This study analyses two Old English formulae gret freodlice (‘greets in a friendly manner’) and ic cyðe eow þæt (‘I make it known to you that’), which form a salutation–notification template in a document type called writs. It connects the emergence of this formulaic set to previous oral traditions of delivering news and messages, and to their reflection in dictation practices from at least the time of King Alfred. Their later routinisation and standardisation is seen as a factor brought about by the centralised production of royal writs and their subsequent adoption as templates in monastic scriptoria across the country. These templates continue to be recycled in the early Middle English period both in English and in Latin writs, ultimatel...
The paper is a case study investigating the nominal and adjectival morphology in the English text o...
The basis for the study of testamentary procedure in Anglo-Saxon England is the detailed analysis of...
Includes bibliographical references and index.Orality and literacy in Frankish society -- An uneasy ...
This study analyses two Old English formulae gret freodlice (‘greets in a friendly manner’) and ic c...
It is well known that the Anglo-Saxons were some of the earliest and most prolific users of a writte...
International audienceA new, distinct script, English Vernacular minuscule, emerged in the 990s, use...
Often noted within modern editions of Anglo-Saxon charters but rarely discussed in depth, endorsemen...
This paper explores linguistic and sociolinguistic mechanisms that facilitated collaboration bet...
This thesis examines the production of written law in Anglo-Saxon England by asking some basic quest...
This paper explores linguistic and sociolinguistic mechanisms that facilitated collaboration between...
In medieval legal transactions the use of the written word was only one of many ways of conducting b...
This thesis focuses on the use of maledictory sanction clauses to protect charters, whether written ...
This thesis is a study in how the political culture of the reign of Henry III was conditioned by its...
As Samuels says, the 'regionally mixed spelling systems' in the Paston Letters are attributed to the...
This paper seeks to develop a digital diplomatic approach for reducing medieval charters’ documentar...
The paper is a case study investigating the nominal and adjectival morphology in the English text o...
The basis for the study of testamentary procedure in Anglo-Saxon England is the detailed analysis of...
Includes bibliographical references and index.Orality and literacy in Frankish society -- An uneasy ...
This study analyses two Old English formulae gret freodlice (‘greets in a friendly manner’) and ic c...
It is well known that the Anglo-Saxons were some of the earliest and most prolific users of a writte...
International audienceA new, distinct script, English Vernacular minuscule, emerged in the 990s, use...
Often noted within modern editions of Anglo-Saxon charters but rarely discussed in depth, endorsemen...
This paper explores linguistic and sociolinguistic mechanisms that facilitated collaboration bet...
This thesis examines the production of written law in Anglo-Saxon England by asking some basic quest...
This paper explores linguistic and sociolinguistic mechanisms that facilitated collaboration between...
In medieval legal transactions the use of the written word was only one of many ways of conducting b...
This thesis focuses on the use of maledictory sanction clauses to protect charters, whether written ...
This thesis is a study in how the political culture of the reign of Henry III was conditioned by its...
As Samuels says, the 'regionally mixed spelling systems' in the Paston Letters are attributed to the...
This paper seeks to develop a digital diplomatic approach for reducing medieval charters’ documentar...
The paper is a case study investigating the nominal and adjectival morphology in the English text o...
The basis for the study of testamentary procedure in Anglo-Saxon England is the detailed analysis of...
Includes bibliographical references and index.Orality and literacy in Frankish society -- An uneasy ...