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The bachelor programme Celtic Languages and Culture at Utrecht University is under threat.

Bibliography
Foreword by John Carey; Preface; Acknowledgements
[Ch. 1] “Introduction: the canid question”
Celtic canids: the status quaestionis; Outline and methodology;
[Ch. 2] “Celtic canids: ordinary, renowned, and monstrous”
Canids: ordinary; Canids: noteworthy; Canids: monstrous; Conclusions
[Ch. 3] “Canids in serial shapeshifting”
Serial shapeshifting in Wales; Serial shapeshifting in Ireland; Late instances of serial shapeshifting in Scotland and Brittany
[Ch. 4] “Celtic lycanthropy, cynanthropy, and other canid therioanthropies”
Metaphorical werewolves; constitutional werewolves; “The werewolf’s tale”; transformation by spell or curse; the “threat” of werewolves
[Ch. 5] “Cynocephali, cynocephaloids, and other mutts”
Cynocephali: an introduction; “Doghead”; “Dogheads”; “Dog's Heads”; Conclusions
[Ch. 6] “Conclusion”
[Appendix 1] “Canid terms and elements in personal names”
[Appendix 2] “Celtic canids in archaeology, classical sources and iconography”
[Appendix 3] “Celtic canids in legal sources”
[Appendix 4] “The hounds of the fíanna
[Appendix 5] “Edition of “Conceand ingi Cathbaidh caim” with provisional translation”
Bibliography; Index