This article deals with a hitherto unknown and unpublished early modern English manuscript account of Montaigne's Essais by Sir Ralph Bankes (1631?–77) of Kingston Lacy in Dorset. Bankes's account covers a range of features in Montaigne's work: crucial elements of self-portraiture such as judgement, but also his attitude to women and doctors. These characteristics are analysed and compared first with Montaigne's own pronouncements about the aspects Bankes selects and secondly with two other short accounts from the seventeenth century: by Sir William Cornwallis and John Locke. The similarities and differences between the accounts provide evidence of the intellectual networks to which they belonged, only parts of which have so far received in...
peer reviewedPart of a special issue dedicated to the manuscripts of Reading Abbey. This article exa...
The printing of the poems of the early Tudor poet Stephen Hawes (c.1474–before 1529) by the London p...
William Scheves (c. 1440–1497), Archbishop of St Andrews, marked his books with a distinctive owners...
This volume tracks a Montaigne in transit all the way from the genesis and production of his Essais ...
A remarkable copy of the 1595 Essais of Montaigne at Maynooth offers a particularly full set of corr...
Montaigne’s wide and critical reading contributed enormously to his writing. that we know more about...
This article examines the book collection of Sir Francis Leicester (1674-1742) of Nether Tabley Hall...
This article tracks the reputation of Guillaume de Saluste Du Bartas's Semaines (1578, 1584 et seq.)...
This article deals with a hitherto unknown and unpublished English poem on the Theologie Naturelle o...
It is more than two decades since literary scholars first began exploring the impact of the eighteen...
This article undertakes an ‘embedded reading’ of the term ‘cannibale’ in book 1, chapter 31 of Monta...
The Tudor period saw a revolution in antiquarian histories of Britain. Their networks of transmissio...
The 1611 edition of the Essais, published in Paris and with surviving copies bearing the imprint of ...
In this article I provide a reconstruction of the dissemination of the handwritten copies of René De...
Please see page 251 of PDF for this review.To review a work which cites one's name in both acknowled...
peer reviewedPart of a special issue dedicated to the manuscripts of Reading Abbey. This article exa...
The printing of the poems of the early Tudor poet Stephen Hawes (c.1474–before 1529) by the London p...
William Scheves (c. 1440–1497), Archbishop of St Andrews, marked his books with a distinctive owners...
This volume tracks a Montaigne in transit all the way from the genesis and production of his Essais ...
A remarkable copy of the 1595 Essais of Montaigne at Maynooth offers a particularly full set of corr...
Montaigne’s wide and critical reading contributed enormously to his writing. that we know more about...
This article examines the book collection of Sir Francis Leicester (1674-1742) of Nether Tabley Hall...
This article tracks the reputation of Guillaume de Saluste Du Bartas's Semaines (1578, 1584 et seq.)...
This article deals with a hitherto unknown and unpublished English poem on the Theologie Naturelle o...
It is more than two decades since literary scholars first began exploring the impact of the eighteen...
This article undertakes an ‘embedded reading’ of the term ‘cannibale’ in book 1, chapter 31 of Monta...
The Tudor period saw a revolution in antiquarian histories of Britain. Their networks of transmissio...
The 1611 edition of the Essais, published in Paris and with surviving copies bearing the imprint of ...
In this article I provide a reconstruction of the dissemination of the handwritten copies of René De...
Please see page 251 of PDF for this review.To review a work which cites one's name in both acknowled...
peer reviewedPart of a special issue dedicated to the manuscripts of Reading Abbey. This article exa...
The printing of the poems of the early Tudor poet Stephen Hawes (c.1474–before 1529) by the London p...
William Scheves (c. 1440–1497), Archbishop of St Andrews, marked his books with a distinctive owners...