The present thesis focuses on the importance of the written word as a ruling device of the Anglo- Saxon kings. Due to the availability of historical evidence, the studied period begins in 597 with the arrival of Christian missionaries from Rome and ends prior to the Norman Conquest in 1066. The kings' approach to the written word is analyzed on the basis of surviving literary and iconographic evidence, i.e. on documents composed for or by the rulers, and on the visual images of the rulers as portrayed in surviving manuscripts. The first chapter provides a historical background necessary for the correct interpretation of the examined texts and portraits. This section is aimed at the main concepts discussed in the thesis: medieval authorship,...
Other than charters, only a handful of Latin texts from Anglo-Saxon England can be conclusively date...
This thesis examines the function of commemorative skaldic verse at the Viking-age court. The first ...
This thesis analyses the language and the translation technique of Bishop Waeferth's late ninth-cent...
This thesis will determine what can be considered ‘kingly’ imagery before depictions of individual k...
Using close textual analysis, this thesis has identified similarities and differences in the ways in...
This thesis examines the iconography of Anglo-Saxon kingship through analysis of three late Anglo-S...
This dissertation argues that kings were central to the formation of vernacular literary culture in ...
This thesis examines the uses of Anglo-Saxon manuscripts in the 150 years immediately following the ...
This dissertation examines three crucial texts written and translated from Latin into Old English be...
The Iconography of Late Anglo-Saxon Kingship Representations of Kings Æthelstan, Edgar, and Cnut i...
This thesis is a study in how the political culture of the reign of Henry III was conditioned by its...
It is well known that the Anglo-Saxons were some of the earliest and most prolific users of a writte...
This dissertation discusses the complicated relationship (known as the comitatus) of kings and follo...
This thesis examines the function of commemorative skaldic verse at the Viking-age court. The first...
This dissertation challenges the traditional notions of the Anglo-Normans as rapacious colonizers of...
Other than charters, only a handful of Latin texts from Anglo-Saxon England can be conclusively date...
This thesis examines the function of commemorative skaldic verse at the Viking-age court. The first ...
This thesis analyses the language and the translation technique of Bishop Waeferth's late ninth-cent...
This thesis will determine what can be considered ‘kingly’ imagery before depictions of individual k...
Using close textual analysis, this thesis has identified similarities and differences in the ways in...
This thesis examines the iconography of Anglo-Saxon kingship through analysis of three late Anglo-S...
This dissertation argues that kings were central to the formation of vernacular literary culture in ...
This thesis examines the uses of Anglo-Saxon manuscripts in the 150 years immediately following the ...
This dissertation examines three crucial texts written and translated from Latin into Old English be...
The Iconography of Late Anglo-Saxon Kingship Representations of Kings Æthelstan, Edgar, and Cnut i...
This thesis is a study in how the political culture of the reign of Henry III was conditioned by its...
It is well known that the Anglo-Saxons were some of the earliest and most prolific users of a writte...
This dissertation discusses the complicated relationship (known as the comitatus) of kings and follo...
This thesis examines the function of commemorative skaldic verse at the Viking-age court. The first...
This dissertation challenges the traditional notions of the Anglo-Normans as rapacious colonizers of...
Other than charters, only a handful of Latin texts from Anglo-Saxon England can be conclusively date...
This thesis examines the function of commemorative skaldic verse at the Viking-age court. The first ...
This thesis analyses the language and the translation technique of Bishop Waeferth's late ninth-cent...