This article introduces a new fragmentary witness to Béroul’s Tristan, which was previously thought to survive only in a single copy made in the thirteenth century. This fragment appears in a sixteenth-century English bookbinding containing Josephus’s History of the Jews printed in Lyon in 1528. This article considers how the evidence of the binding and the fragment reveal new routes for the transmission of Béroul’s poem, with implications for our understanding of the circulation of French in later medieval England.</p
In this article I provide a reconstruction of the dissemination of the handwritten copies of René De...
Provides information about a fragment of the Middle English Prose Brut discovered by the author that...
Medieval manuscripts are perishable objects. Whether they have degraded over time through constant u...
This article introduces a new fragmentary witness to Béroul’s Tristan, which was previously thought ...
The Broxbourne collection in the Bodleian Library is a collection of rare binding specimens presente...
The work today known as the prose Tristan, whose earliest version was composed c. 1220-1235, was one...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityIt has been my purpose in this thesis to interpret and analyze the m...
This article examines an overlooked fifteenth-century document which attacks and refutes 35 extracts...
This article discusses the presentation copies of two sixteenth-century works, Martin Bucer’s De reg...
peer reviewedPart of a special issue dedicated to the manuscripts of Reading Abbey. This article exa...
The purpose of the following study has been to consider the consecutive interpretations of the Trist...
International audienceFrom the end of the 16th century to the beginning of the 18th century, over th...
This article describes the context and development of A Social Edition of the Devonshire Manuscript,...
This article focuses on medieval improvisation and intervention in the production of Oxford, Bodleia...
In this essay Ryan Perry employs a fragment of the Middle English Prose Brut, recently discovered in...
In this article I provide a reconstruction of the dissemination of the handwritten copies of René De...
Provides information about a fragment of the Middle English Prose Brut discovered by the author that...
Medieval manuscripts are perishable objects. Whether they have degraded over time through constant u...
This article introduces a new fragmentary witness to Béroul’s Tristan, which was previously thought ...
The Broxbourne collection in the Bodleian Library is a collection of rare binding specimens presente...
The work today known as the prose Tristan, whose earliest version was composed c. 1220-1235, was one...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityIt has been my purpose in this thesis to interpret and analyze the m...
This article examines an overlooked fifteenth-century document which attacks and refutes 35 extracts...
This article discusses the presentation copies of two sixteenth-century works, Martin Bucer’s De reg...
peer reviewedPart of a special issue dedicated to the manuscripts of Reading Abbey. This article exa...
The purpose of the following study has been to consider the consecutive interpretations of the Trist...
International audienceFrom the end of the 16th century to the beginning of the 18th century, over th...
This article describes the context and development of A Social Edition of the Devonshire Manuscript,...
This article focuses on medieval improvisation and intervention in the production of Oxford, Bodleia...
In this essay Ryan Perry employs a fragment of the Middle English Prose Brut, recently discovered in...
In this article I provide a reconstruction of the dissemination of the handwritten copies of René De...
Provides information about a fragment of the Middle English Prose Brut discovered by the author that...
Medieval manuscripts are perishable objects. Whether they have degraded over time through constant u...