This article presents a reassessment of the evidence provided by the extant medieval Irish medical manuscripts for ritualized healing charms, focusing on a group of blood-staunching incantations preserved in a substantial, but hitherto largely unstudied, medical remedy book written primarily by the sixteenth-century Irish medical scribe Conla Mac an Leagha (fl. 1496–1509). It is argued that some of the charms in question may have been composed in the early medieval period, and reflect currents of intellectual exchange between ecclesiastical centers in Ireland and southern England, especially Canterbury, prior to the twelfth century. The apparently obscure lexical items in one of these blood-staunching charms may point to the partici...
This contribution will examine some aspects of an unpublished Irish medical compendium that consists...
This is an essay to open a discussion of medieval Latin charms as a genre rooted in oral tradition. ...
The term loch tuile is not recorded in published lexicographical sources for the Irish language, bu...
This article presents a reassessment of the evidence provided by the extant medieval Irish medical ...
. This article presents an edition and translation of an Irish didactic poem found in a large compil...
This is a study of two groups of Anglo-Saxon charms: six charms for remedying theft; and six charms ...
This article investigates the conflicted cultural identity of those Irish-speaking antiquarians work...
In the history of Anglo-Saxon scholarship considerable effort has been expended to extricate the pag...
This is an essay to open a discussion of medieval Latin charms as a genre rooted in oral tradition. ...
Because they are so deeply rooted in their performance context, the Old English charms require us to...
This thesis contextualises the Old English Metrical Charms, a selection of twelve alliterative texts...
Manuscript Ferguson MS 147, a fifteenth-century volume written in Middle English and housed in Glasg...
After the Norman Conquest, many of the charms that had circulated in Anglo-Saxon England disappeared...
By Véronique Soreau Charms are incantations or magic spells, chanted, recited, or written. Used to c...
This article is the first full examination of the Irish translation of the popular and influential m...
This contribution will examine some aspects of an unpublished Irish medical compendium that consists...
This is an essay to open a discussion of medieval Latin charms as a genre rooted in oral tradition. ...
The term loch tuile is not recorded in published lexicographical sources for the Irish language, bu...
This article presents a reassessment of the evidence provided by the extant medieval Irish medical ...
. This article presents an edition and translation of an Irish didactic poem found in a large compil...
This is a study of two groups of Anglo-Saxon charms: six charms for remedying theft; and six charms ...
This article investigates the conflicted cultural identity of those Irish-speaking antiquarians work...
In the history of Anglo-Saxon scholarship considerable effort has been expended to extricate the pag...
This is an essay to open a discussion of medieval Latin charms as a genre rooted in oral tradition. ...
Because they are so deeply rooted in their performance context, the Old English charms require us to...
This thesis contextualises the Old English Metrical Charms, a selection of twelve alliterative texts...
Manuscript Ferguson MS 147, a fifteenth-century volume written in Middle English and housed in Glasg...
After the Norman Conquest, many of the charms that had circulated in Anglo-Saxon England disappeared...
By Véronique Soreau Charms are incantations or magic spells, chanted, recited, or written. Used to c...
This article is the first full examination of the Irish translation of the popular and influential m...
This contribution will examine some aspects of an unpublished Irish medical compendium that consists...
This is an essay to open a discussion of medieval Latin charms as a genre rooted in oral tradition. ...
The term loch tuile is not recorded in published lexicographical sources for the Irish language, bu...