Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-q99xh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-18T17:15:00.530Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 May 2020

Jeremy J. Smith
Affiliation:
University of Glasgow
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Transforming Early English
The Reinvention of Early English and Older Scots
, pp. 252 - 281
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Primary Sources

Secondary Sources

Anderson, Andro (pr) 1666, 1673. The Life and Acts of the Most famous and valiant Champion, Sir William Wallace (Edinburgh: Anderson) (= Hary)Google Scholar
Anderson, Andro (pr) 1670. The Acts and Life of the Most victorious Conquerour Robert Bruce, King of Scotland (Edinburgh: Anderson) (= Barbour)Google Scholar
Anon. 1633. The Psalms of David, in prose and metre (Aberdeen: Raban)Google Scholar
Anon 1693. A Specimen of the Several Sorts of Letter, Given to the University by Dr. John Fell, Late Lord Bishop of Oxford. To which is Added The Letter Given by Mr F. Junius (Oxford: Printed at the Theater)Google Scholar
Anon (ed.) 1712. The Life and Conversation of Richard Bentley, delivered in his own words, for the most part from his own writings (London: Morphew)*Google Scholar
Anon ?1737. The Session of the Critics … (London: Cooper)Google Scholar
Awdelay, John 1559. The Wonders of England (London: Awdelay)Google Scholar
Awdelay, John (pr) 1573. A Sermon no lesse fruitfull then famous (London: Awdelay) (= Wimbledon)Google Scholar
Barbour 1571 = Lekpreuik; Barbour 1616 = Hart; Barbour 1620 = Hart; Barbour 1648 = Lithgow; Barbour 1665 = Sanders; Barbour 1670 = Anderson; Barbour 1672 = Sanders; Barbour 1737 = Carmichael and Miller; Barbour ‘1715’/‘1758’ = Freebairn; Barbour 1790 = PinkertonGoogle Scholar
Baron, Robert 1636. Canons and constitutions ecclesiasticall (Aberdeen: Raban)Google Scholar
Bentley, Richard 1699. A dissertation on the epistles of Phalaris (London: Mortlock and Hartley)Google Scholar
Bentley, Richard 1720. Η KAINH ΔIAΘHKH, Graece Novum Testamentum Versionis Vulgatae (Cambridge: n.p.)Google Scholar
Bentley, Richard (ed.) 1732. Milton’s Paradise Lost: A new edition (London: Tonson)Google Scholar
Berthelette, Thomas (pr) 1532, 1554. Jo. Gower de confessione Amantis (London: Berthelette)Google Scholar
Blow, James (pr) 1728. The Life and Acts of the most famous and valiant Champion, Sir William Wallace (Belfast: Blow) (= Hary)*Google Scholar
Boorde, Andrew 1555. The fyrst boke of the introduction of knowledge (London: Copland)Google Scholar
Bryson, James (pr) 1640, 1645. The Life and Acts of the most famous and valiant Champion, Sr. William Wallace (Edinburgh: Bryson) (= Hary)Google Scholar
of Buchan, Earl (‘overlooked by’) 1790. The Metrical History of William Wallace (Perth: Morison) (= Hary)Google Scholar
du Cange, Sieur Charles du Fresne 1678. Glossarium ad scriptores mediae & infimae Latinitatis (Paris: Martin)*Google Scholar
Carmichael, Alexander and Miller, Alexander (pr) 1737. The Acts and Life of the Most victorious Conquerour Robert Bruce, King of Scotland (Glasgow: Carmichael and Miller) (= Barbour)Google Scholar
Cates, Thomas (pr) 1635. A Sermon, No less fruitfull, then Famous (London: Cates) (= Wimbledon)Google Scholar
Caxton, William (pr) 1477. [Chaucer, Canterbury Tales] (Westminster: Caxton)Google Scholar
Caxton, William (pr) 1483a. [Gower, Confessio Amantis] (Westminster: Caxton)Google Scholar
Caxton, William (pr) 1483b. [Chaucer, Canterbury Tales] (Westminster: Caxton)Google Scholar
Caxton, William (pr) 1484, 1490. [Love, Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ] (Westminster: Caxton)Google Scholar
Charteris, Henrie (pr) 1594. The lyfe and actis of the maist illuster and vailzeand campioun VVilliam Wallace (Edinburgh: Charteris) (= Hary)Google Scholar
Charteris, Robert (pr) 1601. The lyfe and actis of the maist illuster and vailzeand campioun VVilliam Wallace (Edinburgh: Charteris) (= Hary)Google Scholar
