Bernhard Tauchnitz. 1937. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos plié, Intérieur frais. 295 pages. Jaquette en couleurs légèrement abîmée. Etiquette de bibliothèque au dos.. . . . Classification Dewey : 820-Littératures anglaise et anglo-saxonne
Reference : RO60063709
Classification Dewey : 820-Littératures anglaise et anglo-saxonne
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Turnhout, Brepols, 2012 Hardback, Pages: xix + 657 p. Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations: 3 b/w Language(s):English, French, Latin * new. ISBN 9782503534022.
England's religious life in the fifteenth century is worthy of sustained, nuanced, and meticulous analysis. This book offers a portrait of late medieval English religious theory and praxis that complicates any attempt to present the period as either quivering in the post-traumatic stress of Lollardy, or basking in the autumn sunshine of an uncritical and self-satisfied hierarchy?s failure to engage with undoubted European and domestic crises in ecclesiology, pastoral theology, anti-clericalism, and lay spiritual emancipation. After Arundel means not just because of or despite Archbishop Arundel (and the repressive legislation associated with him), for it also asks what models and taxonomies will be needed to move beyond Arundel as a fixed star in the firmament of (especially literary) scholarship in the period. It aims to supply the next phase of scholarly exploration of this still often dark continent of religious attitudes and writing with new tools and technical vocabularies, as well as to suggest new directions of travel. TABLE OF CONTENTS Foreword List of Contributors Part I. Opening Salvoes Chichele?s Church: Vernacular Theology in England after Thomas Arundel - VINCENT GILLESPIE After Arundel: The Closing or the Opening of the English Mind? - JEREMY CATTO Censorship or Cultural Change? Reformation and Renaissance in the Spirituality of Late Medieval England - MICHAEL G. SARGENT Vernacular Theology / Theological Vernacular: A Game of Two Halves? - IAN JOHNSON Part II. Discerning the Discourse: Language, Image, and Spirituality Orthodoxy?s Image Trouble: Images in and after Arundel?s Constitutions - JAMES SIMPSON Censorship and Cultural Continuity: Love?s Mirror, the Pore Caitif, and Religious Experience before and after Arundel - CHRISTOPHER G. BRADLEY Voice after Arundel - DAVID LAWTON Part III. The Dynamics of Orthodox Reform Conciliarism and Heresy in England - ALEXANDER RUSSELL ?Let Them Praise Him in Church?: Orthodox Reform at Salisbury Cathedral in the First Half of the Fifteenth Century? - DAVID LEPINE London after Arundel: Learned Rectors and the Strategies of Orthodox Reform - SHEILA LINDENBAUM Common Libraries in Fifteenth-Century England: An Episcopal Benefaction - JAMES WILLOUGHBY Part IV. Ecclesiastical Humanism Religion, Humanism, and Humanity: Chaundler?s Dialogues and the Winchester Secretum - DANIEL WAKELIN Staging Advice in Oxford, New College, MS 288: On Thomas Chaundler and Thomas Bekynton - ANDREW COLE Part V. Reginald Pecock Reconstructing the Mixed Life in Reginald Pecock?s Reule of Crysten Religioun - ALLAN F. WESTPHALL Vernacular Authority and the Rhetoric of Sciences in Pecock?s The Folewer to the Donet and in The Court of Sapience - TAM S KAR TH Part VI. Literary Self-Consciousness and Literary History ?This holy tyme?: Present Sense in the Digby Lyrics - HELEN BARR English Devotions for a Noble Household: The Long Passion in Audelay?s Counsel of Conscience - SUSANNA FEIN Lydgate?s Retraction and ?his resorte to his religyoun? - W. H. E. SWEET Part VII. The Codex as an Instrument of Reform Devotional Cosmopolitanism in Fifteenth-Century England - STEPHEN KELLY AND RYAN PERRY Canons and Catechisms: The Austin Canons of South-East England and Sacerdos parochialis - NIAMH PATTWELL ? at ine opun dedis be a trewe book?: Reading around Arundel?s Constitutions - AMANDA MOSS Part VIII. Translation Gender, Confession, and Authority: Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Douce 114 in the Fifteenth Century - JENNIFER BROWN Dressing up a ?galaunt?: Traditional Piety and Fashionable Politics in Peter Idley?s ?translacions? of Mannyng and Lydgate - MATTHEW GIANCARLO Richard Methley and the Translation of Vernacular Religious Writing into Latin - LAURA SAETVEIT MILES Part IX. Acting Holy Saints? Lives and the Literary after Arundel - CATHERINE SANOK Hagiography after Arundel: Expounding the Trinity - KAREN WINSTEAD Proliferation and Purification: The Use of Books for Nuns after Arundel - C. ANNETTE GRIS Part X. From Script to Print After Arundel but before Luther: The First Half-Century of Print - SUSAN POWELL Part XI. Closing Reflections and Responses Wyclif, Arundel, and the Long Fifteenth Century - KANTIK GHOSH ?A clerke schulde have it of kinde for to kepe counsell? - NICHOLAS WATSON Bibliography Index Nominum Index of Manuscripts
Tyacke Nicholas Grell Ole Peter Israel Jonathan I
Reference : 100138604
(1991)
ISBN : 0198201966
Clarendon Press 1991 456 pages in8. 1991. Cartonné jaquette. 456 pages.
