This article will attempt to take stock of what we know about Chaucer's earliest audiences, that is, about uses of and references to his work made during his lifetime. Relevant new research on manuscript use and ownership has been included in the case of Thomas Hoccleve and the scrivener Thomas Spencer. In addition to various named addressees of Chaucer's works - Peter Bukton, Henry Scogan and Philip de la Vache - this brief survey lists contemporary references to Chaucer and his works in the poetry of John Gower, Eustache Deschamps, John Clanvowe and Thomas Usk
In 1532, William Thynne printed the first edition of the complete works of Geoffrey Chaucer. It was ...
This article reconsiders the biographical and literary identities of the Privy Seal clerk and poet T...
Geoffrey Chaucer lived in England from the late 1340s until his death on October 25, 1400, and he is...
This article will attempt to take stock of what we know about Chaucer's earliest audiences, that is,...
This dissertation argues that the remarkable persistence of Chaucer\u27s fame in early modern Englan...
Despite knowing the name of the scribe responsible for two of the earliest manuscripts of Chaucer’s ...
“Chaucer’s French Tradition: Coterie Poetics in Late-Medieval England” shows the influence of litera...
The Latin translation of Chaucer’s Troilus and Criseyde by Sir Francis Kynaston or Kinaston, publis...
Thomas Hoccleve, the early fifteenth-century London poet who first promoted the notion that Chaucer ...
Of the minor poets of the 15th century, those who claimed Chaucer as their teacher and their master,...
This article surveys marginalia and readers' marks in fifty-four Renaissance printed copies of Chauc...
This article subjects Thomas Speght's Chaucer editions (1598; 1602) to a consideration of how these ...
Until very recently, Geoffrey Chaucer, author of the famous Canterbury Tales, was considered the sol...
Thesis note (4 p.) inserted between pages [6] and [7]"The first sketch of this book was written in D...
This thesis examines Geoffrey Chaucer’s pioneering work as a distinctly English poet who wrote again...
In 1532, William Thynne printed the first edition of the complete works of Geoffrey Chaucer. It was ...
This article reconsiders the biographical and literary identities of the Privy Seal clerk and poet T...
Geoffrey Chaucer lived in England from the late 1340s until his death on October 25, 1400, and he is...
This article will attempt to take stock of what we know about Chaucer's earliest audiences, that is,...
This dissertation argues that the remarkable persistence of Chaucer\u27s fame in early modern Englan...
Despite knowing the name of the scribe responsible for two of the earliest manuscripts of Chaucer’s ...
“Chaucer’s French Tradition: Coterie Poetics in Late-Medieval England” shows the influence of litera...
The Latin translation of Chaucer’s Troilus and Criseyde by Sir Francis Kynaston or Kinaston, publis...
Thomas Hoccleve, the early fifteenth-century London poet who first promoted the notion that Chaucer ...
Of the minor poets of the 15th century, those who claimed Chaucer as their teacher and their master,...
This article surveys marginalia and readers' marks in fifty-four Renaissance printed copies of Chauc...
This article subjects Thomas Speght's Chaucer editions (1598; 1602) to a consideration of how these ...
Until very recently, Geoffrey Chaucer, author of the famous Canterbury Tales, was considered the sol...
Thesis note (4 p.) inserted between pages [6] and [7]"The first sketch of this book was written in D...
This thesis examines Geoffrey Chaucer’s pioneering work as a distinctly English poet who wrote again...
In 1532, William Thynne printed the first edition of the complete works of Geoffrey Chaucer. It was ...
This article reconsiders the biographical and literary identities of the Privy Seal clerk and poet T...
Geoffrey Chaucer lived in England from the late 1340s until his death on October 25, 1400, and he is...