Chaucer 1477 = Caxton; Chaucer 1483 = Caxton; Chaucer 1492 = Pynson; Chaucer 1498 = de Worde; Chaucer 1526 = Pynson; Chaucer 1532 = Thynne; Chaucer 1542 = Thynne; Chaucer 1550 = Thynne; Chaucer 1561 = Stow; Chaucer 1598 = Speght; Chaucer 1602 = Speght; Chaucer 1682 = Harefinch; Chaucer 1721 = Urry; Chaucer 1775 = TyrwhittGoogle Scholar
Chepman, Walter and Myllar, Andro (pr) 1509. [Hary’s Wallace] (Edinburgh: Chepman and Myllar)*Google Scholar
Churchyard, Thomas 1552. Davy Dycars Dreme (London: Lant)Google Scholar
Copland, William (pr) 1553a. The Palis of Honoure Compeled by Gawyne dowglas Bysshope of Dunkyll (London: Copland)Google Scholar
Copland, William (pr) 1553b. The xiii Bukes of Eneados of the famose Poete Virgill Translatet out of Latyne verses into Scottish metir, bi the Reuerend fathir in God, Mayster Gawin Douglas Bishop of Dunkel & vnkil to the Erle of Angus (London: Copland)Google Scholar
Crowley, Robert 1548. An Informacion and Peticion Agaynst the Oppressours of the Poore (London: Day)Google Scholar
Crowley, Robert 1549. The Voyce of the Laste Trumpet (London: Grafton for Crowley)Google Scholar
Crowley, Robert (ed.) 1550a. The Vision of Pierce Plowman, 1st edn (London: Grafton for Crowley)Google Scholar
Crowley, Robert (ed.) 1550b. The Vision of Pierce Plowman, 2nd edn (London: Grafton for Crowley)Google Scholar
Crowley, Robert (ed.) 1550c. The Vision of Pierce Plowman, 2nd (= 3rd) edn (London: Grafton for Crowley)Google Scholar
Crowley, Robert 1550d. One and Thyrtye Epigrammes (London: Crowley)Google Scholar
Crowley, Robert 1550e. The Way to Wealth (London: Mierdman for Crowley)Google Scholar
Crowley, Robert 1551. Philargyrie of Greate Britayne (London: Crowley)Google Scholar
Descartes, René 1649. Les passions de l’âme (Paris: de Gras)*Google Scholar
Dickson, David 1635. A short explanation, of the epistle of Paul to the Hebrewes (Aberdeen: Raban)Google Scholar
Douglas 1553a = Copland; Douglas 1553b = Copland; Douglas 1710 = RuddimanGoogle Scholar
Drummond of Hawthornden, William 1616. Poems (Edinburgh: Hart)Google Scholar
Erasmus, Desiderius 1530. De recta Latini Grecisque sermonis pronuntiatione (Basle: Froben)*Google Scholar
Foxe, John 1563. Acts and Monuments of matters most speciall and memorable (London: Day)Google Scholar
Foxe, John (ed.) 1571, The Gospels of the Fower Euangelistes, Translated in the Old Saxon Tyme out of Latin into the Vulgare Toung of the Saxons (London: Day)Google Scholar
Freebairn, Robert (pr) ‘1715’/‘1758’a. The Life and Acts of the Most Victorious Conqueror Robert Bruce, King of Scotland (Edinburgh: Freebairn) (= Barbour)Google Scholar
Freebairn, Robert (pr) ‘1715’/‘1758’b. The Acts and Deeds of the Most Famous and Valiant Champion, Sir William Wallace (Edinburgh: Freebairn) (= Hary)Google Scholar
Gau, John (trans) 1533. The richt way to the kingdome of heuine (Malmö: Hochstraten)Google Scholar
The Gentleman’s Magazine, October, 1731*Google Scholar
Gower 1483 = Caxton; Gower 1532 = Berthelette; Gower 1554 = BertheletteGoogle Scholar
Guild, William 1624. Three Rare Monuments of Antiquitie (Aberdeen: Raban)Google Scholar
Hailes, Lord (Sir David Dalrymple) (ed.) 1770. Ancient Scottish Poems (Edinburgh: Balfour)Google Scholar
Harefinch, John (?) (pr) 1687. The Works of our Ancient, Learned & Excellent Poet, Jeffrey Chaucer (London: J. H.)Google Scholar
Hart, Andro (pr) 1611, 1618, 1620b. The life and acts of the most famous and valiant campion, Sir William Wallace (Edinburgh: Hart) (= Hary)Google Scholar
Hart, Andro (pr) 1616, 1620a. The actes and life of the most victoriovs conquerouvr Robert Bruce, king of Scotland (Edinburgh: Hart) (= Barbour)Google Scholar
Hary 1509 = Chepman and Myllar; Hary 1570 = Lekpreuik; Hary 1594 = Charteris;Google Scholar
