• Thumbnail for Eliza Haywood
    Eliza Haywood (c. 1693 – 25 February 1756), born Elizabeth Fowler, was an English writer, actress and publisher. An increase in interest and recognition...
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  • Thumbnail for Fantomina
    Fantomina (category Novels by Eliza Haywood)
    Fantomina; or, Love in a Maze is a novel by Eliza Haywood published in 1725. In it, the protagonist disguises herself as four different women in her efforts...
    20 KB (2,695 words) - 04:30, 10 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Love in Excess; or, The Fatal Enquiry
    Love in Excess; or, The Fatal Enquiry (category Novels by Eliza Haywood)
    Love in Excess (1719–20) is Eliza Haywood's best known novel. It details the amorous escapades of Count D'Elmont, a rake who becomes reformed over the...
    10 KB (1,312 words) - 18:42, 26 August 2024
  • and philanthropist Eliza Hayley, English translator and essayist Eliza Haywood (c. 1693–1756), English novelist and painter Eliza Putnam Heaton (1860–1919)...
    21 KB (2,607 words) - 21:41, 18 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Amatory fiction
    short stories. The three most prominent amatory fiction writers were: Eliza Haywood (who wrote Love in Excess; Or, The Fatal Enquiry and Fantomina: Or,...
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  • Thumbnail for Novel
    ready to use their personal names rather than pseudonyms, including Eliza Haywood, who in 1719 following in the footsteps of Aphra Behn used her name...
    96 KB (11,939 words) - 03:54, 28 September 2024
  • your own honour in Westminster Abbey." From April 1744 to May 1746 Eliza Haywood anonymously published The Female Spectator, a monthly periodical which...
    12 KB (1,698 words) - 11:30, 27 August 2023
  • Thumbnail for The Sofa: A Moral Tale
    John Nourse and Thomas Cooper. This translation has been attributed to Eliza Haywood and William Hatchett. The story concerns a young courtier, Amanzéï,...
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  • Thumbnail for The Female Spectator
    The Female Spectator, published by Eliza Haywood between 1744 and 1746, is generally considered to be the first periodical in English written by women...
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  • Thumbnail for Mistress (lover)
    as victims in the 18th century in England, whether in the novels of Eliza Haywood or Samuel Richardson (whose heroines in Pamela and Clarissa are both...
    15 KB (1,659 words) - 01:20, 5 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for The Anti-Pamela; or, Feign'd Innocence Detected
    The Anti-Pamela; or, Feign'd Innocence Detected (category Novels by Eliza Haywood)
    Anti-Pamela; or Feign'd Innocence Detected is a 1741 novel written by Eliza Haywood as a satire of the 1740 novel Pamela; or, Virtue Rewarded by Samuel...
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  • Royal, Dublin. April – The Female Spectator (a monthly) is founded by Eliza Haywood in England, the first periodical written for women by a woman. April...
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  • Thumbnail for Chawton House
    Edgeworth (1768–1849) Sarah Fielding (1710–1768) Mary Hays (1760–1824) Eliza Haywood (1693–1756) Lucy Hutchinson (1620-1681) Elizabeth Inchbald (1753–1821)...
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  • Mandarin Fum-Hoam (Chinese Tales)) Eliza Haywood – Idalia: Or, the Unfortunate Mistress. A Novel. Written by Mrs. Eliza Haywood Anton Josef Kirchweger – Aurea...
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  • authors Eliza Haywood, Delarivier Manley, and Aphra Behn. The term was coined by poet-critic Rev. James Sterling in a dedicatory verse to Haywood's Secret...
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  • Shaftesbury, to Robert Molesworth Charles Gildon – The Laws of Poetry Eliza Haywood – Letters from a Lady of Quality to a Chevalier (translation) Montesquieu...
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  • Fantomina by Eliza Haywood; Mariamne by Augustin Nadal 1726 in literature – Jonathan Swift, Gulliver's Travels 1727 in literature – Eliza Haywood, Philidore...
    149 KB (15,875 words) - 04:15, 25 August 2024
  • Laureate of Great Britain. The first record of the actress and writer Eliza Haywood tells of her performing in Thomas Shadwell's Shakespeare adaptation...
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  • the early 18th century. In 1719, he published Robinson Crusoe. 1719: Eliza Haywood published Love in Excess, an unusually sympathetic portrayal of a fallen...
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    conventions called The Opera of Operas; or Tom Thumb the Great by playwrights Eliza Haywood and William Hatchett. This version includes a happy ending in which...
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  • Thumbnail for Kate Williams (historian)
    journals and books: "The Force of Language and the Sweets of Love: Eliza Haywood and the Erotics of Reading in Samuel Richardson's Clarissa" in Lumen...
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  • in Antiochus by John Mottley (1721) Alphonso in The Fair Captive by Eliza Haywood (1721) O'Neill in Hibernia Freed by William Phillips (1722) Flaminius...
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  • precedent for prosecutions for obscenity. Anonymous (attributed to Eliza Haywood) – Memoirs of the Court of Liliput Henry Baker – The Universe, a Poem...
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  • universalem James Grieve – translation of A. Cornelius Celsus of Medicine Eliza Haywood as "Mira" – The Wife posthumously – The Husband: in Answer to The Wife...
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    February 22 – Akdun, Chinese Manchu statesman (b. 1685) February 25 – Eliza Haywood, English actress, writer (b. 1693) March 1 – Antonio Bernacchi, Italian...
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  • Thumbnail for Henry Fielding
    Performing at the New Theatre in the Hay-Market, (1733) written by Eliza Haywood and William Hatchett, music by Thomas Arne, adapted from the Fielding...
    27 KB (3,301 words) - 00:06, 29 September 2024
  • Bignon first published in Paris, 1712, as Les Avantures d'Abdalla) Eliza Haywood – The Fair Hebrew; or, A True, but Secret History of Two Jewish Ladies...
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  • Thumbnail for Advice column
    soon mimicked in the Female Spectator, a women's magazine launched by Eliza Haywood. As Silence Dogood and other characters, Benjamin Franklin offered advice...
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  • Chris Haywood, American film and television actor and producer Eliza Haywood, (1693–1756), English writer, actress and publisher Esme Haywood, (1900–1985)...
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  • Book 2 of The Dunciad (1728), with the winner awarded the female poet Eliza Haywood and a china chamber pot to the runner-up. A pissing contest takes place...
    16 KB (2,032 words) - 18:02, 28 July 2024