The manuscript London, Lambeth Palace 6, contains the Middle English prose Brut, a text which benefited from a great popularity throughout the fifteenth century. It was copied by an English scribe and richly illuminated by the Master of Edward IV and his assistants at Bruges around 1480. This article studies the representation and integration of the reign of Arthur in the historical framework of the Brut or Chronicles of England, including its fictional aspects: Arthur emerges as a historical character but also as a chivalric and mythical figure. The analysis covers the miniatures ranging from the plot leading to the conception of Arthur to the end of his reign (fols. 36-66). The textual and iconographic choices of the prose Bruts are highl...
Book summary: This volume offers newly translated texts that exemplify the two most important tradit...
BnF fr. 95 is a late 13th century manuscript containing Arthurian romances and other fictional and d...
The proto-romance features of the work of Geoffrey of Monmouth and early Anglo-Norman vernacular his...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the relationship between chronicl...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the relationship between chronicl...
Arthur of Lyttel Brytayne. Artus de Bretagne, roman arthurien, mais aussi roman courtois et d'aventu...
The ms. Paris, BnF, fr. 344 was produced in Lorraine at the end of the thirteenth century and contai...
Geoffrey of Monmouth (c.1095-1155 CE) is one of the most influential writers on King Arthur. Prior t...
This dissertation is a diachronic study of when and how the first five Plantagenet kings of England ...
The Arthurian myth is one of the most fundamental and abiding ones of Western culture. The legend of...
Although today King Arthur is widely perceived as a figure of British origin, likely due in part to ...
Even if Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia regum Britanniae has been the subject of much attention by p...
Artus de Bretagne is a French Arthurian prose romance: its hero, Arthur, son of the Duke of Brittany...
Artus de Bretagne is a French Arthurian prose romance: its hero, Arthur, son of the Duke of Brittany...
Even if Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia regum Britanniae has been the subject of much attention by p...
Book summary: This volume offers newly translated texts that exemplify the two most important tradit...
BnF fr. 95 is a late 13th century manuscript containing Arthurian romances and other fictional and d...
The proto-romance features of the work of Geoffrey of Monmouth and early Anglo-Norman vernacular his...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the relationship between chronicl...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the relationship between chronicl...
Arthur of Lyttel Brytayne. Artus de Bretagne, roman arthurien, mais aussi roman courtois et d'aventu...
The ms. Paris, BnF, fr. 344 was produced in Lorraine at the end of the thirteenth century and contai...
Geoffrey of Monmouth (c.1095-1155 CE) is one of the most influential writers on King Arthur. Prior t...
This dissertation is a diachronic study of when and how the first five Plantagenet kings of England ...
The Arthurian myth is one of the most fundamental and abiding ones of Western culture. The legend of...
Although today King Arthur is widely perceived as a figure of British origin, likely due in part to ...
Even if Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia regum Britanniae has been the subject of much attention by p...
Artus de Bretagne is a French Arthurian prose romance: its hero, Arthur, son of the Duke of Brittany...
Artus de Bretagne is a French Arthurian prose romance: its hero, Arthur, son of the Duke of Brittany...
Even if Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia regum Britanniae has been the subject of much attention by p...
Book summary: This volume offers newly translated texts that exemplify the two most important tradit...
BnF fr. 95 is a late 13th century manuscript containing Arthurian romances and other fictional and d...
The proto-romance features of the work of Geoffrey of Monmouth and early Anglo-Norman vernacular his...