As part of an AHRC-funded interdisciplinary research project, ‘Identification of the Scribes Responsible for Copying Major Works of Middle English Literature’, this thesis re-examines the late medieval poet Thomas Hoccleve in the context of his career as a clerk of the Privy Seal and the history of the late medieval English government administration. Through identification of Hoccleve’s handwriting, it has been possible to search for all the extant documents produced by him for that office now in the National Archives. The evidence drawn from these documents is used to contribute towards a more complete chronology of the poet’s life, and the circumstances under which his poetry was written. Firstly, Hoccleve is used as a case study through ...
This article reconsiders the biographical and literary identities of the Privy Seal clerk and poet T...
The explosive growth of Europe’s literary culture in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries was unpr...
International audienceThomas Hoccleve (c. 1367-1426) was at the same time a scribe of the Privy Seal...
As part of an AHRC-funded interdisciplinary research project, ‘Identification of the Scribes Respons...
Although most scholars of medieval English palaeography are familiar with the hand of the Privy Seal...
Although most scholars of medieval English palaeography are familiar with the hand of the Privy Seal...
Although most scholars of medieval English palaeography are familiar with the hand of the Privy Seal...
Although most scholars of medieval English palaeography are familiar with the hand of the Privy Seal...
Although most scholars of medieval English palaeography are familiar with the hand of the Privy Seal...
At some time between 1422 and 1426, Thomas Hoccleve copied nineteen of his poems into a manuscript n...
Thomas Hoccleve, the early fifteenth-century London poet who first promoted the notion that Chaucer ...
This article reconsiders the biographical and literary identities of the Privy Seal clerk and poet T...
Although most scholars of medieval English palaeography are familiar with the hand of the Privy Seal...
Although most scholars of medieval English palaeography are familiar with the hand of the Privy Seal...
Although most scholars of medieval English palaeography are familiar with the hand of the Privy Seal...
This article reconsiders the biographical and literary identities of the Privy Seal clerk and poet T...
The explosive growth of Europe’s literary culture in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries was unpr...
International audienceThomas Hoccleve (c. 1367-1426) was at the same time a scribe of the Privy Seal...
As part of an AHRC-funded interdisciplinary research project, ‘Identification of the Scribes Respons...
Although most scholars of medieval English palaeography are familiar with the hand of the Privy Seal...
Although most scholars of medieval English palaeography are familiar with the hand of the Privy Seal...
Although most scholars of medieval English palaeography are familiar with the hand of the Privy Seal...
Although most scholars of medieval English palaeography are familiar with the hand of the Privy Seal...
Although most scholars of medieval English palaeography are familiar with the hand of the Privy Seal...
At some time between 1422 and 1426, Thomas Hoccleve copied nineteen of his poems into a manuscript n...
Thomas Hoccleve, the early fifteenth-century London poet who first promoted the notion that Chaucer ...
This article reconsiders the biographical and literary identities of the Privy Seal clerk and poet T...
Although most scholars of medieval English palaeography are familiar with the hand of the Privy Seal...
Although most scholars of medieval English palaeography are familiar with the hand of the Privy Seal...
Although most scholars of medieval English palaeography are familiar with the hand of the Privy Seal...
This article reconsiders the biographical and literary identities of the Privy Seal clerk and poet T...
The explosive growth of Europe’s literary culture in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries was unpr...
International audienceThomas Hoccleve (c. 1367-1426) was at the same time a scribe of the Privy Seal...