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    • English novelist, journalist, traveller and Egyptologist

      • Amelia Ann Blanford Edwards (7 June 1831 – 15 April 1892), also known as Amelia B. Edwards, was an English novelist, journalist, traveller and Egyptologist.
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  2. Amelia Ann Blanford Edwards (7 June 1831 – 15 April 1892), also known as Amelia B. Edwards, was an English novelist, journalist, traveller and Egyptologist.

  3. Amelia Edwards was an English novelist, journalist, explorer, artist, and Egyptologist. She wrote everything from ghost stories to travel books. Her 19th century voyage up the Nile was not a common journey to be made by a woman in this time period.

  4. Amelia Edwards was born in 1831 in London. Her father had been an army officer before becoming a banker. Her mother was Irish. Amelia was educated at home by her mother, and showed promise as a writer at a very young age. Her first published poem appeared at age 7; her first published story, at age 12.

  5. Apr 1, 2024 · Amelia Ann Blanford Edwards was born in 1831 to Thomas and Alicia Edwards in Clerkenwell, London. The family later moved to 19 Wharton Street. A blue plaque was unveiled on this house in 2015 by English Heritage and the EES to honour Edwards’ connection.

  6. Amelia Edwards was born in London, June 7, 1831 to a middle aged couple, Alicia, an energetic and intellectual mother descended from the Walpoles, and Thomas, a retired army officer who had served under Wellington in the Peninsular War, but later in civilian life occupied a minor banking post.

  7. English author and Egyptologist. Born Amelia Ann Blandford Edwards in London, England, on June 7,1831; died of influenza in Weston-super-Mare, Somersetshire, England, on April 15, 1892; daughter of one of the duke of Wellington's officers; cousin of Matilda Barbara Betham-Edwards (1836–1919), a writer on French life; educated at home by her ...

  8. Amelia Ann Blanford Edwards was a novelist and traveller. Known as “The Godmother of Egyptology” she paved the way for influential British Egyptologists such as her protégés Flinders Petrie and Howard Carter (discoverer of Tutankhamun’s Tomb in 1922).