Matthew Concanen (Q387436): Difference between revisions
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Olaf Simons (talk | contribs) (Created claim: Biographical notes (P173): Overall: A barrister, Concanen wrote plays, poems, and essays. In some of his works, he attacked Pope and Swift; in return, he was ridiculed by Pope in the Dunciad. The income from his political and literary endeavors enabled him to live in "affluent retirement" (DNB)., #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1637953760450) |
Olaf Simons (talk | contribs) (Added reference to claim: Biographical notes (P173): Overall: A barrister, Concanen wrote plays, poems, and essays. In some of his works, he attacked Pope and Swift; in return, he was ridiculed by Pope in the Dunciad. The income from his political and literary endeavors enabled him to live in "affluent retirement" (DNB)., #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1637953760450) |
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Property / Biographical notes: Overall: A barrister, Concanen wrote plays, poems, and essays. In some of his works, he attacked Pope and Swift; in return, he was ridiculed by Pope in the Dunciad. The income from his political and literary endeavors enabled him to live in "affluent retirement" (DNB). / reference | |||
Revision as of 21:12, 26 November 2021
* 1701, + 1749-01-22, Irish writer, poet, and lawyer
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Matthew Concanen |
* 1701, + 1749-01-22, Irish writer, poet, and lawyer |
Statements
1701
0 references
“at least four prominent whigs in Ireland”; pensioner of Walpole
Coteries: James Sterling; Lewis Theobald; William Warburton; A Supplement to the Profound
Periodicals etc.: Miscellaneous Poems (1724), ed. Concanen, included his own work and that of others; dedicated to the whig Viscount Gage; the London Journal and the British Journal, 1725; Richard Savage's Miscellaneous Poems and Translations (1726); Musical Miscellany (1729); The Flower-Piece (1731), ed. Concanen; wrote in the Daily Courant
Overall: A barrister, Concanen wrote plays, poems, and essays. In some of his works, he attacked Pope and Swift; in return, he was ridiculed by Pope in the Dunciad. The income from his political and literary endeavors enabled him to live in "affluent retirement" (DNB).
Sitelinks
Wikipedia(0 entries)
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Other sites(1 entry)
- wikidatawiki Q6790326