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Thijs Porck deposited Beowulf: A Dutch Paper Doll Pirate History (1934) in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 4 years agoReports on the existence of a set of paper dolls based on the Old English poem Beowulf, published in various Dutch newspapers in the 1930s.
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Thijs Porck deposited De Middeleeuwen in Midden-aarde. J.R.R. Tol- kien en zijn Oudengelse inspiratiebronnen in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 4 years agoA Dutch article that discusses some of the Old English sources that inspired J. R. R. Tolkien.
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Dominik Waßenhoven deposited Vom Verraten und Beraten. Æthelred the Unready (978–1016) im Urteil seiner Zeitgenossen in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 4 years, 4 months agoWas King Æthelred ‘the Unready’ seen as a failure by his contemporaries? The study looks at sources that were written during and immediately after Æthelred’s reign in order to see if the king was criticised or blamed for the misfortunes in the conflicts with the Danes. The most important authors to be considered are Ælfric of Eynsham and Archbish…[Read more]
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Nelson Goering deposited Review of Mailhammer & Vennemann (2019): The Carthaginian North: Semitic Influence on Early Germanic: A Linguistic and Cultural Study in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 4 years, 5 months agoJournal of Historical Linguistics, Volume 11, Issue 2, 357 – 366.
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Nelson Goering deposited Kaluza’s Law and Secondary Stress (final version) in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 4 years, 5 months agoKaluza’s law is a proposed restriction in the metre of Beowulf against the resolution of light-heavy sequences: words like cyning ‘king’ can only resolve and count as the equivalent of a single heavy syllable under more restricted circumstances than can words such as wudu ‘wood’. There has been debate about how to define these ‘restrict…[Read more]
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Nelson Goering deposited Kaluza’s Law and Secondary Stress in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 4 years, 8 months agoKaluza’s law is a proposed restriction in the metre of Beowulf against the resolution of light-heavy sequences: words like cyning ‘king’ can only resolve and count as the equivalent of a single heavy syllable under more restricted circumstances than can words such as wudu ‘wood’. There has been debate about how to define these ‘restricted…[Read more]
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Nicole Guenther Discenza replied to the topic Old English Forum CFP for MLA 2022 in the discussion
Anglo-Saxon / Old English on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoThe deadline has been extended to 25 March.
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Nicole Guenther Discenza started the topic Old English Forum CFP for MLA 2022 in the discussion
Anglo-Saxon / Old English on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoThe Old English Forum announces these calls for papers for MLA 2022, 6–9 January in Washington, DC.
Session (1) Broken but Wondrous: Finding Hope in Old English Literature
Old English literature is rarely associated with hope – indeed, much of its poetry is littered with the ruins of lost peoples, frozen and desolate landscapes, meditations on…[Read more] -
Nelson Goering deposited Review: A Comparative Grammar of the Early Germanic Languages (2018), by R.D. Fulk in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 4 years, 11 months agoReview of A Comparative Grammar of the Early Germanic Languages by R. D. Fulk, 2018.
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Nelson Goering deposited The Terrible Bite of Fire: Metre, Sound Change, and Emendation in Beowulf 1122 in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 5 years, 1 month agoLine 1122 of Beowulf represents a problem where the findings of metrics, historical phonology, and the reading of the manuscript are in conflict with one another. I revive and adapt Tolkien’s proposal to emend lāðbite līċes līġ ealle forswealg to lāðbite līġes līċ eall forswealg “the cruel bite of fire swallowed up the entire bodies”. This…[Read more]
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Nelson Goering deposited Old Saxon unmet, Genesis B 313b ungemet, and unmetrical scribal forms in Germanic alliterative verse in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 5 years, 1 month agoThe adverb ungemete, unigmetes in Beowulf and elsewhere in Old English verse creates significant metrical problems. I revive and expand the proposal of Fulk (1992) to read this as *unmet. This restoration receives support from metrics and from the comparison with Old Saxon unmet of the same meaning, and the alteration to ungemet(e), etc., in the…[Read more]
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Nelson Goering deposited Eduard Sievers’ Altgermanisch Metrik 125 years on in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 5 years, 2 months agoEduard Sievers’ Altgermanische Metrik remains a foundational work for Germanic metrical research, even 125 years after its publication in 1893. His impact on the field may be roughly divided into three broad approaches: 1) the impulse for the typological categorization and labelling of verses; 2) the four-position principle as the basis for a…[Read more]
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Thijs Porck deposited An Old English Love Poem, a Beowulf Summary and a Reference Letter from Eduard Sievers: G. J. P. J. Bolland (1854–1922) as an Aspiring Old Germanicist in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 5 years, 5 months agoThis article calls attention to documents relating to the early academic life of G. J. P. J. Bolland (1854–1922). During the late 1870s and early 1880s, Bolland was enthralled by the study of Old Germanic languages and Old English in particular. His endeavours soon caught the eye of Pieter Jacob Cosijn (1854–1922), Professor of Germanic Phi…[Read more]
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Alex Woolf deposited CAEDUALLA REX BRETTONUM AND THE PASSING OF THE OLD NORTH in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 5 years, 6 months agoThis paper attempts to correlate Bede’s account of the British king Caedualla, to whom he attributed Edwin’s death, with the information provided by Historia Brittonum and the Harleian pedigrees. It is suggested, inter alia, that his identification with Cadwallon ap Cadfan may be in error.
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Alex Woolf deposited Onuist son of Uurguist: tyrannus carnifex or a David for the Picts? in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 5 years, 6 months agoThis paper examines the career and reputation of perhaps the longest reigning Pictish king, Onuist son of Urguist, who was a contemporary of Offa of Mercia.
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Alex Woolf deposited Dún Nechtain, Fortriu and the Geography of the Picts in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 5 years, 6 months agoIn the nineteenth century the Pictish kingdom of Fortriu and the site of
the Battle of Nechtansmere were located by scholars in Menteith and
Strathearn and at Dunnichen in Forfarshire respectively. These identifications
have largely gone unchallenged. The purpose of this article is to
review the evidence for these locations and to suggest that…[Read more] -
James M. Harland deposited Memories of migration? The ‘Anglo-Saxon’ burial costume of the fifth century AD in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoIt is often claimed that the mortuary traditions that appeared in lowland Britain in the fifth century AD are an expression of new forms of ethnic identity, based on the putative memorialisation of a ‘Germanic’ heritage. This article considers the empirical basis for this assertion and evaluates it in the light of previously proposed ethnic con…[Read more]
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Thijs Porck deposited Reshaping the Germanic Economy of Honour: Gift Giving in J. R. R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 5 years, 10 months agoAn article that contrasts the role of gift giving in Old English poems like Beowulf and The Battle of Maldon to Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings.
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Eileen Joy deposited The Signs and Location of a Flight (or Return?) of Time: The Old English WONDERS OF THE EAST and the Gujarat Massacre in the group
Old English / Early Medieval England on Humanities Commons 6 years agoIn this essay, I examine two widely divergent instances of what I understand to be a compulsive and racialized-sexualized violence against women whose bodies have been figured as “foreign”/Eastern (and even, as animal and barbaric) threats within collective national bodies: the real case of a massacre in the modern state of Gujarat in southwestern…[Read more]
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