Hary 1601 = Charteris; Hary 1611 = Hart; Hary 1618 = Hart; Hary 1620 = Hart; Hary 1630 = Raban; Hary 1640 = Bryson; Hary 1645 = Bryson; Hary 1648 = Lithgow; Hary 1661a = Lithgow; Hary 1661b = ‘Society of Stationers’; Hary 1665 = Sanders; Hary 1666 = Anderson; Hary 1673 = Anderson; Hary 1684 = Sanders; Hary 1685 = Sanders; Hary 1690 = Sanders; Hary 1699 = Sanders; Hary 1713 = Sanders; Hary ‘1715’/‘1758’ = Freebairn; Hary 1728 = Blow; Hary 1790 = Buchan, Earl ofGoogle Scholar
Hearne, Thomas (ed.) 1722. Johannis de Fordun Scotichronicon (Oxford: e Theatro Sheldoniano)Google Scholar
Hearne, Thomas 1726. Johannis Confratris et Monachi Glastoniensis Chronica (Oxford: e Theatro Sheldoniano)Google Scholar
Hickes, George and Wanley, Humfrey 1705, Linguarum Vett. Septentrionalium Thesaurus Grammatico-Criticus et Archaeologicus (Oxford: e Theatro Sheldoniano)Google Scholar
Jaggard, William (pr) 1617. A Sermon No lesse Fruitefull, then Famous (London: Jaggard) (= Wimbledon)Google Scholar
James, VI, king of Scots 1585. Essayis of a Prentise in the Divine Art of Poesie (Edinburgh: Vautrollier)Google Scholar
Jonson, Ben 1640. The English Grammar made by Ben. Iohnson (London: n.p.)Google Scholar
Joscelyn, John (ed.) 1566. A testimonie of antiquitie, shewing the auncient faith in the Church of England touching the sacrament of the body and bloude of the Lord here publikely preached, and also receaued in the Saxons tyme, aboue 600. yeares agoe (London: Day)Google Scholar
Langland 1550a = Crowley; Langland 1550b = Crowley; Langland 1550c = Crowley; Langland 1561 = RogersGoogle Scholar
Lekpreuik, Robert (pr) 1570. The actis and deidis of the illuster and vailzeand campioun, Schir William Wallace (Edinburgh: Lekpreuik for Charteris) (= Hary)Google Scholar
Lekpreuik, Robert (pr) 1571. The actys and lyfe of Robert Bruce King of Scotland (Edinburgh: Lekpreuik for Charteris) (= Barbour)Google Scholar
L’Isle, William (ed.) 1623. A Saxon Treatise Concerning the Old and New Testament (London: Haviland)Google Scholar
Lithgow, Gedeon (pr) 1648a. The Life and Acts of the most victorious Conquerour Robert Bruce, King of Scotland (Edinburgh: Lithgow) (= Barbour)Google Scholar
Lithgow, Gedeon (pr) 1648b, 1661. The Life and Acts of the most valiant Champion, Sir William Wallace (Edinburgh: Lithgow) (= Hary)Google Scholar
Love, Nicholas 1484 = Caxton; Love, Nicholas 1490 = Caxton; Love, Nicholas 1494 = Pynson; Love, Nicholas 1506 = Pynson; Love, Nicholas 1517 = de Worde; Love, Nicholas 1525 = de WordeGoogle Scholar
Macpherson, David (ed.) 1795. The orygynale cronykil of Scotland (London: Bensley)*Google Scholar
Morgan, Joseph 1732. Phoenix Britannicus (London: Morgan, Edlin and Wilford)Google Scholar
Morison, Robert (pr) 1790. The Metrical History of William Wallace (Perth: Morison) (= Hary; see also Buchan, Earl of)Google Scholar
Moxon, Joseph 1683. Mechanick Exercises, or, The Doctrine of Handy-works (London: Moxon)Google Scholar
Ogle, George (ed. and trans.) 1741. The Canterbury Tales of Chaucer, modernis’d by several hands (London: Tonson)Google Scholar
Panter, Patrick 1633. Valliados: de gestis Illustrissimi GULIELMI VALLÆ (Edinburgh: Hart)Google Scholar
Percy, Thomas (ed.) 1763. Five Pieces of Runic Poetry (London: Dodsley)Google Scholar
Percy, Thomas (ed.) 1765. Reliques of Ancient English Poetry (London: Dodsley)Google Scholar
Pinkerton, John (ed.) 1790. The Bruce; or, The History of Robert I, King of Scotland (London: Nicol) (= Barbour)Google Scholar
Poyntz, Robert 1566. Testimonies for the Real Presence of Christes Body and Blood in the Blessed SacramentGoogle Scholar
Pynson, Richard (pr) 1492. [Chaucer, Canterbury Tales] (Westminster: Pynson)Google Scholar
Pynson, Richard (pr) 1494, 1506. Incipit Speculum Vite Cristi (London: Pynson) (= Love)Google Scholar
Pynson, Richard (pr) 1526. Here begynneth the boke of Canterbury tales (London: Pynson)Google Scholar
Raban, Edward (pr) 1630. The Lyfe and Acts of the most famous and valiant Champion, Sir William Wallace (Aberdeen: Raban) (= Hary)Google Scholar
Ramsay, Allan 1721. Poems (Edinburgh: Ruddiman)Google Scholar
