The first ever English translation of Le Roman de Waldef, a significant early thirteenth-century representative of the French literature of early medieval England, and a fast-moving romance set against a history of pre-Conquest England.
An exploration of the nature of cultural exchange of the exotic and Chinese influence in world culture through the study of yongwufu (rhapsodies on objects) and the connection between the early Silk Roads and Chinese poetic writing of the third century.
This volume explores a millennium of multilingual literary exchanges among the peoples of Sicily, the Iberian Peninsula, and North Africa: the Maghrib, or westernmost strongholds of medieval Islam.
This study examines the gift book practices of Elizabeth and Mary Tudor, both queens of England; it begins with pre-accession dedications... Læs mere
The first ever volume fully dedicated to Iberoamerican neomedievalisms that examines the meanings and uses of “the Middle Ages” in Iberian America.
A comprehensive and up-to-date re-examination of over 500 Norse-derived terms in the Ormulum, building on the Gersum typology, exploring the impact of Anglo-Scandinavian on early English.
A discussion of Nordic medieval laws in the period 1100–1300, focusing on the female criminal and highlighting the complex relationship between gender, law, and society during this transformative period.
This book explores the potential of network analysis for medieval and early modern book history, with case studies of the Cotton Library, the Digital Index of Middle English Verse, and the Pforzheimer Collection.
Offers new ways to think about how disease and death, healing and health, were considered, experienced, displayed, and portrayed across the global medieval world.
The first collection of network analysis case studies dedicated to the study of the European Middle Ages.
Hildegard of Bingen’s understandings of the womb from natural philosophy (in her medical work Cause et Cure) and theology (in her visionary work Scivias).
Translations of texts attributed to Emma of Normandy and Edith of Wessex—mother and wife, respectively, of Edward the Confessor.