottor
Edmund Howes
・ Edmund Hoyle Vestey
・ Edmund Hudleston
・ Edmund Hugh Hodgkinson
・ Edmund Hurst
・ Edmund Husserl
・ Edmund I
・ Edmund Ignatius Rice
・ Edmund Ingalls
・ Edmund Ironside
・ Edmund Ironside (disambiguation)
・ Edmund Ironside (play)
・ Edmund Ironside, 1st Baron Ironside
・ Edmund Ironside, 2nd Baron Ironside
・ Edmund Isham


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Edmund Howes : ウィキペディア英語版
Edmund Howes

Edmund Howes (fl. 1607–1631), was an English chronicler.
==Biography==
Howes lived in London, and designated himself "gentleman". Undeterred by John Stow's neglect, and despite the ridicule of his acquaintances, he applied himself on Stow's death in 1605 to continuations of Stow's ''Abridgement'' and of his ''Annales.'' The former he undertook, after discovering (he tells us) that no one else was likely to perform it. Howes's first edition of Stow's ''Abridgement, or Summary of the English Chronicle,'' appeared in 1607. A dedication to Sir Henry Rowe, the lord mayor, a few notices of "sundry memorable antiquities", and a continuation of matters "foreign and domestically" between 1603 and 1607, constitute Howes's contributions. In 1611 Howes issued another edition of the same work, with a further continuation to the end of 1610, and a new dedication addressed to Sir William Craven, lord mayor.
Howes issued in 1615 an expanded version of Stow's well-known ''Annales or Chronicle, with an historical preface,'' and a continuation from 1600, the date of the last edition, to 1615. According to Howes's own account, Archbishop Whitgift had suggested this task to him, and he received little encouragement while engaged on it.〔 cites ''Stow, Annales'', 1631, ded.〕 In 1631 he published his final edition of the ''Annales,'' with a dedication to Charles I, and a concluding address to the lord mayor and aldermen of London. Howes lays much stress on his love of truth, and the difficulties caused him in his labours by "venomous tongues". In a letter to Nicholas, dated 23 December 1630, he refers to the passage of his work through the press, and mentions Sir Robert Pye as a friend.〔 cites ''Cal. State Papers'', Dom. 1629–31, p. 416.〕 The 1631 edition of the ''Annales'' is the most valuable of all, and Howes's additions are not the least interesting part of it.

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