Edward Faragher | |
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![]() Edward Faragher outside his home in Cregneash | |
Native name | Ned Beg Hom Ruy |
Born | 1831 Cregneash, Isle of Man |
Died | 5 June 1908 Blackwell Colliery, near Alfreton, Derbyshire, England | (aged 76–77)
Occupation | Fisherman |
Nationality | Manx |
Period | Victorian, Edwardian |
Genre | Poetry, folklore, memoir |
Subject | Manx legends |
Edward Faragher (1831–1908), also known as (Manx: Ned Beg Hom Ruy),[1] was a Manx language poet, folklorist, and cultural guardian. He is considered to be the last important first language writer of Manx literature and perhaps the most important guardian of Manx culture during a time when it was most under threat. Celticist Charles Roeder wrote that Faragher had "done great services to Manx folklore, and it is due to him that at this late period an immense amount of valuable Manx legends have been preserved, for which indeed the Isle of Man must ever be under gratitude to him."[2]
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