As the recent bloom of literary scholarship around manuscripts shows, the longstanding desire to correct and emend their lessons has ceded to an appreciation of what we can learn about medieval reading and writing practices from them. This paper addresses the question of genre through three apparently disparate manuscripts associated with the Augustinian canons at Oxford in the early thirteenth century. United by 1300 into a single codex that was later bound into the larger Edwardes manuscript, Gui de Warewic, La Chanson de Guillaume, and the Pseudo-Turpin Chronicle share a scribe, a lettrine artist, and a concern with acceptable Christian conduct that leads to the suggestion that the manuscript functioned as a reference codex of exemplary ...
International audienceThis paper examines the gathering of news in the light of documents collected ...
Manuscripts underpin the study of the Middle Ages, but the numbers which survive are thought to be a...
The twenty-first canon, Omnis utriusque sexus, of the Fourth Lateran Council made annual confession ...
As the recent bloom of literary scholarship around manuscripts shows, the longstanding desire to cor...
During the episcopate of St Wulfstan of Worcester (1062-1095) a large number of books, many in Engli...
The Auchinleck Manuscript, compiled in the early fourteenth century, is one of the first manuscripts...
Only one liturgical manuscript from Oseney Abbey survives, a compendium bound in the fifteenth centu...
The aim of this paper is to reorganize English carol containing manuscripts and printed books that w...
Smith Rebecca, The Augustinian canons in England and their writings on pastoral care, c. 1150-1300, ...
During Leofric’s episcopacy, there was an organized programme of manuscript copying in Exeter, for w...
Pastoral manuals are designed as practical aids to the proper execution of the cura animarum and add...
This book investigates how medieval abbeys in the Southern Low Countries used hagiographical manuscr...
This study advances and adds detail to our history of the reading of verse in England c.1350–1500. S...
Church leaders have always been seen as shepherds, expected to feed their flock with teaching, to gu...
Royal MS. 8 A. XVIII is an early fifteenth-century Cistercian manuscript of Oxford origin. A scholar...
International audienceThis paper examines the gathering of news in the light of documents collected ...
Manuscripts underpin the study of the Middle Ages, but the numbers which survive are thought to be a...
The twenty-first canon, Omnis utriusque sexus, of the Fourth Lateran Council made annual confession ...
As the recent bloom of literary scholarship around manuscripts shows, the longstanding desire to cor...
During the episcopate of St Wulfstan of Worcester (1062-1095) a large number of books, many in Engli...
The Auchinleck Manuscript, compiled in the early fourteenth century, is one of the first manuscripts...
Only one liturgical manuscript from Oseney Abbey survives, a compendium bound in the fifteenth centu...
The aim of this paper is to reorganize English carol containing manuscripts and printed books that w...
Smith Rebecca, The Augustinian canons in England and their writings on pastoral care, c. 1150-1300, ...
During Leofric’s episcopacy, there was an organized programme of manuscript copying in Exeter, for w...
Pastoral manuals are designed as practical aids to the proper execution of the cura animarum and add...
This book investigates how medieval abbeys in the Southern Low Countries used hagiographical manuscr...
This study advances and adds detail to our history of the reading of verse in England c.1350–1500. S...
Church leaders have always been seen as shepherds, expected to feed their flock with teaching, to gu...
Royal MS. 8 A. XVIII is an early fifteenth-century Cistercian manuscript of Oxford origin. A scholar...
International audienceThis paper examines the gathering of news in the light of documents collected ...
Manuscripts underpin the study of the Middle Ages, but the numbers which survive are thought to be a...
The twenty-first canon, Omnis utriusque sexus, of the Fourth Lateran Council made annual confession ...