The Ruthwell Cross is an Anglo-Saxon (or more properly Northumbrian) stone sculpture, dating from the eighth (or perhaps seventh) century, and now housed in Ruthwell parish church in Dumfriesshire, although it may have once stood outside. Runic inscriptions on the cross record a poetic text, sometimes known as 'The Ruthwell Crucifixion Poem', some lines of which narrate the story of Christ's crucifixion from the point of view of the cross. Parts of this text share similarities with a longer poem on the same subject, known as the Dream of the Rood, and preserved in a tenth-century Anglo-Saxon codex known as the Vercelli Book. Literary critics often treat the Ruthwell text as it is an excerpt from the Dream of the Rood, although this is a con...
Kingston upon Thames, or Cyninges-tun as it was known in Saxon times, plays an important part in Ang...
These notes describe a project carried out at the Manchester Museum in the University of Manchester ...
The remains of the H igh Cross at Auckland St. Andrews are well-known, but little documented. Rosema...
The Dream of the Rood constitutes one of the most intriguing products of Old English literature, bot...
The first decades following a country’s conversion to Christianity are sometimes marked by experimen...
In his preface to his edition of the Old English poem “The Dream of the Cross, ” more often called “...
The main aim of this article is to present the Old English poem The Dream of the Rood as a literary ...
A verse translation of the Old English poem 'The Dream of the Rood' with an introduction by Robert C...
A poem inspired by the Anglo-Saxon church of St Andrew at Greensted in Essex, parts of which are est...
Long before Christian missionaries arrived in England in the 7th century, the pagan population recog...
Dissertation Abstract: The medieval wood-of-the-cross legends trace the history of the wood of...
The poem of St Erkenwald and his encounter with the body of a pagan judge preserved in a tomb under...
In this paper, the ‘Ancestors of Christ panel’ of the southern Sandbach cross, each of whose figures...
Crosses made in metal, paint, or stone stand at a singular intersection of past, present and future ...
This paper argues Exeter Book Riddle 21, The Dream of the Rood, and the Æcerbot Charm make use of a ...
Kingston upon Thames, or Cyninges-tun as it was known in Saxon times, plays an important part in Ang...
These notes describe a project carried out at the Manchester Museum in the University of Manchester ...
The remains of the H igh Cross at Auckland St. Andrews are well-known, but little documented. Rosema...
The Dream of the Rood constitutes one of the most intriguing products of Old English literature, bot...
The first decades following a country’s conversion to Christianity are sometimes marked by experimen...
In his preface to his edition of the Old English poem “The Dream of the Cross, ” more often called “...
The main aim of this article is to present the Old English poem The Dream of the Rood as a literary ...
A verse translation of the Old English poem 'The Dream of the Rood' with an introduction by Robert C...
A poem inspired by the Anglo-Saxon church of St Andrew at Greensted in Essex, parts of which are est...
Long before Christian missionaries arrived in England in the 7th century, the pagan population recog...
Dissertation Abstract: The medieval wood-of-the-cross legends trace the history of the wood of...
The poem of St Erkenwald and his encounter with the body of a pagan judge preserved in a tomb under...
In this paper, the ‘Ancestors of Christ panel’ of the southern Sandbach cross, each of whose figures...
Crosses made in metal, paint, or stone stand at a singular intersection of past, present and future ...
This paper argues Exeter Book Riddle 21, The Dream of the Rood, and the Æcerbot Charm make use of a ...
Kingston upon Thames, or Cyninges-tun as it was known in Saxon times, plays an important part in Ang...
These notes describe a project carried out at the Manchester Museum in the University of Manchester ...
The remains of the H igh Cross at Auckland St. Andrews are well-known, but little documented. Rosema...