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This volume provides a combined index to the first 20 volumes of
Index of Middle English Prose. In the absence of a searchable
electronic database version of this series, it will be an essential
tool for all researchers in this area. Indexes of incipits and
excipits are provided, together with author and title indexes and
general subject indexes. The project to publish a complete listing
of all known manuscript items containing Middle English prose began
in 1978, and the first volume appeared in 1984. The final listing
will consist of some fifty volumes; with the publication of the
twentieth volume in 2009, the corpus was sufficiently extensive to
justify the first comprehensive index to the contents of the
existing titles. This, the resulting volume, is a vital research
tool for anyone working with Middle English prose texts. It is
designed to give immediate access to the indices now found
separately in the first twenty descriptive manuscript catalogues
and begins with a summary contents list for each of these. In
additionto an index of first lines, the volume contains other
finding aids in the form of an index of rubrics and titles, and a
general index. This will enable scholars to quickly find all
surviving manuscript copies of a particular textin the collections
catalogued to date, and will form the basis of future index
volumes. KARI ANNE RAND is Professor of Older English Language at
the University of Oslo.
`The Index of Middle English Prose when completed will be a
monumental achievement' REVIEW OF ENGLISH STUDIES Two very
different collections are surveyed in this volume. The manuscripts
of Pembroke College, Cambridge are typical of a medieval
foundation. Its core of books is a working library of that period,
representing the interests andneeds of its Fellows, very often
given or bequeathed by them to the College. The collection was
substantially enlarged in 1599 through the gift by William Smart of
Ipswich of a large number of manuscripts which until the
Reformation had belonged to the Abbey of Bury St Edmunds. By
contrast the emphasis of the Fitzwilliam Museum collection is to a
great extent art historical. At its heart are the manuscripts
bequeathed by Lord Fitzwilliam in 1816. These were supplemented
throughout the 19th century by a series of gifts and bequests,
culminating in 1904 in the largest bequest to date, from Frank
McClean, of some 203 manuscripts. In spite of the different
character of the two collections, both contain a range of Middle
English prose items, among them Chaucer's Boece, a complete
Wycliffite sermon cycle and several Paston letters [all from
Pembroke], the Anlaby Cartulary, the "Canutus" pestilence tract,
the Brut, Lydgate's Serpent of Division and Nicholas Love's Mirror
of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ (from the Fitzwilliam). KARI
ANNE RAND is Professor of Older English Literature at the
University of Oslo.
Detailed examination of the evidence linking the authorship of the
Equatorie of the Planetis with Chaucer. The Equatorie of the
Planetis, a Middle English text on the construction and use of a
planetary equatorium, was composed in 1393. The unique manuscript,
which appears to be the author's original, belongs to Peterhouse,
Cambridge. In 1952 it was brought to general attention by Derek
Price who argued that the text was written by Geoffrey Chaucer.
Whether the Equatorie is indeed Chaucer's has remained
controversial ever since. Dr Rand Schmidt's book offers a detailed
examination of the literary, linguistic and codicological evidence
linking the authorship of the Equatorie with Chaucer. She analyses
and compares the manuscript with other specimens proposed
asChaucer's hand, and evaluates the available methods of testing.
The volume includes a new transcription of the Equatorie,
accompanied by a facsimile of the MS, and a KWIC-concordance to the
text. Diplomatic transcriptions of three Middle English
astronomical texts have also been included and are printed here for
the first time. Dr KARI ANNE RAND SCHMIDT is a language specialist,
teaching in the Department of English at the University of Oslo.
Fifty-five catalogued manuscripts include major religious works and
medical writing - on uroscopy, surgery, bloodletting and
pestilence. Major religious works among the fifty-five manuscripts
indexed in this handlist include a thirteenth-century copy of the
Ancrene Riwle, Rolle's Forme of Living and the English translation
of his Emendatio vitae, the Apocalypse of Jesus Christ, Mirk's
Festial, the Pilgrimage of the Soul, the Seven Points of True Love
and Everlasting Wisdom and the apparently unique English
translation of the Wycliffite Rosarium theologie. Medical writing
is also well represented, with a number of extensive compilations
which also contain medical recipes. Uroscopy texts include the
Practica urinarum and the shorter and the longer versionsof Henry
Daniel's Liber uricrisiarum; other important medical texts are the
first book of Guy de Chauliac's Chirurgia magna, the shorter
English version of John of Burgundy's treatise on pestilence and
two versionsof the bloodletting treatise attributed to Henry of
Winchester. KARI ANNE RAND SCHMIDT is Senior Lecturer in English at
the University of Oslo.
Handlist to the rich collection of manuscripts contained in Corpus
Christi College, Cambridge, with full indices. The majority of the
medieval manuscripts in Corpus Christi which contain Middle English
prose came to the College as part of the bequest of Matthew Parker
(1504-75), archbishop of Canterbury, who in 1568 had been given
authority by the Privy Council to collect "auncient recordes and
monumentes written" for "perusyng of the same". These manuscripts
came from all over the south of England, having mainly originated
in monastic libraries. Some were subsequently returned to their
owners, but the majority appear to have remained with Parker and to
have been considered his personal property, to dispose of as he
wished. The majority went to Corpus Christi, where he had been
Master from 1544-53. Of the 433 Parker manuscripts in the College,
48 are indexed in this Handlist. A further four manuscripts,
derived from other sources, containing Middle English are also
included. The texts range in length from jottings in the margin of
the Bury Bible (MS 2) to a complete Wycliffite sermon cycle (MS
336). The great majority are religious texts; among those are the
Ancrene Wisse, The Compendyous Treatise, Nicholas Love's Mirror of
the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ, Richard Rolle's English Psalter,
A Treatise of Goostely Batayle, Walter Hilton's Scale of
Perfection, Beniamyn minor and the Treatise on the Seven Points of
True Love and Everlasting Wisdom. There are also a large collection
of fourteenth-century medical recipes, Chaucer's Treatise on the
Astrolabe, Trevisa's translation of Higden's Polychronicon and
William Worcester's Itineraries. Kari Anne Rand is Professor of
Older English Language at the University of Oslo.
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