Results by Title
7 books about Civilization, Anglo-Saxon
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Bede: Part 1
Edited by George Hardin Brown and Frederick Biggs
Amsterdam University Press, 2015
Library of Congress PA8260.B7598 2017
Bede is the inaugural volume in the Sources of Anglo-Saxon Literary Culture series, which seeks to comprehensively map British literary culture from 500 to 1100 CE. This volume presents four texts, or fascicles, dedicated to the Venerable Bede (d. 735), theologian and author of the Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum. Articles provide a wealth of information on Bede through manuscript evidence, medieval library catalogs, citations, and quotations. Using discussions of source relationships, the entries weigh and consider different interpretations of Bede’s works and suggest possibilities for future research. Part of an exciting new reference series, this book“and those that follow“will be indispensable to anyone interested in the history and literature of the period.
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Bede: Part 2
Edited by George Hardin Brown and Frederick M. Biggs
Amsterdam University Press, 2016
Library of Congress PA8260.B7598 2017
This newest volume in a long-running work of mapping the sources of Anglo-Saxon literary culture in England from 500 to 1100 CE takes up one of the most important authors of the period, the eighth-century monk-scholar known as the Venerable Bede. Bede is best known as the author of the Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum, which is one of the key sources for our historical and cultural knowledge of the period; this collection covers that and more, drawing on manuscript evidence, medieval library catalogues, Anglo-Latin and Old English versions, citations, quotations, and more, putting Bede and his work in the context of his period.
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CAEDMON'S HYMN AND MATERIAL CULTURE IN THE WORLD OF BEDE
ALLEN J. FRANTZEN
West Virginia University Press, 2007
Library of Congress PR1613.C34 2007 | Dewey Decimal 821.1
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The Daily Lives of the Anglo-Saxons
Carole Biggam
Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2017
Library of Congress DA152.D33 2017 | Dewey Decimal 942.01
Essays in Anglo-Saxon Studies v.8 (Glasgow, 2015).
Insights into the lives of any group of historical people are provided by three main types of evidence: their language, their literature and their material culture. The contributors to this volume draw on all three types of evidence in order to present new research into the lives of the Anglo-Saxons. The particular focus is on daily life – the ordinary rather than the extraordinary, the normal rather than the exceptional. Rather than attempting an overview, the essays address individual scenarios in greater depth, but with an emphasis on shared experience.
The following scholars have contributed essays to this collection:
Martha Bayless
University of Oregon
Carole P. Biggam
University of Glasgow
Paul Cavill
University of Nottingham
Amy W. Clark
University of California, Berkeley
James Graham-Campbell
University College London
Antonina Harbus
Macquarie University, Sydney
Carole Hough
University of Glasgow
Daria Izdebska
Liverpool Hope University
Karen Louise Jolly
University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa
Alexandra Lester-Makin
University of Manchester
Elisabeth Okasha
University College, Cork
Phyllis Portnoy
University of Manitoba
Jane Roberts
University of London
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England, Ireland, and the Insular World: Textual and Material Connections in the Early Middle Ages
Mary Clayton
Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2017
Library of Congress PR173.E54 2017 | Dewey Decimal 829.09
ISAS Dublin 2013. England, Ireland and the Insular World: Textual and Material Connections in the Early Middle Ages is a collection of twelve essays related to the theme of the 2013 conference of the International Society of Anglo-Saxonists, ‘Insular Cultures’. Contributors cover a broad range of topics, from early medieval agriculture in Ireland and England, to sculpture, manuscript illumination and script, homilies, hagiography, aristocratic gift-giving, relics, calendars, Beowulf, and Anglo-Saxon perceptions of the Celtic peoples, considering connections, parallels and differences between Anglo-Saxon England and its insular neighbors. The volume will be of interest to all those working on Early Medieval history, literature, archaeology, liturgy, art, and manuscripts.
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The Maritime World of the Anglo-Saxons
Stacy S. Klein
Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2014
Library of Congress DA152.M35 2014 | Dewey Decimal 387.09420902
The twenty-first century has been marked by an “oceanic turn” and by groundbreaking new research on the previously hidden depths of maritime life, literature, and culture. The Maritime World of the Anglo-Saxons builds upon these new areas of research as the first major volume of essays to explore Anglo-Saxon England’s complex relationship to its maritime history, economy, and sensibilities. Individual essays focus on maritime travel, Viking invasions by sea, littoral culture, the archeology of the whale, and literary mythologies of monstrous sea creatures, bringing together insights from a range of disciplines: archeology, history, literature, paleography, linguistics, art history, critical theory, geography, and cultural studies.
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NAKED BEFORE GOD: UNCOVERING THE BODY IN ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND
BENJAMIN C. WITHERS
West Virginia University Press, 2003
Library of Congress BJ1500.N8N35 2003 | Dewey Decimal 128.60942
At different times and in different places, the human form has been regarded in different ways. The Ancient Greeks thought it was the most admirable subject for art, whereas early Christians often viewed it as lascivious in our post-lapsarian state. With illustrations taken from manuscripts, statuary and literary, this is a fascinating collection of essays with much that will be new to scholars and general readers alike.
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