found: Pro Cantione Antiqua. Liebe, Lust und Frömmigkeit [SR] p1975:label (Edmund Turges)
found: Turges, E. Two secular trios from the Fairfax book, c1978:t.p. (Turges, c. 1440-1502)
found: Grove music online, July 31, 2015(Turges, Edmund; b. ca. 1450; English composer; admitted to the Fraternity of St. Nicholas, the London parish clerks' company, between 1468 and 1470; his later career is obscure, although he was probably active in circles close to the court of Henry VII; possibly the "Sturges" (a name commonly abbreviated to Turges in non-musical sources) employed as a chaplain at New College, Oxford, in 1507-8; works include one surviving Magnificat (3 are lost), two versions of Gaude flore virginali (4- and 5-part, respectively), and four part-songs)
found: Wikipedia, July 31, 2015(Edmund Turges; c. 1450-1500; thought to be also Edmund Sturges (fl. 1507-1508); English Renaissance era composer from Petworth; several of his works are preserved in the Eton choirbook; he also has a Magnificat extant in the Caius choirbook, and compositions in the Fayrfax boke; a Kyrie and Gloria are ascribed to Sturges in the Ritson manuscript)