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Anglo-Saxon England

Four very different kinds of Anglo-Saxon thinking are clarified in this volume of Anglo-Saxon England.

Peter Clemoes (Edited by), Simon Keynes (Edited by), Michael Lapidge (Edited by)

9780521038348, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 11 October 2007

348 pages
22.8 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm, 0.533 kg

Four very different kinds of Anglo-Saxon thinking are clarified in this volume: traditions, learned and oral, about the settlement of the country, study of foreign-language grammar, interest in exotic jewels as reflections of the glory of God, and a mainly rational attitude to medicine. Publication of no less than three discoveries augments our corpus of manuscript evidence. The nature of Old English poetry is illuminated, and a useful summary of the editorial treatment of textual problems in Beowulf is provided. A re-examination of the accounts of the settlement in Bede's Historia Ecclesiastica and the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle yields insights into the processes of Anglo-Saxon learned historiography and oral tradition. A thorough-going analysis of an under-studied major work, Bald's Leechbook, demonstrates that the compiler, perhaps in King Alfred's reign, translated selections from a wide range of Latin texts in composing a well-organized treatise directed against the diseases prevalent in his time. The usual comprehensive bibliography of the previous year's publications in all branches of Anglo-Saxon studies rounds off the book.

List of illustrations
1. The settlement of England in Bede and the Chronicle Patrick Sims-Williams
2. The study of Latin grammar in eighth-century Southumbria Vivien Law
3. Lapidary traditions in Anglo-Saxon England: part II, Bede's Explanatio Apocalypsis and related works Peter Kitson
4. A fragment of Bede's De Temporum Ratione in the public record office Michael Roper
5. A fragment of an early-tenth-century Anglo-Saxon manuscript and its significance M. B. Parkes
6. Neumed Boethian metra from Canterbury: a newly recovered leaf of Cambridge, University Library, Gg. 5.35 (the 'Cambridge Songs' manuscript) M. T. Gibson, M. Lapidge and C. Page
7. Bald's Leechbook: its sources and their use in its compilation M. L. Cameron
8. Literary art and oral tradition in Old English and Serbian poetry John Miles Foley
9. A reading of Andreas: the poem as poem Edward B. Irving Jr
10. The formative stages of Beowulf textual scholarship: part II Birte Kelly
11. Bibliography for 1982 Carl T. Berkhout, Martin Biddle, Mark Blackburn, T. J. Brown, C. R. E. Coutts and Simon Keynes.

Subject Areas: Early history: c 500 to c 1450/1500 [HBLC], British & Irish history [HBJD1]

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