The resurgence of interest in the history of the English language has prompted this indispensable introductory guide to the scripts used in Old and Middle English writing. The best way to gain a sense of changes in scripts across time is through visual examples. The reader is introduced gradually to vocabulary suitable for the description of script through a range of plates, for example, Caedmon's 'Hymn' (the earliest extant English poem); the opening of an Exeter Book poem; the Lindisfarne Gospels; the opening page of King Alfred's first translation; an illustrated version of the story of Abraham and Isaac; passages from the 'Anglo-Saxon Chronicle'; early (Layamon) and late tellings of the story of Arthur (Malory); contrasting manuscripts of Chaucer's 'Troilus and Criseyde'; Langland; York plays. Each plate is reproduced full size where possible, accompanied by a full transcript, commentary and notes.
Author(s): Jane Roberts
Series: Exeter Medieval Texts and Studies
Edition: 2nd, corrected
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Year: 2016
Language: English
Pages: XVI+294
Some symbols used and other miscellaneous information xiii
Acknowledgements xv
I. GENERAL INTRODUCTION 1
COLOURED PLATES SECTION between pages 12-13
II. INSULAR BACKGROUND 13
III. ANGLO-SAXON MINUSCULE 38
IV. ENGLISH CAROLINE MINUSCULE 85
V. PROTOGOTHIC 104
VI. THE GOTHIC SYSTEM OF SCRIPTS: GOTHIC 'TEXTUALIS' 140
VII. THE GOTHIC SYSTEM OF SCRIPTS: ANGLICANA 161
VIII. THE GOTHIC SYSTEM OF SCRIPTS: SECRETARY 211
IX. AFTERWORD 255
REFERENCES 259
INDEXES 276