Edward Hannes

[1] Hannes died on 22 July 1710, in the parish of St Anne's, Westminster, and was buried beside his wife at Shillingford, Berkshire, where there was a monument to his memory.

[1] Hannes contributed to the collections of Oxford poems on the death of Charles II in 1685, and on William III's return from Ireland in 1690 (reprinted in Musarum Anglicanarum Analecta).

In 1688, he assisted William King on Reflections on Mr. Varillas his history of Heresy, Book 1, Tome 1, as far as relates to English Matters, more especially those of Wicliff.

[1] Hannes attended William, Duke of Gloucester, at his death on 30 July 1700, and published an account of the dissection of the body.

For this account, he was ridiculed in a satirical poem entitled Doctor Hannes dissected in a familiar epistle by way of Nosce Teipsum, London, 1700.