This thesis is an edition of medical texts in London, British Library Sloane 3160, f. 151r-v and ff. 166r-170v, copied by a single scribe here referred to as Scribe M. The manuscript has been dated to the second half of the fifteenth century and consists of religious and medical texts. The medical texts produced by scribe M are of a practical kind (mainly recipes, diagnostics and charms), and they are written in a very distinctive Northwest Midland dialect. No study has thus far been published of these interesting texts, which contain language written in letter-substitution codes in both English and Latin, as well as a range of charm formulae. They present a linguistically complex and layered text that provides insight into the literacy ski...
Recipe books are frequently encountered in Early Modern English scientific writing. They are of para...
London, Wellcome Library, MS 411 is a codex in one volume which houses a collection of practical tre...
This thesis explores the validity of seeing late medieval vernacular remedies as more than just util...
This thesis is an edition based on the study of a fifteenth-century Middle English manuscript contai...
By analysing the codicology and other features of a group of fifteenth-century medical manuscripts, ...
Master's thesis in LiteracyThis thesis is an edition based on the study of a fifteenth-century Middl...
This thesis is an edition of the English texts in British Library MS Sloane 3285, an important fifte...
This volume is the first detailed, book-length study of Middle English medical recipes in their lite...
In late medieval England learned medicine leapt the walls of universities and became available to pe...
Master's thesis in Literacy studiesThis thesis consists of an edition of an alchemical text found in...
Master's thesis in Literacy studiesThis thesis is an edition of medical texts in London, British Lib...
This dissertation is a textual analysis of a fifteenth-century medical recipe book, Glasgow Universi...
This thesis is a presentation of ‘A Leche’, a deontological text in Cambridge, Gonville and Caius Co...
This paper seeks to explore the similarities between different unidentified texts, chiefly London, W...
MS Sloane 3160 is a miscellaneous volume containing one copy of the herbal Agnus Castus in Middle En...
Recipe books are frequently encountered in Early Modern English scientific writing. They are of para...
London, Wellcome Library, MS 411 is a codex in one volume which houses a collection of practical tre...
This thesis explores the validity of seeing late medieval vernacular remedies as more than just util...
This thesis is an edition based on the study of a fifteenth-century Middle English manuscript contai...
By analysing the codicology and other features of a group of fifteenth-century medical manuscripts, ...
Master's thesis in LiteracyThis thesis is an edition based on the study of a fifteenth-century Middl...
This thesis is an edition of the English texts in British Library MS Sloane 3285, an important fifte...
This volume is the first detailed, book-length study of Middle English medical recipes in their lite...
In late medieval England learned medicine leapt the walls of universities and became available to pe...
Master's thesis in Literacy studiesThis thesis consists of an edition of an alchemical text found in...
Master's thesis in Literacy studiesThis thesis is an edition of medical texts in London, British Lib...
This dissertation is a textual analysis of a fifteenth-century medical recipe book, Glasgow Universi...
This thesis is a presentation of ‘A Leche’, a deontological text in Cambridge, Gonville and Caius Co...
This paper seeks to explore the similarities between different unidentified texts, chiefly London, W...
MS Sloane 3160 is a miscellaneous volume containing one copy of the herbal Agnus Castus in Middle En...
Recipe books are frequently encountered in Early Modern English scientific writing. They are of para...
London, Wellcome Library, MS 411 is a codex in one volume which houses a collection of practical tre...
This thesis explores the validity of seeing late medieval vernacular remedies as more than just util...