Search Results

You searched for:
  • Keyword:
    • pig and sheep
  • Source Date From:
  • Source Date To:

Your search found 24 results in 3 resources

Category

  • Literary Manuscripts (24)
  • 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

Access Type

British Library Catalogue of Illuminated Manuscripts icon

British Library Catalogue of Illuminated Manuscripts

14 results from this resource . Displaying 1 to 5

Detail of a miniature of sheep. This is a 'Second Family' bestiary; see James; Payne p. 15. Numerous (112) miniatures in brown, green, and red, on alternately blue and red backgrounds. Small initials in red. Bestiary Thomas Rawlinson (b. 1681,

by Robert Harley (b. 1661, d. 1724), 1st earl of Oxford and Mortimer, politician, and Edward Harley (b. 1689, d. 1741), 2nd earl of Oxford and Mortimer, book collector and patron of the arts. Edward Harley bequeathed the library to

calendar pages with tinted drawings in colours of the labours of the months and the signs of the zodiac, and various pictures and emblems representing saints' days and other feasts (ff. 5-16). Drawings in colours of notable events; written above

drawing water and a pig being slaughtered. The date 1582 is inscribed in gold in a roundel on f. 15 and on blocks of stone on ff. 27, 28. 22 full page miniatures of alchemical subjects in colours and gold

miniature of a man and a woman slaughtering a pig, representing December, in Matfré Ermengau of Béziers's Breviari d'Amour. The text is originally a Provencal poem composed between 1288 and 1292 by Matfré Ermengau of Béziers, and is an encyclopaedic

The Norman Blake Editions of The Canterbury Tales icon

The Norman Blake Editions of The Canterbury Tales

9 results from this resource . Displaying 1 to 5

sheep or oxe swelle That any worm hath ete or worm y stonge Take water of that welle and wassh his tonge And it is hool anon and forthermore Of pokkes and of Scabbe and euery sore Shal euery

a Chauntrye for soules And ran to Londoū , vn to Seint Poules And leet his sheep , encombred in the Myre He sette noght. his benefice to hyre By his clennesse , how þt his sheep sholde lyue Wel

parysh moche and lyte Vpon his feet and in his hand a staffe This noble ensample to his sheep he yaffe That firste he wroght and afterward he taght Oute of the gospell tho wordes he kaught. And this figure

Ther was enclosid rip and sad corage And in gret reuerence and charite Hir olde poore fadre fostred she A few sheep spynnyng on felde she kepte She wolde nat ben ydel til she slepte And whan she whom ward

the drought and by the Reyne The yeldyng of his seed and of his greyne His lordes sheep his neet and his deyrye. His swyn his hors his stoore and his pultrye Was holly in his Reues gouernyngã And by

British Literary Manuscripts Online icon

British Literary Manuscripts Online

1 result from this resource . Displaying 1 to 1

in [to, interl.] shroudes: as I a sheep were." Dowell is headed: "Passus octanus de visione. Et incipit inquisicio prima de Dowell" (f. 36). Dobet and Dobest have no headings but "Passus xv." and " Passus xixus." respectively (ff. 69,

Cite this page:

"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 28 April 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?kw=pig%20and%20sheep&sdf=1375&sdt=1405