Ramsay, Allan (ed.) 1723–4. The Ever Green, being a collection of Scots Poems, Wrote by the Ingenious before 1600 (Edinburgh: Ruddiman)Google Scholar
Rawlinson, Christopher (ed.) 1698. An. Manl. Sever. Boethi Consolationis Philosophiae Libri V. Anglo-Saxonice redditi ab Alfredo, Inclyto Anglo-Saxonum Rege. Ad apographum Junianum expressos edidit Christophorus Rawlinson e Collegio Reginae (Oxford: e Theatro Sheldoniano)*Google Scholar
Ritson, Joseph (ed.) 1783. A Select Collection of English Songs (London: Johnson)Google Scholar
Rogers, Owen (pr) 1561. The vision of Pierce Plowman (London: Rogers)Google Scholar
Ruddiman, Thomas (ed.) 1710. Virgil’s Æneis, Translated into Scottish Verse, by the Famous Gawin Douglas Bishop of Dunkeld (Edinburgh: Symson and Freebairn)Google Scholar
Ruddiman, Thomas 1714. The Rudiments of the Latin Tongue, or A plain and easy Introduction to Latin Grammar (Edinburgh: Freebairn)Google Scholar
Salesbury, William 1550. A briefe and playne introduction, teachyng how to pronounce the letters of the British tong (London: Grafton for Crowley)Google Scholar
Salesbury, William 1567. A playne and a familiar introduction (London: Denham)Google Scholar
Sanders, Robert (father and son) (pr) 1665a, 1684, 1685, 1690, 1699, 1713. The Life and Acts of the most famous and valiant Champion, Sir William Wallace (Glasgow: Sanders) (= Hary)Google Scholar
Sanders, Robert (pr) 1672. The acts and life of the most victorious conqueror, Robert Bruce, King of Scotland (Glasgow: Sanders) (= Barbour)Google Scholar
Shakespeare, William 1609. The Late, And much admired Play, Called Pericles, Prince of Tyre (London: White and Creede)Google Scholar
Sheridan, Thomas 1759. A Discourse delivered in the Theatre at Oxford, in the Senate-House at Cambridge, and at Spring-Garden in London (London: Millar)Google Scholar
Skelton, John 1545 [1554]. Why come ye nat to Courte (London: Copland)Google Scholar
‘Society of Stationers’ (pr) 1661. The Life and Acts of the most famous Champion, Sir William Wallace (Edinburgh: Society of Stationers) (= Hary)Google Scholar
Speght, Thomas (ed.) 1598. The Workes of our Antient and Learned English Poet, Geoffrey Chavcer, newly Printed (London: Islip)Google Scholar
Speght, Thomas (ed.) 1602. The Workes of ovr Ancient and Learned English Poet, Geoffrey Chavcer, newly Printed (London: Islip)Google Scholar
Spenser, Edmund 1579. The Shepheardes Calender (London: Singleton)Google Scholar
Stow, John (ed.) 1561. The Workes of Geffrey Chaucer (London: Kyngston)Google Scholar
Stow, John 1598. A Suruay of London (London: Windet)Google Scholar
Strutt, Joseph 1779. The Chronicle of England (London: Evans and Faulder)Google Scholar
Suhm, Peter 1787. Symbolae ad Literaturam Teutonicam Antiqviorem (Copenhagen: Horrebow)*Google Scholar
Swift, Jonathan 1704. A Tale of a Tub (London: Nutt)Google Scholar
Symson, Andrew 1705. Tripatriarchicon, Or, the Lives of the three Patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, Extracted forth of the Sacred Story, and digested into English Verse (Edinburgh: Symson)Google Scholar
Thomas, Percy, 1770. The Hermit of Warkworth: a Northumberland Ballad (Alnwick: Davidson)Google Scholar
Thynne, William (ed.) 1532. The Workes of Geffray Chaucer (London: Godfray)Google Scholar
Thynne, William (ed.) 1542. The Workes of Geffray Chaucer (London: Grafton)Google Scholar
Thynne, William (ed.) 1550. The Workes of Geffray Chaucer (London: Hill)Google Scholar
Turner, Sharon 17991805. History of the Anglo-Saxons (London: Cadell and Davies)Google Scholar
Tyrwhitt, Thomas (ed.) 1775. The Canterbury Tales of Chaucer (London: Payne)Google Scholar
Urry, John (ed.) 1721. The Works of Geoffrey Chaucer (London: Lintot)Google Scholar
Virgil 1679. Publii Virgilii Maronis Opera (London: Tyler and Holt)Google Scholar
Willich, Anthony 1798. Elements of the Critical Philosophy; … to which are added: Three Philological Essays (London: Longman)Google Scholar
[Wimbledon, Thomas] 1540–1. A Sermon no lesse fruteful then famous (London: n.p.)Google Scholar
