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Anglo-Saxon England: Volume 49
Rosalind Love, Simon Keynes, Rory Naismith
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R2,777
R2,512
Discovery Miles 25 120
Save R265 (10%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The forty-seventh volume of Anglo-Saxon England begins with a
record of the eighteenth conference of the International Society of
Anglo-Saxonists, and ends with a fourth supplement to the Hand-list
of Anglo-Saxon Non-Runic Inscriptions. Other articles in this
volume cover a diverse range of subjects, including Skaldic art in
Cnut's court, alliteration in Old English poetry, the northern
world of an Anglo-Saxon mappa mundi and the Germanic context of
Beowulf. Religious matters are given particular consideration in
this volume: new light is shed on the lost St Margaret's crux
nigra, and on Anglo-Breton contact between the tenth and twelfth
centuries through an examination of St Kenelm and St Melor. Also
included are an account of Archbishop Wulfstan's forgery of the
'laws of Edward and Guthrum', and an edition of the four sermons
attributed to Candidus Witto. Each article is preceded by a short
abstract.
Contributions to the forty-sixth volume of Anglo-Saxon England
focus on aspects of Anglo-Saxon culture and history across a period
from the seventh to the eleventh century. The study of a fragment
of a tenth-century sacramentary offers new evidence for the role of
music in Anglo-Saxon England, while consideration of
charter-evidence in both Latin and Old English from Worcester c.870
to 992 sheds fresh light on institutional interaction between the
two main languages of Anglo-Saxon England. Two contributions
consider Beowulf and its immediate manuscript-context, the first
focusing on the spellings of the second scribe, and the next on the
later history of the manuscript into the sixteenth century,
facilitating its survival to this day. Finally, a detailed study of
English landed society before and after the Norman Conquest has
resulted in new perspectives on landed wealth in England in 1066
and 1086. Each article is preceded by a short abstract.
Contributions to the forty-eighth volume of Anglo-Saxon England
focus on aspects of Anglo-Saxon culture and history across a period
from the sixth to the twelfth century. This volume begins with an
examination of Beowulf fitt II and the Andreas-poet, and ends with
a study of St Dunstan and the heavenly choirs of St Augustine's
Abbey, Canterbury, as related in Goscelin's Historia translationis
S. Augustini. Also included are articles on Leofric of Exeter and
liturgical performance as pastoral care, legal culture under Dena
lage with reference to III AEthelred, an Agnus Dei penny of King
AEthelred the Unready and self-seeking in The Metres of Boethius.
Latin verse in an Old English medical codex is examined with
reference to Bald's Colophon, the figure of Beow is explored in a
Scandinavian context and a new solution is provided for Exeter
Riddle 55. Each article is preceded by a short abstract.
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Bede: On First Samuel (Paperback)
Scott Degregorio; Commentary by Scott Degregorio; Translated by Rosalind Love; Commentary by Rosalind Love
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R1,343
Discovery Miles 13 430
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The Old Testament book 1 Samuel (known as 1 Kings in modern Bibles)
contains one of the most dramatic stories in the Old Testament,
with its tense narrative about Israel's first attempts to govern
itself by kingship, and a cast of famous characters who drive the
story - the priest and prophet Samuel, the tragic figure of King
Saul, and chiefly David himself, the youngest son of Jesse, who
slays the Philistine's champion, Goliath, and gains God's favour in
replacement for Saul. The Venerable Bede (672-735 AD), Anglo-Saxon
England's foremost interpreter of the Bible, wrote many
commentaries on the Old Testament, but his treatment of 1 Samuel
stands out in particular: it is one of his longest commentaries,
one of his first sustained attempts to deal with the Old Testament
without support from an earlier commentary, and one of the few
commentaries he wrote that can be dated precisely. Bede sets out to
read the story of 1 Samuel as full of details which demonstrate the
prophetic nature of Old Testament history, an attempt that is
boldly experimental in its application of the allegorical method of
interpretation. Historically, the commentary is of special interest
for its detailed reference to the departure of Abbot Ceolfrith from
Wearmouth-Jarrow in June 716 AD, which has allowed scholarship to
firmly date the work and explore some potential links to the
turbulent political scene in Northumbria that marked that decade.
This English translation is the first rendering of the Latin into
another language. The translation is preceded by a substantial
introduction that places the work in the context of Bede's oeuvre,
discusses his sources and exegetical methods, and offers a reading
of the work's contemporary context in the light of current
scholarly debate.
The Warenne Chronicle is the more appropriate name for the Latin
text known as the Hyde Chronicle. It covers the period from 1035 -
the year in which Robert the Magnificent, duke of Normandy, died -
up to the account of the White ship disaster in November 1120 when
William Adelin, eldest son and heir of King Henry I, lost his life
at the age of eighteen. The chronicle therefore covers the history
of Normandy and England around the Norman Conquest of England with
special reference to the earls of Warenne in Normandy. It is not a
full blown dynastic history of this aristocratic family, but rather
a historical narrative that emphasises the loyal support of the
earls to the Norman rulers. The crucial question as to how far the
Warenne chronicler may have covered the years beyond 1120 is
impossible to settle definitively. The new argument put forward
here is that the Warenne Chronicle was written early in the reign
of King Henry II, probably shortly after 1157, for King Stephen's
son William and his wife Isabel, heiress of Warenne, to provide an
account of the invaluable help her ancestors had given to the
Anglo-Norman rulers. Although the chronicle has survived
anonymously, the suggestion is made that the author may have been
Master Eustace of Boulogne, clerk and chancellor of William of
Blois as fourth earl of Warenne. Unique information, other than
that pertaining to the Warennes, concerns the commemoration of
Queen Edith/Matilda, Henry I's rule in western Normandy, and the
use of the word 'normananglus' (Norman-English) for the inhabitants
of England of Norman origin.
