Bibliography

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


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Results (13)
Brady, Lindy, “Late medieval Irish kingship, Egerton 1782, and the Irish Arthurian romance Eachtra an mhadra mhaoil (‘The story of the crop-eared dog’)”, Arthurian Literature 34 (2018): 69–87.
Smith, Joshua Byron, “Benedict of Gloucester’s Vita sancti Dubricii: an edition and translation”, Arthurian Literature 29 (2012): 53–100.
Hopkins, Amanda, “Why Arthur at all? The dubious Arthuricity of Arthur and Gorlagon”, Arthurian Literature 26 (2009): 77–97.
Constantine, Mary-Ann, “Neither flesh nor fowl: Merlin as bird-man in Breton folk tradition”, Arthurian Literature 21 (2004): 95–114.
Roberts, Helen A., “Court and cyuoeth: Chrétien de Troyes’ Erec et Enide and the Middle Welsh Gereint”, Arthurian Literature 21 (2004): 53–72.
Lloyd-Morgan, Ceridwen, “Narratives and non-narratives: aspects of Welsh Arthurian tradition”, Arthurian Literature 21 (2004): 115–136.
Lloyd-Morgan, Ceridwen, “Introduction”, Arthurian Literature 21 (2004): 1–8.
Poppe, Erich, “Owein, Ystorya Bown, and the problem of ‘relative distance’: some methodological considerations and speculations”, Arthurian Literature 21 (2004): 73–94.
Davies, Sioned, “Performing Culhwch ac Olwen”, Arthurian Literature 21 (2004): 29–52.
Dooley, Ann, “Arthur of the Irish: a viable concept?”, Arthurian Literature 21 (2004): 9–28.
Gowans, Linda, “The Eachtra an Amadáin Mhóir as a response to the Perceval of Chrétien de Troyes”, Arthurian Literature 19 (2003): 199–230.
abstract:

Probably the least studied of the group of texts ultimately indebted to Chrétien de Troyes' Perceval is an Irish prose tale, Eachtra an Amadáin Mhóir (The Story of the Great Fool). The Arthurian content of its opening section has undoubted links to the work of Chrétien, and in this article I hope to demonstrate that the overall relationship of the two stories is closer than may previously have been appreciated; also that the perceptive and witty response of the Irish work to its celebrated predecessor well repays careful attention.

Dumville, David N., “The historical value of the Historia Brittonum”, Arthurian Literature 6 (1986): 1–26.
Dumville, David N., “An early text of Geoffrey of Monmouth’s Historia regum Britanniae and the circulation of some Latin histories in twelfth-century Normandy”, Arthurian Literature 4 (1985): 1–36.

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