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The Czech chivalric romances 'Vevoda Arnost' and 'Lavryn' in their literary contextThomas, A. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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The mirror and the reader : aspects of Julio Cortazar's convergent textCocks, B. J. January 1985 (has links)
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Love, prowess, and society in Old French courtly verse romance (1165-1210)Baird, J. W. R. January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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A commentary on Der Meide Kranz by Heinrich von MuegelnVolfing, Annette Marianne January 1993 (has links)
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‘Þys tale rymeth hou men in senne beþ’ : a study of vernacular verse pastoralia for the English laity c.1240 - c.1330Sibson, Carol Anne January 2013 (has links)
The Fourth Lateran Council of 1215 promoted regular and effective religious instruction for the parish laity. This was facilitated by the development of preaching and instructional texts – works known as pastoralia – which proliferated throughout Europe. This dissertation explores the phenomenon of vernacular pastoralia written in rhymed verse, works intended for oral performance to a lay audience. My focus is on the work of four writers of sacramental instruction in Anglo-Norman and Middle English. The earliest text considered is the Anglo-Norman Corset, written circa 1240-50 by Robert the Chaplain. The other three authors were more or less contemporary, all writing in the late-thirteenth or early-fourteenth centuries. I examine three penitential poems by the Franciscan friar, Nicholas Bozon: Pus ke homme deit morir, Tretys de la Passion and Le char d’Orgueil, and then Handlyng Synne by the Gilbertine, Robert Mannyng. I finally consider the religious poems of William of Shoreham, a vicar in rural Kent, concentrating on De septem sacramentis and On the Trinity, Creation, the Existence of Evil, Devils, Adam and Eve. While all these writers confronted the challenges of providing religious instruction for the laity, their efforts also reflected a concern with social issues and an awareness of the literary nature of their verse enterprises. The texts frequently employed poetic or fictive devices found in popular literary genres and, whilst these illuminated and entertained listeners, they sometimes rendered the teaching obscure. The meeting of sacramental exposition, social discourse and literary invention resulted in complex textual interplay and tension, as well as in memorable formulations of faith. This dissertation considers the content of verse pastoralia in their historical context and aims to assess how the texts may have been received and understood by parishioners in thirteenth- and fourteenth-century England.
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The early development of the illustrated Book of Hours in England c. 1240-1350Baker, C. M. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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High status sites, kingship and state formation in post-Roman western Britain, AD 400-700Dark, K. R. January 1989 (has links)
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The making of B.L. Harley Mss. 2506 and 603Noel, William Gerard January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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'Vices and Virtues' : re-edited from British Library MS Stowe 34Crawford, Judith M. January 1987 (has links)
'Vices and Virtues' is an early Middle English homiletic dialogue between Reason, the Soul and the Body, originally edited by Ferdinand Holthausen in 1888, with Notes and Glossary published in 1921. This edition contains an Introduction, the re-edited Text, Notes on the text, a full etymological Glossary, and a Bibliography of works cited or referred to in the preparation of the edition. The Introduction is concerned principally with an analysis of the language of 'Vices and Virtues', and suggests a provenance of London, or the areas of Essex or Middlesex just to the north of London, and a date of c. 1200. It also contains a general introduction to the work and the background against which it is presumed to have been written, a description of the MS and notes on the characteristics of the scribes who worked on it, and brief surveys of the syntax, style and structure of the work, together with a statement of editorial principles. The Notes to the text are concerned principally with the language, both grammar and vocabulary, and with sources and parallels in Patristic writings and other medieval texts.
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The administration of the United Provinces of Agra & Oudh under Sir William Malcolm Hailey (1928-1934)Misra, Anil Kumar January 1976 (has links)
United Provinces of Agra
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