The forty-fifth volume of Anglo-Saxon England focusses on various
aspects of Anglo-Saxon culture and history from the seventh to the
seventeenth century. In the field of Old English literature,
contributions examine a ninth-century homily fragment, The Dream of
the Rood, The Seafarer, and the Old English translation of
Boethius' De Consolatione Philosophiae. A contribution which
explores references to the senses in a wide range of vernacular
texts is complemented by another which reconsiders the iconography
of the Fuller Brooch. The network of fortifications recorded in the
Burghal Hidage is re-interpreted here as a product of political
developments in the later 870s; and a new edition of the 'Ely
memoranda' reminds us that the religious houses of the tenth and
eleventh centuries functioned also as major agricultural estates.
Finally, the contribution of seventeenth-century antiquaries to the
development of Anglo-Saxon studies is remembered in a study of an
early Anglo-Saxon Grammar.
The forty-fourth volume of Anglo-Saxon England contains three
contributions on religious culture in eighth-century Northumbria,
one discussing the conception of church buildings, one linking Bede
and John of Beverley, and a comparison of Miracula Nynie episcopi
and Arator. A discussion of the historical context of the battle of
the Winwoed is complemented by a reconsideration of a literary work
which influenced modern perceptions of King Edward the Confessor.
Old English prose is represented by an analysis of the preface of
Bede's Ecclesiastical History, and an examination of AElfric's
treatment of the apostles. Old English poetry is covered by a
contribution making the case for a new approach to the texts, and
one addressing the riddles in the Exeter Book. This volume also
covers military organization throughout the period, the practice of
penance in the late eleventh century, and the discovery of an
Anglo-Saxon hoard near Buckingham in 2014.
The forty-third volume of Anglo-Saxon England contains three
contributions on Latin learning in the early part of the period,
two focusing on texts being studied at Canterbury, and a third
discussing the recording of Cuthbert's cult at Lindisfarne. Old
English poetry is well represented by three contributions which
exemplify new approaches towards poetic diction and its sources,
and reinterpret Cynewulf's use of runes. Old English prose
meanwhile receives further attention through a reassessment of its
intended audience, and in an analysis of Andreas. There is also a
discussion of an unusual prayer first attested in the Leofric
Missal. The theme of kingship is addressed in an article on
different representations of King Cnut in Old English, Latin and
Old Norse texts, and in an extended review of demonstrably or
arguably 'royal' books in the Anglo-Saxon period. Each article is
preceded by a short abstract.
The forty-second volume of Anglo-Saxon England begins with an
article which introduces a 'new' Anglo-Latin poet to a modern
audience, and ends with an article exploring the activities of a
Norman archbishop of Canterbury when exiled from England in the
early 1050s. Other disciplines well represented here are
palaeography, philology, Old English language and literature,
tenth-century diplomatic, and numismatics. Extended treatment is
given to the reception in Anglo-Saxon England of a Latin life of St
AEgidius, which lies behind the Old English Life of St Giles in
Cambridge, Corpus Christi College MS 303. It is also a privilege
for the journal to include the first scholarly publication of the
recently discovered seal-matrix of a certain AElfric, presumed to
have been a layman who flourished in the late tenth century; the
object itself has been acquired by the Fitzwilliam Museum,
Cambridge. Each article is preceded by a short abstract."
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Bede: On First Samuel (Hardcover)
Scott Degregorio; Commentary by Scott Degregorio; Translated by Rosalind Love; Commentary by Rosalind Love
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R5,363
Discovery Miles 53 630
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Old Testament book 1 Samuel (known as 1 Kings in modern Bibles)
contains one of the most dramatic stories in the Old Testament,
with its tense narrative about Israel's first attempts to govern
itself by kingship, and a cast of famous characters who drive the
story - the priest and prophet Samuel, the tragic figure of King
Saul, and chiefly David himself, the youngest son of Jesse, who
slays the Philistine's champion, Goliath, and gains God's favour in
replacement for Saul. The Venerable Bede (672-735 AD), Anglo-Saxon
England's foremost interpreter of the Bible, wrote many
commentaries on the Old Testament, but his treatment of 1 Samuel
stands out in particular: it is one of his longest commentaries,
one of his first sustained attempts to deal with the Old Testament
without support from an earlier commentary, and one of the few
commentaries he wrote that can be dated precisely. Bede sets out to
read the story of 1 Samuel as full of details which demonstrate the
prophetic nature of Old Testament history, an attempt that is
boldly experimental in its application of the allegorical method of
interpretation. Historically, the commentary is of special interest
for its detailed reference to the departure of Abbot Ceolfrith from
Wearmouth-Jarrow in June 716 AD, which has allowed scholarship to
firmly date the work and explore some potential links to the
turbulent political scene in Northumbria that marked that decade.
This English translation is the first rendering of the Latin into
another language. The translation is preceded by a substantial
introduction that places the work in the context of Bede's oeuvre,
discusses his sources and exegetical methods, and offers a reading
of the work's contemporary context in the light of current
scholarly debate.
|
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