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 421 to 440

In line 47, he identifies the chief competitors as "Bruce" (that is Robert Bruce, lord of Annandale), "Balyoune" (John Balliol), and "Hastyng" (John Hastings), the descendants of the three daughters of "Our Prynce Davy" (line 45), David, earl of Huntingdon

out of Egypt [M], Massacre of Innocents [M], Betrayal [C], Christ before Pilate [C], Flagellation [C], Crucifixion [C], Mary and John at Cross, Deposition [C], Entombment [C], Harrowing of Hell, Christ's Appearance to Mary Magdalene, Doubting Thomas, Christ's Appearance to

240-46. 768 the two and twentithe pope. PLH's emendation; MS foure and twentiþe. The correct pope is John XXII and not John XXIV. John XXII quarreled especially with the Spiritual Franciscans in the early fourteenth century. 772-89 Reply to JU

gives power of attorney to John Gower and Richard Forester while he travels abroad on the continent. 1381 The Rising of Essex and Kentishmen and their march on London in June. The burning of John of Gaunt’s Savoy Palace and

frame of The Canterbury Tales (I[A]769-818). 143-44 Marginalia: ¶ How oure Host spak to Daun John. 164-66 Marginalia: ¶ How oure Host bad Daun John telle a tale. 165 jape. The term means both a trick and a joke. In

Therfor carefull is my rede. Sorow wyll me slo.” Than seyd the lady Beulybon, “Syr, I rede you, be Seynt John, Of were that ye ho. Ye do the wrong and not the ryght: That may ye se right wele

(see note) (t-note) (t-note) Go To Cinkante Balades, Introduction Go To Cinkante Balades, Text John Gower, Traiti selonc les auctours pour essampler les amantz marietz JOHN GOWER, TRAITIÉ SELONC LES AUCTOURS POUR ESSAMPLER LES AMANTZ MARIETZ: EXPLANATORY NOTES Abbreviations: B:

(see note) (see note) (see note) (see note) (see note) (see note) Go To Est amor John Gower: The Minor Latin Works, Notes JOHN GOWER, THE MINOR LATIN WORKS: NOTES ABBREVIATIONS: CA: Gower, Confessio Amantis; CB: Gower, Cinkante Ballades; Cronica:

the Fool and Blind John Audelay,” presents compactly the evidence for interest in Marcolf in late medieval England, including the “Marcolf” poem of the fifteenth-century English writer John Audelay. James Simpson, “Saving Satire after Arundel’s Constitutions: John Audelay’s ‘Marcol and

John Gower, Confessio Amantis, Volume 3: Introduction Return to Menu of TEAMS Texts Copyright Information for this edition the innuendoes of the sin are enlarged upon through a family scheme that Gower had devised in his first major opus,

Prophets (sixteen books) 7. The Gospels: Matthew, Mark, Luke, John (four books) 8. The Epistles of the Apostles (twenty-one books) 9. The Acts of the Apostles and the Apocalypse of John (two books)48 The abbreviations for the nine parts of

(pope holy); (see note) ribaldry; plain Foolish far lessening John Lydgate (?), Prohemy of a Mariage Betwixt an Olde Man and a Yonge Wife, and the Counsail, Select Bibliography and Notes JOHN LYDGATE (?), PROHEMY OF A MARIAGE BETWIXT AN

most famous English poets of the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries. John Gower and Geoffrey Chaucer had both died several decades before Bokenham began to write, but John Lydgate (author of the elaborate verse Life of Margaret in the

John Gower, Confessio Amantis, Volume 2: Introduction Return to Menu of TEAMS Texts Copyright Information for this edition Gower, less so. But the term "drama" lends itself well to the Confessio, which, though more formal than Chaucer's Canterbury Tales,

The angel to the vergyn said. By John Audelay. Index no. 3305. MS: Bodl. 21876 (Douce 302), fol. 24a-b (fifteenth century; West Midlands Shropshire dialect). Edition: Ella Keats Whiting, ed., The Poems of John Audelay, EETS o.s. 184 (1931; rpt.

The angel to the vergyn said. By John Audelay. Index no. 3305. MS: Bodl. 21876 (Douce 302), fol. 24a-b (fifteenth century; West Midlands Shropshire dialect). Edition: Ella Keats Whiting, ed., The Poems of John Audelay, EETS o.s. 184 (1931; rpt.

in a small sequence of moral and religious lyrics. The poems are written in a different hand, possibly that of John Purde, a priest whose signature in the manuscript indicates that he was an early owner; a conjectural date for

The angel to the vergyn said. By John Audelay. Index no. 3305. MS: Bodl. 21876 (Douce 302), fol. 24a-b (fifteenth century; West Midlands Shropshire dialect). Edition: Ella Keats Whiting, ed., The Poems of John Audelay, EETS o.s. 184 (1931; rpt.

1450). Early Printed Editions Madden, Sir Frederick, ed. How the Goode Wif Thaught Hir Doughter. London: C. Whittington, 1838. Stow, John. Certaine Worthy MS Poems of Great Antiquitie. London, 1597; rpt. 1812. Editions Coulton, G. G. Social Life in Britain

The angel to the vergyn said. By John Audelay. Index no. 3305. MS: Bodl. 21876 (Douce 302), fol. 24a-b (fifteenth century; West Midlands Shropshire dialect). Edition: Ella Keats Whiting, ed., The Poems of John Audelay, EETS o.s. 184 (1931; rpt.

Cite this page:

"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 2 May 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ac=f&ct=lm%2Cod&ft=t&kw=john&sr=te&st=420