Revisiting the medieval north of England : interdisciplinary approaches /
edited by Anita Auer, Denis Renevey, Camille Marshall and Tino Oudesluijs.
- Cardiff : University of Wales Press, (c)2019.
- 1 online resource
- Religion and culture in the Middle Ages .
Includes bibliographies and index.
Cover; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; Series Editors' Preface; Acknowledgements; List of Figures; Notes on Contributors; Setting the Scene: Interdisciplinary Perspectiveson the Medieval North of England; 1: Northern Spirituality Travels South: Rolle's Middle English Encomium Oleum Effusum Nomen Tuumin Lincoln College Library, MS 91, and Dublin, Trinity College, MS 155: Denis Renevey; 2: Mechtild of Hackeborn and Cecily Neville's Devotional Reading: Images of the Heart in Fifteenth-Century England: Naoë Kukita Yoshikawa 3: Langage o northrin lede: Northern Middle English as a Written Medium: Merja Stenroos4: A Pystille Made to a Cristene Frende: A Translation of Walter Hilton's Epistola ad Quemdam Seculo Renunciare Volentem in a Northern Anthology, London, British Library, MS Additional 33971: Marleen Cré; 5: 'So to interpose a little ease': Northern Hermit-lit: Ralph Hanna; 6: The Children of the York Plays: Richard Beadle; 7: Linguistic Regionalism in the York Corpus Christi Plays: Anita Auer; 8: The Hermit and the Sailor: Readings of Scandinavia in North-East English Hagiography: Christiania Whitehead 9: Towards a Nuanced History of Early English Spelling: Old Northumbrian Witnesses and Northern Orthography: Marcelle ColeBibliography; Index; Back Cover
The focus of this volume is the north of England and its regions in the late medieval period. Concentrating on the north as a centre of manuscript production, dissemination and reception, this volume aims to illustrate the fluidity of boundaries and communication, and the resulting links to different geographical regions.