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El. knyga: Ashgate Critical Essays on Early English Lexicographers: Volume 2: Middle English

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The teaching of Latin remained important after the Conquest but Anglo-Norman now became a language of instruction and, from the thirteenth century onwards, a language to be learned. During this period English lexicographers were more numerous, more identifiable and their works more varied, for example: the tremulous hand of Worcester created an Old English-Latin glossary, and Walter de Bibbesworth wrote a popular contextualized verse vocabulary of Anglo-Norman country life and activities. The works and techniques of Latin scholars such as Adam of Petit Point, Alexander Nequam, and John of Garland were influential throughout the period. In addition, grammarians' and schoolmasters' books preserve material which in some cases seems to have been written by them. The material discussed ranges from a twelfth-century glossary written at a minor monastic house to four large alphabetical fifteenth-century dictionaries, some of which were widely available. Some material seems to connect with the much earlier Old English glossaries in ways not yet fully understood.
Acknowledgements ix
Series Preface xiii
Introduction xv
SECTION 1 LOOKING BACK TO OLD ENGLISH
1 The Old English Gloss of the Eadwine Psalter
3(30)
Phillip Pulsiano
2 The Hatton MS of the West Saxon Gospels: The Preservation and Transmission of Old English
33(16)
Andreas Fischer
3 Building a Glossary, extract from `Use of Sources and External Aids'
49(40)
Christine Franzen
4 An Early `Hard Word' List: Stephen Batman's `A Note of Saxon Wordes'
89(4)
John R. McNair
5 Stephen Batman and the Expositio Vocabulorum
93(4)
Carl T. Berkhout
6 Expositio Vocabulorum: A Medieval English Glossary as Archival Aid
97(16)
Don C. Skemer
SECTION 2 LATIN LEXICOGRAPHERS, THEIR METHODS AND WORKS, ELEVENTH TO THIRTEENTH CENTURIES
7 Lexicography in the Middle Ages
113(16)
Olga Weijers
8 From Ælfric to John of Cornwall: Evidence for Vernacular Grammar Teaching in Pre- and Post-Conquest England
129(32)
Lucia Kornexl
9 The Oratio de utensilibus ad domum regendam pertinentibus by Adam of Balsham
161(24)
Patrizia Lendinara
SECTION 3 OTHER LATIN TEXTS AND GLOSSARIES WITH ANGLO-NORMAN AND ENGLISH GLOSSES, MAINLY TWELFTH AND THIRTEENTH CENTURIES
10 A Polyglot Glossary of the Twelfth Century
185(12)
David Howlett
11 English Plant Names in the Thirteenth Century: The Trilingual Harley Vocabulary
197(26)
Hans Sauer
SECTION 4 ANGLO-NORMAN AND THE TRILINGUAL SOCIETY, FROM THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY
12 Anglo-Norman: Past and Future
223(12)
Tony Hunt
13 Anglo-French and Middle English Vocabulary in Femina Nova
235(26)
W. Rothwell
14 The Trilingual England of Geoffrey Chaucer
261(24)
W. Rothwell
15 Business Training in Medieval Oxford
285(22)
H.G. Richardson
16 A French Vocabulary and Conversation-Guide in a Fifteenth-Century Legal Notebook
307(26)
J.H. Baker
SECTION 5 LATIN AND ENGLISH, FOURTEENTH AND FIFTEENTH CENTURIES
17 Book Production Terms in Nicholas Munshull's Nominale
333(24)
Jeremy Griffiths
18 The Teaching of Latin in Later Medieval England
357(20)
Brother Bonaventure
19 The Recovery of a Fifteenth-Century Schoolmaster's Book: Beinecke MS 3, No. 34
377(670)
Linda Ehrsam Voigts
Barbara A. Shailor
20 Late Fifteenth-Century `Terms of Association' in MS. Pepys
399(6)
T.L. Burton
21 Cambridge University Library LI I 14, f. 46r-v: A Late Medieval Natural Scientist at Work
405(8)
D. Thomas Benediktson
22 The Preface to a Fifteenth-Century Concordance
413(18)
Sherman M. Kuhn
SECTION 6 THE FIFTEENTH-CENTURY ALPHABETICAL DICTIONARIES
23 Humfrey Wan ley Borrows Books in Cambridge
431(16)
Helmet Gneuss
24 The Catholicon Anglicum (1483): A Reconsideration
447(16)
Gabriele Stein
25 Linguistic Problems within the Tradition of the 15th Century Glossary Medulla grammatice
463(26)
Vincent P. McCarren
Index 489
Christine Franzen was formerly at the School of English, Film and Theatre with Media Studies, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand.