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more info Edward Everett Hale, n.
prolific United States writer (1822-1909)
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more info Edward Fitzgerald, n.
English poet remembered primarily for his free translation of the poetry of Omar Khayyam (1809-1883)
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more info Edward Franklin Albeen, n.
United States dramatist (1928-)
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more info Edward G. Robinson, n.
United States film actor noted for playing gangster roles (1893-1973)
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more info Edward George Earle Bulwer-Lytton, n.
English writer of historical romances (1803-1873)
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more info Edward Gibbon, n.
English historian best known for his history of the Roman Empire (1737-1794)
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more info Edward Goldenberg Robinson, n.
United States film actor noted for playing gangster roles (1893-1973)
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more info Edward Henry Harriman, n.
United States railway tycoon (1848-1909)
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more info Edward I, n.
King of England from 1272 to 1307; conquered Wales (1239-1307)
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more info Edward II, n.
King of England from 1307 to 1327 and son of Edward I; was defeated at Bannockburn by the Scots led by Robert the Bruce; was deposed and died in prison (1284-1327)
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more info Edward III, n.
son of Edward II and King of England from 1327-1377; his claim to the French throne provoked the Hundred Years' War; his reign was marked by an epidemic of the Black Plague and by the emergence of the House of Commons as the powerful arm of British Parliament (1312-1377)
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more info Edward IV, n.
King of England from 1461 to 1470 and from 1471 to 1483; was dethroned in 1470 but regained the throne in 1471 by his victory at the battle of Tewkesbury (1442-1483)
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more info Edward James Hughes, n.
English poet (born in 1930)
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more info Edward James Muggeridge, n.
United States motion-picture pioneer remembered for his pictures of running horses taken with a series of still cameras (born in England) (1830-1904)
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more info Edward Jean Steichen, n.
United States photographer who pioneered artistic photography (1879-1973)
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more info Edward Jenner, n.
English physician who pioneered vaccination; Jenner inoculated people with small amounts of cowpox to prevent them from getting smallpox (1749-1823)
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more info Edward Kendall, n.
United States biochemist who discovered cortisone (1886-1972)
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more info Edward Kennedy Ellington, n.
United States jazz composer and piano player and bandleader (1899-1974)
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more info Edward Lawrie Tatum, n.
United States biochemist who discovered how genes act by regulating definite chemical events (1909-1975)
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more info Edward Lear, n.
British artist and writer of nonsense verse (1812-1888)
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more info Edward Lee Thorndike, n.
United States educational psychologist (1874-1949)
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more info Edward MacDowell, n.
United States composer best remembered as a composer of works for the piano (1860-1908)
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more info Edward Morley, n.
United States chemist and physicist who collaborated with Michelson in the Michelson-Morley experiment (1838-1923)
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more info Edward Osborne Wilson, n.
United States entomologist who has generalized from social insects to other animals including humans (born in 1929)
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more info Edward Pusey, n.
English theologian who (with John Henry Newman and John Keble) founded the Oxford movement (1800-1882)
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more info Edward R. Murrow, n.
United States broadcast journalist remembered for his reports from London during World War II (1908-1965)
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more info Edward Roscoe Murrow, n.
United States broadcast journalist remembered for his reports from London during World War II (1908-1965)
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more info Edward Sapir, n.
anthropologist and linguist; studied languages of North American Indians (1884-1939)
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more info Edward Teach, n.
an English pirate who operated in the Caribbean and off the Atlantic coast of North America (died in 1718)
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more info Edward Teller, n.
United States physicist (born in Hungary) who worked on the first atom bomb and the first hydrogen bomb (1908-2003)
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