Wimbledon, Thomas 1573 = Awdelay; Wimbledon, Thomas 1617 = Jaggard; Wimbledon, Thomas 1635 = CatesGoogle Scholar
de Worde, Wynkyn (pr) 1498. The boke of Chaucer named Caunterbury Tales (Westminster: de Worde)Google Scholar
de Worde, Wynkyn (pr) 1517. Vita Christi (London: de Worde) (= Love)Google Scholar
de Worde, Wynkyn (pr) 1525. Vita Christi (London: de Worde) (= Love)Google Scholar
Aarsleff, Hans 1967. The Study of Language in England 1780–1860 (Princeton University Press)Google Scholar
Aitken, Adam J. 1983. ‘The language of Older Scots poetry’, in Derrick McClure, J. (ed.), Scotland and the Lowland Tongue: Studies in the Language and Literature of Lowland Scotland in Honour of David D. Murison (Aberdeen University Press), 1849Google Scholar
Alderson, William 1984. ‘John Urry (1666–1715)’, in Ruggiers (ed.), 93114Google Scholar
Ambrose, Gavin and Harris, Paul 2011. The Fundamentals of Typography, 2nd edn (Lausanne: AVA Academia)Google Scholar
Anderson, Wendy (ed.) 2013. Language in Scotland: Corpus-Based Studies (Amsterdam: Rodopi)Google Scholar
Andersson, Bo 2014. ‘Female writing in manuscript and print: Two German examples from the cultural and political context of late seventeenth-century Sweden – Maria Aurora von Königsmarck (1662–1728) and Eva Margaretha Frölich (?–1692)’, Studia Neophilologica 86, 928Google Scholar
Aston, Margaret 1984. Lollards and Reformers (London: Hambledon)Google Scholar
Bally and Sechehaye 1916 = Saussure 1916Google Scholar
Barbour 1820 = Jamieson 1820; Barbour 1870–89 = Skeat 1870–89; Barbour 1980–5 = McDiarmid and Stevenson 1980–5Google Scholar
Barbrook, Adrian, Howe, Christopher, Blake, Norman and Robinson, Peter 1998. ‘The phylogeny of the Canterbury Tales’, Nature 394, 839Google Scholar
Barker, Nicolas 2002. ‘Editing the past: Classical and historical scholarship’, in Barnard et al. (eds.), 206–27Google Scholar
Barnard, John 2002. ‘Introduction’, in Barnard et al. (eds.), 125Google Scholar
Barnard, John, McKenzie, Donald F. and Bell, Maureen (eds.) 2002. The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain IV: 1557–1695 (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Barton, David 2007. Literacy: An Introduction to the Ecology of Written Language (Oxford: Blackwell)Google Scholar
Baugh, Albert C. (ed.) 1956. The English Text of the Ancrene Riwle, Edited from British Museum MS. Royal 8.C.i (London: EETS)Google Scholar
Bawcutt, Priscilla (ed.) 1998. The Poems of William Dunbar (Glasgow: Association for Scottish Literary Studies)Google Scholar
Bax, Marcel and Kádár, Daniel (eds.) 2011. ‘Understanding historical (im)politeness’, Special Issue, Journal of Historical Pragmatics 12.Google Scholar
Beadle, Richard and McKitterick, Rosamund 1992. Catalogue of the Pepys Library at Magdalene College, Cambridge. V. Manuscripts i. Medieval (Woodbridge: Brewer)Google Scholar
Bédier, Joseph 1890. Le Lai de l’ombre (Fribourg: L’Œuvre de Saint-Paul)Google Scholar
Bédier, Joseph 1922. La Chanson de Roland (Paris: L’Edition de l’Art)Google Scholar
Bédier, Joseph 1928. ‘La Tradition manuscrite du Lai de l’Ombre’, Romania 54, 161–96Google Scholar
Bell, Maureen 2002. ‘Mise-en-page, illustration, expressive form: Introduction’, in Barnard et al., 632–5Google Scholar
Benskin, Michael 1982. ‘The letter <þ> and <y> in later Middle English, and some related matters’, Journal of the Society of Archivists 7, 1330Google Scholar
Benskin, Michael 2004. ‘“Chancery Standard”’, in Kay, Christian, Hough, Carole and Wotherspoon, Irene (eds.), New Perspectives on English Historical Linguistics, volume II (Lexis and Transmission) (Amsterdam: Benjamins), 140Google Scholar
Benskin, Michael and Samuels, Michael L. (eds.) 1981. So meny people longages and tonges: Philological Essays in Scots and Mediaeval English Presented to Angus McIntosh (Edinburgh: Benskin and Samuels)Google Scholar
