Bibliography

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From CODECS: Online Database and e-Resources for Celtic Studies


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Results (7)
Bately, Janet M., “The spelling of the proper names in the OE Orosius: the case for dictation by a Welshman revisited”, The Journal of English and Germanic Philology 116 (2017): 45–81.
abstract:

The 2011 Cambridge Colloquium in Anglo-Saxon, Norse, and Celtic, “Colliding Worlds,” reopened important questions about the history of the rendering in Old English of Paulus Orosius’s Historiarum adversum Paganos Libri Septem. One set of these relates to the presence of a large number of unusual features in the spelling of place names and people names in the manuscripts that have come down to us. Are these spellings the result of dictation, whether of a copy of the Latin original, or of the Old English text? And if so, what, if anything, can be learned about the nationality of the dictator?

Faletra, Michael A., “Merlin in Cornwall: the source and contexts of John of Cornwall’s Prophetia Merlini”, The Journal of English and Germanic Philology 111:3 (July, 2012): 304–338.
Cain, Christopher M., “Sacred words, Anglo-Saxon piety, and the origins of the Epistola salvatoris in London, British Library, Royal 2.A.xx”, Journal of English and Germanic Philology 108:2 (April, 2009): 168–189.
Mulligan, Amy C., “‘The satire of the poet is a pregnancy’: pregnant poets, body metaphors, and cultural production in medieval Ireland”, Journal of English and Germanic Philology 108:4 (October, 2009): 481–505.
Larkin, Peter, “A suggested author for De ortu Waluuanii and Historia Meriadoci: Ranulph Higden”, The Journal of English and Germanic Philology 103:2 (2004): 215–231.
Sayers, William, “Deployment of an Irish loan: ON verða at gjalti ‘to go mad with terror’”, Journal of English and Germanic Philology 93 (1994): 151–176.
Smith, Roland M., “Guinganbresil and the Green Knight”, Journal of English and Germanic Philology 45 (1946): 1–25.

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