Bon état jaquette un peu défraîchie tranche un peu ternie
, Brepols, 2020 Hardback, 231 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:13 b/w, Languages: English, Old English, Latin. ISBN 9782503583846.
Summary In recent years numerous advances in archaeological and historical studies have enhanced our understanding of the form and function of settlements and strongholds in the landscapes of early medieval England. Until now, this groundbreaking work has not been matched in studies of early English literature, where no concerted effort has been made to investigate how these findings can inform our understanding of their representation in texts - and vice versa. This study shows that literary works offer considerable insight into the ways their authors, readers, and other audiences thought and felt about the constructed places and spaces in which they lived their lives. Covering a broad range of evidence from the end of Roman rule to the Conquest, it is the first study of its kind to offer an interdisciplinary account of the relationship between the built environment as it appears in the material record, and in a range of textual productions. Settlements and Strongholds interrogates correlations and disjunctions between the stories found in the soil and in written works of various kinds, focusing on vernacular texts and Latin works that informed their development. It argues for a deeper appreciation of the relationship between imaginative works and the material contexts in which they were created, revealing the parallel development of ideas and concepts that were fundamental in shaping early medieval England. TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Illustrations Acknowledgements Abbreviations Chapter 1. Introduction: Texts and Landscapes in Early Medieval England Texts Materials Contexts Chapter 2. Ruin Mythologies The Desolation of Britain Origin Mythologies Roman Buildings in the Exeter Book Elegies Roman Buildings in Andreas Rural Settlements in Early-Saxon England Loci Amoeni in the Vernacular Tradition Conclusion Chapter 3. Settlements Before the 'Viking Age' Rebuilding Christendom in the Ruins of Rome Cosmic Halls in Beowulf and C dmon's Hymn Minster Authority: C dmon in the Historia Ecclesiastica Building the English Church in De Templo Structuring the Everyday in the Exeter Book Elegies W?cs in Old English Poetry? Burhs in Middle-Saxon England Conclusion Chapter 4. Settlements, Strongholds, and the Alfredian Reinvention Reclaiming the Urban Landscape in Andreas The Archaeology of the Burghal Hidage Society, Settlements, and the 'Alfredian' Translations Society, Settlements, and Asser's Vita Alfredi Conclusion Chapter 5. Spiritual Strongholds in Late-Saxon England Bethulia as Burh in the Old English Judith Cities of Good and Evil in Elene, Juliana, and Daniel lfric, Wulfstan, and the Building of Christendom The Anglo-Norman City in Durham Conclusion Chapter 6. Afterword Of Time and the City Earth, Wood, Stone Structures of Community Works Cited Index
Turnhout, Brepols, 2011 Hardback, XXVI 573 p., 49 b/w ill., 11 b/w tables, 15 b/w line art, 156 x 234 mm. ISBN 9782503532080.
Dedicated as a memorial to the great historian of England and the Continent in the eighth century, Wilhelm Levison, this book provides the widest and most in-depth exploration to date of relations between England and the Continent during an equally crucial period, the tenth century. The volume, which comes out of a sustained collaboration between English and Continental universities, contains thematically arranged essays by established leading specialists and also by younger scholars. By building on the approaches used by Levison as well as other methods that have been developed in the decades since his death, these essays tackle a broad range of questions: What routeways and modes of contact linked England with the Continent? How similar were attitudes to rulership and dynastic strategies? How did the law, the working of government, and the organization and culture of the church differ between England and the Continent? How was the past seen and represented on the two sides of the English Channel? In answering these questions, this volume offers news ways of exploring the links and developing the comparison between England and the Continent in the century after the collapse of the Carolingian Empire, a formative period for the development of Europe. Studies in the Early Middle Ages (SEM 37). Languages: English, Old English, Old Norse. New.
Réunion de 5 affiches, en noir de format 75,5x55,5 cm. 1) Bournemouth on the south cost. Photographie de DIXON SCOTT. Printed in ENGLAND for the Bournemouth corporation and the travel association Pall Mal east, (1930) (deux déchirures restaurées, dans la partie supérieure) 2) Lincoln Cathedral central tower & the vicars court. Photographie de DIXON SCOTT. Printed in ENGLAND for the lincoln corporation and the travel association Pall Mal east, (1930) 3) BATH roman Bath and Abbey. Photo by Herbert LAMBERT Printed in ENGLAND for the Bath corporation and the travel association Pall Mal east, (1930) 4) LANCASHIRE affiche de Ralph MOTT. Printed in ENGLAND for the Lancashire industrial development concil and the travel association Pall Mal east, (1920 ?) 5) BLACKPOOL Playground of the world photos by J DIXON SCOTT Printed in ENGLAND for the BLACKPOOL corporation and the travel association Pall Mal east, (1930) l’ensemble