Benson, Larry (gen. ed.) 1987. The Riverside Chaucer (London: Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Bergs, Alexander 2012. ‘The uniformitarian principle and the risk of anachronisms in language and social history’, in Hernández-Campoy, Juan Manuel and Conde-Silvestre, Juan Camilo (eds.), The Handbook of Historical Sociolinguistics (Malden: Wiley-Blackwell), 8099Google Scholar
Bergstrøm, Geir 2017. ‘“Yeuen at Cavmbrigg”: A study of the medieval English documents of Cambridge’, PhD thesis, University of StavangerGoogle Scholar
Birkett, Tom 2014. ‘Unlocking runes? Reading Anglo-Saxon runic abbreviations in their immediate literary context’, Futhark: International Journal of Runic Studies 5, 91134Google Scholar
Black, Robert and St-Jacques, Raymond (eds.) 2012. The Middle English Glossed Prose Psalter (Heidelberg: Winter)Google Scholar
Blake, Norman (ed.) 1972. Middle English Religious Prose (London: Arnold)Google Scholar
Bliss, Alan J. (ed.) 1969. Sir Orfeo (Oxford: Clarendon Press)Google Scholar
Blodgett, James E. 1984. ‘William Thynne (d. 1546)’, in Ruggiers (ed.), 3553Google Scholar
Bradley, Sidney A. J. (trans.) 1982. Anglo-Saxon Poetry (London: Dent)Google Scholar
Bray, Robyn 2013. ‘“A scholar, a gentleman, and a Christian”: John Josias Conybeare (1779–1824) and his Illustrations of Anglo-Saxon Poetry (1826)’, PhD thesis, University of GlasgowGoogle Scholar
Bremmer, Rolf 1991. ‘Hermes–Mercury and Woden–Odin as inventors of alphabets: A neglected parallel’, in Bammesberger, Alfred (ed.), Old English Runes and Their Continental Background (Heidelberg: Winter), 409–19Google Scholar
Bremmer, Rolf (ed.) 1998. Franciscus Junius F. F. and His Circle (Amsterdam/Atlanta: Rodopi)Google Scholar
Brewer, Charlotte 1996. Editing Piers Plowman (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Brewer, John 1997. The Pleasures of the Imagination: English Culture in the Eighteenth Century (London: HarperCollins)Google Scholar
Briggs, Charles 2000. ‘Literacy, reading, and writing in the medieval West’, Journal of Medieval History 26, 397420Google Scholar
Bromwich, John 1962. ‘The first book printed in Anglo-Saxon types’, Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society 3, 265–91Google Scholar
Brown, Michael 2015. ‘Barbour’s Bruce in the 1480s: Literature and locality’, in Boardman, Steven and Foran, Susan (eds.), Barbour’s Bruce and Its Cultural Contexts: Politics, Chivalry and Literature (Cambridge: Brewer), 213–31Google Scholar
Brown, Stephen, and McDougall, Warren (eds.) 2012. The Edinburgh History of the Book in Scotland, volume II (Enlightenment and Expansion 1707–1800) (Edinburgh University Press)Google Scholar
Brunsden, George 1999. ‘Aspects of Scotland’s social, political and cultural scene in the late 17th and early 18th centuries, as mirrored in the Wallace and Bruce traditions,’ in Cowan, Edward and Gifford, Douglas (eds.), The Polar Twins (East Linton: Tuckwell), 75113Google Scholar
Burnyeat, Myles 1997. ‘Postscript on silent reading’, The Classical Quarterly 47, 74–6Google Scholar
Burrow, John A. 1982. Medieval Writers and Their Work (Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Butler, Emily 2014. ‘Recollecting Alfredian English in the sixteenth century’, Neophilologus 98, 145–59Google Scholar
Butt, Peter and Castle, Richard 2001. Modern Legal Drafting: A Guide to Using Clearer Language (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Caie, Graham D. 2008. ‘The manuscript experience: What medieval vernacular manuscripts tell us about authors and texts’, in Renevey and Caie (eds.), 1027Google Scholar
Caie, Graham D. 2011. ‘The relationship between MS Glasgow, Hunter 409 and the 1532 edition of Chaucer’s works by William Thynne’, in Pahta and Jucker (eds.), 149–61Google Scholar
Campbell, Alistair (ed.) 1962. The Chronicle of Æthelweard (London: Nelson)Google Scholar
Campbell, Lyle 2006. ‘Why Sir William Jones got it all wrong’, International Journal of Basque Linguistics and Philology 40, 245–64Google Scholar
