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Jago Eliot : ウィキペディア英語版
Jago Eliot

Jago Nicholas Aldo Eliot, Lord Eliot (24 March 1966〔GRO Register of Births: JUN 1964 7A 849 PLYMOUTH – Jago Nicholas Eliot, mmn = Lampson〕 – 15 April 2006) was the son of Peregrine Eliot, 10th Earl of St Germans, and Jacquetta Eliot, Countess of St Germans (née Lampson).
In 1988, on the death of his grandfather, he became styled Lord Eliot. Educated at Millfield School,〔 he was known for his hobbies of surfing and was the European body boarding champion in 1988.
He married former model Bianca Ciambriello. The couple were first "married" in the "Lost Vagueness" garden at the Glastonbury Festival,〔 before a more formal ceremony at Port Eliot, the seat of the Eliot family. The alternative wedding is featured in Julian Temple's 2006 film Glastonbury.〔(Glastonbury The Movie )〕〔GRO Register of Marriages: SEP 2002 368 1080 C17 ST GERMANS – Eliot = Ciambriello〕 They had one son, Albert Clarence, and twin daughters, Ruby and Violet.
Eliot was an early collaborator with Eddie Izzard at Covent Garden as a busker, he then moved to Brighton in the late 1980s where he inspired and promoted a number of nights at the ZAP club, including Fundamental〔(Tributes to the lord of all ravers )〕 and Pow Wow. He returned to Cornwall in the mid 1990s and in 2002 founded the Port Eliot Literature Festival, an annual event held in the grounds of the house.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Londonart.co.uk Magazine )
Eliot worked with digital and creative projects, either with the Arts Council or the Port Eliot Literary Festival, and London Arts projects. Shortly before his death, Eliot had been awarded an Artist Fellowship in Creative Technology by Hewlett-Packard and was exploring invisible sculpture and 3D soundscapes.〔http://x2.i-dat.org/~je/2005/audio/jago1.mp3〕
He also began to develop strategies to ensure Port Eliot would continue to be a vibrant cultural laboratory, building on the legend of the Elephant Fayre and helping define the ethos of the Port Eliot Literary Festival, through conversations with friends such as Tom Hodgkinson of the Idler magazine. His passion for the arts saw him also involved with the A Foundation,〔(A Foundation | About )〕 through his Literati project and i-DAT with the A Conversation at Port Eliot in 2006. This was the first in a proposed series on emerging ideas in art, science and technology organised by Jago Eliot and The Institute of Digital Art and Technology at the University of Plymouth. The themes for this seminar were 'art and irrationality' and 'a geography of the immaterial'.
He died on 15 April 2006. He was determined to have died from epilepsy, which he had developed in 2004.
==References==


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