Bibliography
T. M. (Thomas Mowbray)
Charles-Edwards s. xx / s. xxi
2019
article
2016
article
Charles-Edwards, T. M., “The Welsh bardic grammars on litterae”, in: Hayden, Deborah, and Paul Russell (eds), Grammatica, gramadach and gramadeg: vernacular grammar and grammarians in medieval Ireland and Wales, Studies in the History of the Language Sciences 125, Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 2016. xvi + 226 pp. 149–160.
abstract:
The first part of this chapter considers the relatively straightforward relationship between the section on letters in Gramadegau Penceirddiaid (GP), the Welsh vernacular grammars, and the section on Litterae in Donatus’s Ars Maior. It then goes on to consider the more problematic case of how the voiced dental fricative /ð/, now written in Welsh with a double dd, was spelt in the different versions of GP. In particular the adoption of the Latin abbreviation for que as a spelling for /ð/ in the Peniarth 20 version is considered in the context of the development of consistent orthographies in late Middle Welsh.
abstract:
The first part of this chapter considers the relatively straightforward relationship between the section on letters in Gramadegau Penceirddiaid (GP), the Welsh vernacular grammars, and the section on Litterae in Donatus’s Ars Maior. It then goes on to consider the more problematic case of how the voiced dental fricative /ð/, now written in Welsh with a double dd, was spelt in the different versions of GP. In particular the adoption of the Latin abbreviation for que as a spelling for /ð/ in the Peniarth 20 version is considered in the context of the development of consistent orthographies in late Middle Welsh.
article
article
Bemmer, Jaqueline, and T. M. Charles-Edwards, “Irish and Welsh law in the European contexts”, Clio@Themis 10 (2016). URL: <http://www.cliothemis.com/Irish-and-Welsh-Law-in-the>.
abstract:
This paper traces the relationship of the Roman Empire with Ireland and Wales from roughly the fifth to the seventh centuries and probes the role that Roman and Canon law played there following the events of 410, based on evidence from authors, such as Prosper of Aquitaine, Venantius Fortunatus, Zosimus and Gildas, as well as the vernacular legal traditions. This approach allows us to investigate perceptions of legal identity in Post-Roman Britain and the echoes of Latin learning embraced in Ireland.
abstract:
This paper traces the relationship of the Roman Empire with Ireland and Wales from roughly the fifth to the seventh centuries and probes the role that Roman and Canon law played there following the events of 410, based on evidence from authors, such as Prosper of Aquitaine, Venantius Fortunatus, Zosimus and Gildas, as well as the vernacular legal traditions. This approach allows us to investigate perceptions of legal identity in Post-Roman Britain and the echoes of Latin learning embraced in Ireland.
2015
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2014
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2013
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Charles-Edwards, T. M., “1. Britain, 350–550”, in: Charles-Edwards, T. M., Wales and the Britons, 350–1064, History of Wales, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013. 816 pp. 31–74.
abstract:
A narrative is provided stretching from the period immediately before the great attacks on Britain in the 360s up to the great Justinianic plague of the 540s. This is the period which saw the end of direct Roman authority over Britain and the settlements of the Anglo‐Saxons. It also saw the creation of a new Britannia (Brittany) in north‐west Gaul, which survived in spite of the military dominance of the Franks. In Britain, the wars between the Anglo‐Saxon settlers and the Britons extended over several centuries, whereas, south of the Channel, the Franks subdued other barbarian peoples, were converted to Christianity, and allied with the Gallo‐Romans.
(source: digital edition)
abstract:
A narrative is provided stretching from the period immediately before the great attacks on Britain in the 360s up to the great Justinianic plague of the 540s. This is the period which saw the end of direct Roman authority over Britain and the settlements of the Anglo‐Saxons. It also saw the creation of a new Britannia (Brittany) in north‐west Gaul, which survived in spite of the military dominance of the Franks. In Britain, the wars between the Anglo‐Saxon settlers and the Britons extended over several centuries, whereas, south of the Channel, the Franks subdued other barbarian peoples, were converted to Christianity, and allied with the Gallo‐Romans.
(source: digital edition)
article
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2012
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T. M. Charles-Edwards, “[Review of: Patrick Sims-Williams, Irish Influence on medieval Welsh literature (2010)]”, in: Medium Ævum 81 (2012): 324.
2011
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Charles-Edwards, T. M., “Connacht, saints of (act. c.400–c.800)”, Oxford dictionary of national biography, Online: Oxford University Press. URL: <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/51012>.
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work
2010
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edited work
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Charles-Edwards, T. M., “The date of Culhwch ac Olwen”, in: McLeod, Wilson, Abigail Burnyeat, Domhnall Uilleam Stiùbhart, Thomas Owen Clancy, and Roibeard Ó Maolalaigh (eds), Bile ós chrannaibh: a Festschrift for William Gillies, Tigh a' Mhaide, Brig o' Turk, Perthshire: Clann Tuirc, 2010. xxv + 494 pp. 45–56.
article
T. M. Charles-Edwards, “[Review of: Daniel P. Mc Carthy, The Irish annals: their genesis, evolution and history (2008)]”, in: Uáitéar Mac Gearailt (ed.) • James Kelly (ed.), Studia Hibernica 36 (2009–2010): 207–210.
2009
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2007
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Stalmans, Nathalie, and T. M. Charles-Edwards, “Meath, saints of (act. c.400–c.900)”, Oxford dictionary of national biography, Online: Oxford University Press. URL: <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/51010>.
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Charles-Edwards, T. M., “The Galanas tractate in Iorwerth: texts and the legal development”, in: Charles-Edwards, T. M., and Paul Russell (eds), Tair colofn cyfraith: The three columns of law in medieval Wales: homicide, theft and fire, Cymdeithas Hanes Cyfraith Cymru 5, Bangor: The Welsh Legal History Society, 2007. 92–107.
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Charles-Edwards, T. M., “Ulster, saints of (act. c.400–c.650)”, Oxford dictionary of national biography, Online: Oxford University Press. URL: <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/51011>.
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Charles-Edwards, T. M., “The Welsh law of theft: Iorwerth versus the rest”, in: Charles-Edwards, T. M., and Paul Russell (eds), Tair colofn cyfraith: The three columns of law in medieval Wales: homicide, theft and fire, Cymdeithas Hanes Cyfraith Cymru 5, Bangor: The Welsh Legal History Society, 2007. 108–130.
article
Charles-Edwards, T. M., “The three columns: a comparative perspective”, in: Charles-Edwards, T. M., and Paul Russell (eds), Tair colofn cyfraith: The three columns of law in medieval Wales: homicide, theft and fire, Cymdeithas Hanes Cyfraith Cymru 5, Bangor: The Welsh Legal History Society, 2007. 26–59.
edited work
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Charles-Edwards, T. M., “[Texts:] Iorwerth manuscript E (and B)”, in: Charles-Edwards, T. M., and Paul Russell (eds), Tair colofn cyfraith: The three columns of law in medieval Wales: homicide, theft and fire, Cymdeithas Hanes Cyfraith Cymru 5, Bangor: The Welsh Legal History Society, 2007. 258–307.
2006
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2005
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