St Margaret of Antioch was one of the most popular female saints in medieval England and a considerable number of both Latin and vernacular versions of her legend originated or circulated in England from the Old English Martyrology up to Caxton\u2019s Golden Legend. The most salient feature of St Margaret\u2019s life has been pinpointed in the scene in which the imprisoned saint has two subsequent encounters with the devil, first in the shape of a dragon, secondly in the shape of a small black demon. This paper will focus on the crucial scene of the dragon\u2019s swallowing of the saint in Seinte Margarete, an early 13th-century alliterative prose life from the Katherine Group. Seinte Margarete re-enacts the familiar narrative of the virgin...
This thesis is concerned with the didactic function of fourteenth- and fifteenth-century vernacular ...
Research into how women are portrayed in Old English poetry is essential to gain more insight into t...
This thesis explores the legendary account of the mystic marriage of St Katherine in medieval Englan...
This essay deals with the rendition of the most sensational scene of St Margaret’s legend – the one ...
This work examines the literary English traditions of four Virgin Martyrs: Agatha of Catania, Agnes...
grantor: University of TorontoThe thesis presents a holistic overview of the dramatic, did...
Latin version of the life of St. Margaret (ms. Harley 2801): p. [127]-142.Two Middle English texts p...
This thesis looks at the role and function of the dragon in the saint's encounter with the monster i...
"Illustrative readings from the Latin text (Camb.) Mm. IV.6": p. 48-53.In rhymed verse, from Cambri...
This research will examine the origins of the cult of Saint George in late medieval England, and wil...
Dating back to the late antique period, the martyrdom of St. Ursula and the eleven thousand virgins ...
Contrary to what one might think, the dragon appears rather frequently to characterise ...
This project, which is a combination of historical research, literary analysis, and creative writing...
This doctoral dissertation aims at describing the representation of holy harlots (Mary Magdalene, Ma...
Late medieval devotional practice adapted the Roman martyr\u27s standard—in which physical suffering...
This thesis is concerned with the didactic function of fourteenth- and fifteenth-century vernacular ...
Research into how women are portrayed in Old English poetry is essential to gain more insight into t...
This thesis explores the legendary account of the mystic marriage of St Katherine in medieval Englan...
This essay deals with the rendition of the most sensational scene of St Margaret’s legend – the one ...
This work examines the literary English traditions of four Virgin Martyrs: Agatha of Catania, Agnes...
grantor: University of TorontoThe thesis presents a holistic overview of the dramatic, did...
Latin version of the life of St. Margaret (ms. Harley 2801): p. [127]-142.Two Middle English texts p...
This thesis looks at the role and function of the dragon in the saint's encounter with the monster i...
"Illustrative readings from the Latin text (Camb.) Mm. IV.6": p. 48-53.In rhymed verse, from Cambri...
This research will examine the origins of the cult of Saint George in late medieval England, and wil...
Dating back to the late antique period, the martyrdom of St. Ursula and the eleven thousand virgins ...
Contrary to what one might think, the dragon appears rather frequently to characterise ...
This project, which is a combination of historical research, literary analysis, and creative writing...
This doctoral dissertation aims at describing the representation of holy harlots (Mary Magdalene, Ma...
Late medieval devotional practice adapted the Roman martyr\u27s standard—in which physical suffering...
This thesis is concerned with the didactic function of fourteenth- and fifteenth-century vernacular ...
Research into how women are portrayed in Old English poetry is essential to gain more insight into t...
This thesis explores the legendary account of the mystic marriage of St Katherine in medieval Englan...