Benjamin Thorpe (1781/2 1870) was a scholar of Old English and Member of the Royal Academy of Sciences at Munich. Through his work, he sought to promote the study of the old vernacular, against the trend of scholarly apathy towards Anglo-Saxon literature. One of his greatest contributions was this two-volume edition, published as part of the Rolls Series in 1861, of the oldest and most important chronological accounts of Anglo-Saxon affairs. Covering the period from Julius Caesar's invasion of Britain to around the accession of Henry II in 1154, this volume is a translation of the chronicle...
Benjamin Thorpe (1781/2 1870) was a scholar of Old English and Member of the Royal Academy of Sciences at Munich. Through his work, he sought to promo...
Benjamin Thorpe (1781/2 1870) was a scholar of Old English and Member of the Royal Academy of Sciences at Munich. Through his work, he sought to promote the study of the old vernacular, against the trend of scholarly apathy towards Anglo-Saxon literature. One of his greatest contributions was this two-volume edition, published as part of the Rolls Series in 1861, of the oldest and most important chronological accounts of Anglo-Saxon affairs. Covering the period from Julius Caesar's invasion of Britain to around the accession of Henry II in 1154, this volume brings together seven manuscripts...
Benjamin Thorpe (1781/2 1870) was a scholar of Old English and Member of the Royal Academy of Sciences at Munich. Through his work, he sought to promo...
The writings of AElfric of Eynsham (c.950 c.1010) are among the most important to survive from Anglo-Saxon England. He was shaped by tenth-century monastic reform, and his promotion of Old English was highly influential. His earliest known works, the Sermones Catholici (c.990 5), are adaptations of Latin texts rendered in Old English. The homilies draw on the gospels, saints' lives and other doctrinal themes. They were intended to be delivered over two years. This two-volume collection, first published between 1844 and 1846, contains transcriptions of the Old English texts with facing-page...
The writings of AElfric of Eynsham (c.950 c.1010) are among the most important to survive from Anglo-Saxon England. He was shaped by tenth-century mon...