Search Results

You searched for:

Your search found 827 results in 1 resource

Category

  • Literary Manuscripts (827)
  • Non-literary Manuscripts (0)
  • Official Documents (government, civic, legal, religious) (0)
  • Literary Printed Books (0)
  • Non-literary Printed Books (0)
  • Maps and Works of Art (0)

Format

Date

  • 1000 – 1124 (0)
  • 1125 – 1249 (0)
  • 1250 – 1374 (0)
  • 1375 – 1500 (0)

Access Type

TEAMS Middle English Texts Series icon

TEAMS Middle English Texts Series

827 results from this resource . Displaying 341 to 360

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

a late fourteenth-century practice of composing saints’ hymns in 14-line alliterative stanzas (compare the hymns to Saints Katherine, John the Evangelist, and John the Baptist [Ruth Kennedy, ed., Three Alliterative Saints’ Hymns]; two of these hymns employ anaphora). [Fol. 26vb–27rb.

Cite this page:

"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 19 April 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ac=f&ft=t&kw=john&sr=te&st=340