Carpenter, Leona, Shaw, Simon and Prescott, Andrew (eds.) 1998. Towards the Digital Library (London: The British Library)Google Scholar
Carroll, Ruth, Peikola, Matti, Salmi, Hanna, Skaffari, Janne, Varila, Mari-Liisa and Hiltunen, Risto 2013. ‘Pragmatics on the page: Visual text in late medieval English books’, in Kendall, J., Portela, M. and White, G. (eds.), ‘Visual text’, Special Issue, European Journal of English Studies 17, 5471Google Scholar
Carroll, Ruth, Hiltunen, Risto, Peikola, Matti, Skaffari, Janne, Tanskanen, Sanna-Kaisa, Valle, Ellen and Wårvik, Brita 2003. ‘Introduction’, in Hiltunen, Risto and Skaffari, Janne (eds.), Discourse Perspectives on English: Medieval to Modern (Amsterdam: Benjamins), 112Google Scholar
Carruthers, Gerard and Gray, Pauline (intro.) 2009. Robert Burns: The Fornicators Court (Edinburgh: Abbotsford Library Project Trust/Faculty of Advocates)Google Scholar
Carruthers, Mary 1990. The Book of Memory (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Cartlidge, Neil 2001. ‘The Canterbury Tales and cladistics’, Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 102, 135–50Google Scholar
Cerquiglini, Bernard 1991. La Naissance du français (Paris: Presses Universitaires de France)Google Scholar
Cerquiglini, Bernard (trans. Betsy Wing) 1999. In Praise of the Variant: A Critical History of Philology (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press)Google Scholar
Chambers, R. W. and Daunt, Marjorie (eds.) 1931. A Book of London English 1384–1425 (Oxford: Clarendon Press)Google Scholar
Chomsky, Noam 1965. Aspects of the Theory of Syntax (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press)Google Scholar
Clanchy, Michael 1993. From Memory to Written Record, 2nd edn (Oxford: Blackwell)Google Scholar
Clemoes, Peter 1952. Liturgical Influence on Punctuation in Late Old English and Early Middle English Manuscripts. Occasional Papers 1. (Cambridge: Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology/Department of Anglo-Saxon)Google Scholar
Cohen, Michael and Bourdette, Robert 1980. ‘Richard Bentley’s edition of Paradise Lost (1732): A bibliography’, Milton Quarterly 14, 4954Google Scholar
Coleman, Joyce 1996. Public Reading and the Reading Public in Late Medieval England and France (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Colledge, Eric 1939. ‘The Recluse: A Lollard interpolated version of the Ancren Riwle’, Review of English Studies 15, 115Google Scholar
Colley, Linda 1992. Britons: Forging the Nation, 1707–1837 (New Haven: Yale University Press)Google Scholar
Collinson, Patrick, Hunt, Arnold and Walsham, Alexandra 2002. ‘Religious publishing in England 1557–1640’, in Barnard et al. (eds.), 2966Google Scholar
Connolly, Margaret and Edwards, Anthony S. G. 2017. ‘Evidence for the history of the Auchinleck Manuscript’, The Library 18, 292304Google Scholar
Connolly, Margaret and Radulescu, Raluca (eds.) 2015. Insular Books: Vernacular Manuscript Miscellanies in Late Medieval Britain (Oxford: The British Academy)Google Scholar
Connor, Patrick 2008. ‘The Ruthwell monument runic poem in a tenth-century context’, Review of English Studies, New Series, 99, 2551Google Scholar
Cook, Brian 2017. ‘Textual homelands: Reinterpreting the manuscript runes of Beowulf’, English Studies 98, 351–67Google Scholar
Cook, Megan 2012. ‘How Francis Thynne read his Chaucer’, Journal of the Early Book Society 15, 214–43Google Scholar
Corbellini, Sabrina, Ramakers, Bart and Hoogvliet, Margriet (eds.) 2015. Discovering the Riches of the Word: Religious Reading in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe (Leiden: Brill)Google Scholar
Corbett, John 2013. ‘The spelling practices of Allan Ramsay and Robert Burns’, in Anderson (ed.), 6590CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cowan, Edward (ed.) 2007. The Wallace Book (Edinburgh: Donald)Google Scholar
Crawford, Robert 2009. The Bard (London: Jonathan Cape)Google Scholar
