Interfaces between Language and Culture in Medieval England
A Festschrift for Matti Kilpiö
Edited by Alaric Hall, Olga Timofeeva, Ágnes Kiricsi and Bethany Fox
Biographical note
Alaric Hall, Ph.D. (2004) in English Language, University of Glasgow, is a lecturer in medieval English literature at the University of Leeds. He has written extensively on medieval Insular and Scandinavian language and culture.
Olga Timofeeva, candidate of sciences in philology (2005), St Petersburg State University, Russia, has just submitted her Ph.D. dissertation on Latin influence on Old English syntax to the University of Helsinki, Finland. She is a researcher at the Research Unit for Variation, Contacts and Change in English and a part-time instructor at the Department of English, University of Helsinki. Her scholarly interests include medieval translation and language contact.
Ágnes Kiricsi, Ph.D. (2006) in Medieval English Literature, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, is a lecturer at Károli Gáspár University in Budapest. Her main field of expertise is the concept of the mind in Anglo-Saxon and later medieval England.
Bethany Fox, B.A. Cantab. (Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, 2003), B.Sc. Open University (Geosciences, 2008), is a Ph.D. student in Geology at the University of Otago and author of 'The P-Celtic Place-Names of North-East England and South-East Scotland' (The Heroic Age, 10).
Olga Timofeeva, candidate of sciences in philology (2005), St Petersburg State University, Russia, has just submitted her Ph.D. dissertation on Latin influence on Old English syntax to the University of Helsinki, Finland. She is a researcher at the Research Unit for Variation, Contacts and Change in English and a part-time instructor at the Department of English, University of Helsinki. Her scholarly interests include medieval translation and language contact.
Ágnes Kiricsi, Ph.D. (2006) in Medieval English Literature, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, is a lecturer at Károli Gáspár University in Budapest. Her main field of expertise is the concept of the mind in Anglo-Saxon and later medieval England.
Bethany Fox, B.A. Cantab. (Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, 2003), B.Sc. Open University (Geosciences, 2008), is a Ph.D. student in Geology at the University of Otago and author of 'The P-Celtic Place-Names of North-East England and South-East Scotland' (The Heroic Age, 10).
Readership
Medievalists and historical linguists, particularly Anglo-Saxonists. The collection will also be of interest to Classicists and theologians.
Table of contents
Introduction
Anglo-Latin Bilbingualism before 1066: Prospects and Limitations
Interlinguistic Communication in Bede's Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum
Quae non habet intellectum: The Disappearance of Fifth-Foot Spondees from Dactylic Hexameter Verse
The Representations of Emotions Connected to Dreams and Visions in Pre-Carolingian Continental and Anglo-Latin narratives
The Kirkdale Dedication Inscription and its Latin Models: romanitas in late Anglo-Saxon Yorkshire
Linguistic Geography, Demography, an dMonastic Community: Scribal Language at Bury St Edmunds
Sense and Sensibility: Old English Semantics and the Lexicographer's Point of View
Spatial Understanding of Time in Early Germanic Cultures: the Evidence of Old English Time Words and Norse Mythology
The Devleopment of the Basic Colour Terms of English
The Lexicon of Mind and Memory: Mood and Mind in Old and Middel English
Another Subordinator, An't Please You: A Diachronic Study of Conditional
Translating Chaucer's Power Play into Modern English and Finnish
Index
Anglo-Latin Bilbingualism before 1066: Prospects and Limitations
Interlinguistic Communication in Bede's Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum
Quae non habet intellectum: The Disappearance of Fifth-Foot Spondees from Dactylic Hexameter Verse
The Representations of Emotions Connected to Dreams and Visions in Pre-Carolingian Continental and Anglo-Latin narratives
The Kirkdale Dedication Inscription and its Latin Models: romanitas in late Anglo-Saxon Yorkshire
Linguistic Geography, Demography, an dMonastic Community: Scribal Language at Bury St Edmunds
Sense and Sensibility: Old English Semantics and the Lexicographer's Point of View
Spatial Understanding of Time in Early Germanic Cultures: the Evidence of Old English Time Words and Norse Mythology
The Devleopment of the Basic Colour Terms of English
The Lexicon of Mind and Memory: Mood and Mind in Old and Middel English
Another Subordinator, An't Please You: A Diachronic Study of Conditional
Translating Chaucer's Power Play into Modern English and Finnish
Index
€161.00$221.00
Peter Paul Bajer, Monash University
This book offers an examination of Scottish migration to the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth: numbers of migrants; patterns of settlement; laws regulating their presence; their activities; their social advancement into the Polish nobility; their assimilation and then the eventual disappearance as ...
€177.00$243.00
Mikołaj Gładysz
By analysing cases of Polish involvement in the crusades and collecting traces of the crusading ideology and preaching in Polish sources from the 12th and 13th century, the book makes a valuable contribution to the discussion about the place of Central Europe in medieval Western Civilization.
€217.00$298.00
Marsha Keith Schuchard
Drawing on unpublished diplomatic and Masonic archives, this study reveals the career of Emanuel Swedenborg as a secret intelligence agent for Louis XV and the pro-French, pro-Jacobite party of “Hats” in Sweden. Utilizing Kabbalistic meditation techniques, he sought political intelligence on ...
€121.00$166.00
Shami Ghosh
Surveying the past two decades of scholarship on the medieval historiography of Norway, this book provides a critical appraisal of the principal issues involved in the study of the primary sources and the key areas of scholarship and future research.
€128.00$176.00
Randi Bjørshol Wærdahl
Inspired by transnational research on medieval state formation, this book presents a comprehensive study of the political incorporation and subsequent judicial and administrative integration of Iceland, the Faroes, Shetland, and Orkney, into the Norwegian realm c. 1195-1397.
€133.00$182.00
Edited by Gro Steinsland, Jón Viðar Sigurðsson, Jan Erik Rekdal and Ian Beuermann
This book analyses the Nordic pre-Christian ideology of rulership, and its confrontation with, survival into and adaptation to the European Christian ideals during the transition from the Viking to the Middle Ages from the ninth to the thirteenth century.
€126.00$179.00
Joanna A. Skórzewska
Based on a variety of extant written sources, this study offers a comprehensive reevaluation of Guðmundr Arason’s popularity in medieval Iceland. It presents a new perspective on the saintly fame and veneration of this controversial and interesting individual.
€130.00$185.00
Edited by Stephen T. Driscoll, Jane Geddes and Mark A. Hall
Survey chapters analyse advances in studies of Pictish culture during the last fifty years. Inter-disciplinary case studies cover archaeology, place-names, history, liturgy, and history within a wider European framework.
€143.00$199.00
Philadelphia Ricketts
Through the juxtaposition of legal theory and practice and the utilization of detailed family reconstruction, a comparison of the property, remarriage and identity of widows in two fundamentally different societies provides a fresh approach which reconsiders generalizations about widows’ ...
€129.00$179.00
Edited by David Worthington
This book comprises the first full-length comparison of Scottish, Irish, English and Welsh migration within Europe in the early modern period. The contributions demonstrate the fruitfulness of pursuing a comparative approach to seventeenth-century British and Irish history.
- 1 of 6
- ››
No additional information