Edward Evan (Q387474): Difference between revisions

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(‎Added qualifier: Online information (P146): https://dh.dickinson.edu/18cpc/node/3508, #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1638027232350)
(‎Removed claim: Biographical notes (P173): Education: taught by James John, a hooper, farmer, and poet from Aberdâr; apprenticed, at age 23, to carpentry and glazing under Lewis Hopkin, #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1638101435300)
Property / Biographical notes
Education: taught by James John, a hooper, farmer, and poet from Aberdâr; apprenticed, at age 23, to carpentry and glazing under Lewis Hopkin
 
Property / Biographical notes: Education: taught by James John, a hooper, farmer, and poet from Aberdâr; apprenticed, at age 23, to carpentry and glazing under Lewis Hopkin / rank
Normal rank
 
Property / Biographical notes: Education: taught by James John, a hooper, farmer, and poet from Aberdâr; apprenticed, at age 23, to carpentry and glazing under Lewis Hopkin / reference
 

Revision as of 14:19, 28 November 2021

* 1716-03-01, + 1798-06-21, Welsh poet
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Edward Evan
* 1716-03-01, + 1798-06-21, Welsh poet

    Statements

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    21 June 1798Gregorian
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    Overall: Evan took an early interest in Welsh poetry. The DNB records an oral poetry performance in 1735 -- an englynion he sang in the eisteddfod held in Cymer, Glamorgan. While apprenticed to Hopkin, Evan worked on mastering the Welsh strict metres and bardic grammar; he composed an ‘exemplifying ode’ -- "a composition incorporating one of each of the canonical twenty-four strict metres" (DNB). He also made some Welsh translations of Pope, Samuel Butler, Bishop Horne, and Isaac Watts. His verse was popular among the Welsh inhabitants of upper Glamorgan. "He became a somewhat romantic figure after it was claimed in the Gentleman's Magazine in November 1789 that he and Iolo Morganwg were by then the only surviving legitimate descendants of the ‘Ancient British Bards’" (DNB).