This dissertation argues that kings were central to the formation of vernacular literary culture in Anglo-Saxon England. Kings typically served in early medieval textual culture as the recipients of clerical instruction, not as authors or educators in their own right. They were enjoined to rule wisely: to listen to advice and issue wise decrees. This limited notion of kingship, however, proved inadequate to the depiction of royal wisdom as it operated in history. In the course of exploring the distant past, when kings had no clerics to advise them, or the ongoing scenario of royal lawmaking, Anglo-Saxon authors constructed royal personae that could reflect wisely on their own actions and offer wisdom to others. These authors adapted instruc...
This article argues that the Anglo-Saxon intellectual Bede (d. 735) saw kingship as a ‘secular’ offi...
This dissertation examines representations of speech in narrative poetry in English between 1377 and...
In the second half of the fourteenth century, petitioners hoping to secure royal grace began address...
This dissertation explores the intersection of Anglo-Saxon ethics and emotion in Old English literat...
This dissertation challenges the traditional notions of the Anglo-Normans as rapacious colonizers of...
The present thesis focuses on the importance of the written word as a ruling device of the Anglo- Sa...
This thesis is a study in how the political culture of the reign of Henry III was conditioned by its...
This dissertation examines three crucial texts written and translated from Latin into Old English be...
My dissertation offers a case study on the relationship between language and power during a period w...
This dissertation analyzes four important historiographical texts produced during the Angevin period...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines three dramatic monologues found in Old ...
For some time now, scholars have mined the homiletic writings of Ælfric of Eynsham in order to gain ...
This dissertation discusses the complicated relationship (known as the comitatus) of kings and follo...
This dissertation, a study in political hermeneutics, claims the practice of biblical interpretation...
This thesis explores the formation of a state in Anglo-Saxon England from the period of Roman withdr...
This article argues that the Anglo-Saxon intellectual Bede (d. 735) saw kingship as a ‘secular’ offi...
This dissertation examines representations of speech in narrative poetry in English between 1377 and...
In the second half of the fourteenth century, petitioners hoping to secure royal grace began address...
This dissertation explores the intersection of Anglo-Saxon ethics and emotion in Old English literat...
This dissertation challenges the traditional notions of the Anglo-Normans as rapacious colonizers of...
The present thesis focuses on the importance of the written word as a ruling device of the Anglo- Sa...
This thesis is a study in how the political culture of the reign of Henry III was conditioned by its...
This dissertation examines three crucial texts written and translated from Latin into Old English be...
My dissertation offers a case study on the relationship between language and power during a period w...
This dissertation analyzes four important historiographical texts produced during the Angevin period...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines three dramatic monologues found in Old ...
For some time now, scholars have mined the homiletic writings of Ælfric of Eynsham in order to gain ...
This dissertation discusses the complicated relationship (known as the comitatus) of kings and follo...
This dissertation, a study in political hermeneutics, claims the practice of biblical interpretation...
This thesis explores the formation of a state in Anglo-Saxon England from the period of Roman withdr...
This article argues that the Anglo-Saxon intellectual Bede (d. 735) saw kingship as a ‘secular’ offi...
This dissertation examines representations of speech in narrative poetry in English between 1377 and...
In the second half of the fourteenth century, petitioners hoping to secure royal grace began address...