Culpeper, Jonathan and Kytö, Merja 2010. Early Modern English Dialogues (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Dahood, Roger 1988. ‘The use of coloured initials and other division markers in early versions of Ancrene Riwle’, in Kennedy, Edward D., Waldron, Ronald and Wittig, Joseph S. (eds.), Medieval English Studies presented to George Kane (Woodbridge: Brewer), 7997Google Scholar
Dane, Joseph and Djananova, Svetlana 2005. ‘The typographical gothic: A cautionary note on the title page to Percy’s Reliques of Ancient English Poetry’, Eighteenth-Century Life 29, 7697Google Scholar
D’Arcy, Julian and Wolf, Kirsten 1987. ‘Sir Walter Scott and Eyrbyggja Saga’, Studies in Scottish Literature 22, 3043Google Scholar
Deegan, Marilyn and Sutherland, Kathryn (eds.) 2009. Text Editing, Print and the Digital World (Farnham: Ashgate)Google Scholar
Dekker, Kees 2000. ‘“That Most Elaborate One of Fr. Junius”: An investigation of Franciscus Junius’s manuscript Old English dictionary’, in Graham (ed.), 301–44Google Scholar
Dickins, Bruce 1949. ‘The Irish broadside of 1571 and Queen Elizabeth’s types’, Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society 1, 4860Google Scholar
Dickins, Bruce and Wilson, Raymond M. (eds.) 1951. Early Middle English Texts (London: Bowes and Bowes)Google Scholar
Dickson, Robert and Edmond, John 1890. Annals of Scottish Printing (Cambridge: Macmillan and Bowes)Google Scholar
Dobson, Eric J. 1968. English Pronunciation 1500–1700 (Oxford: Clarendon Press)Google Scholar
Dobson, Eric J. (ed.) 1972. The English Text of the Ancrene Riwle, edited from BM. Cotton MS. Cleopatra C VI (London: EETS)Google Scholar
Dobson, Eric J. 1975. The Origins of Ancrene Wisse (Oxford: Clarendon Press)Google Scholar
Donaldson, E. Talbot 1970. ‘The psychology of editors of Middle English texts’, in Speaking of Chaucer (London: Athlone), 102–18Google Scholar
Donatelli, Joseph 1993. ‘The Percy Folio manuscript: A seventeenth-century context for medieval poetry’, English Manuscript Studies 4, 114–33Google Scholar
Doyle, A. Ian 1983. ‘English books in and out of court from Edward III to Henry VII’, in Scattergood, V. J. and Sherborne, J. W. (eds.), English Court Culture in the Later Middle Ages (London: Duckworth), 163–82Google Scholar
Doyle, A. Ian (intro.) 1987. The Vernon Manuscript: A Facsimile of Bodleian Library, Oxford MS. Eng.poet.A.1 (Cambridge: Brewer)Google Scholar
Doyle, A. Ian and Parkes, Malcolm B. 1978. ‘The production of copies of the Canterbury Tales and the Confessio Amantis in the early fifteenth century’, in Parkes, Malcolm B. and Watson, Andrew G. (eds.), Medieval Scribes, Manuscripts and Libraries: Essays Presented to N. R. Ker (London: Scolar), 163210Google Scholar
Driver, Martha and O’Mara, Veronica (eds.) 2013. Preaching the Word in Manuscript and Print in Late Medieval England: Essays in Honour of Susan Powell (Turnhout: Brepols)Google Scholar
Drout, Michael and Kleinman, Scott 2010. ‘Doing Philology 2: Something “Old”, Something “New”: Material philology and the recovery of the past’, The Heroic Age 13 (online publication = www.heroicage.org/issues/13/pi.php, last consulted on 25 May 2019)Google Scholar
Duffy, Eamon 2005. The Stripping of the Altars, 2nd edn (New Haven: Yale University Press)Google Scholar
Duncan, Archibald (ed.) 1997. John Barbour: The Bruce (Edinburgh: Canongate)Google Scholar
Duncan, Douglas 1965. Thomas Ruddiman: A Study in Scottish Scholarship of the Early Eighteenth Century (Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd)Google Scholar
Echard, Siân (ed.) 2004. A Companion to Gower (Woodbridge: Brewer)Google Scholar
Echard, Siân 2008. Printing the Middle Ages (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press)Google Scholar
Eckert, Penelope and McConnell-Ginet, Sally 1992. ‘Think practically and look locally: Language and gender as community-based practice’, Annual Review of Anthropology 21, 461–90Google Scholar
Edwards, Anthony S. G. and Griffiths, Jeremy 2000. ‘The Tollemache collection of medieval manuscripts’, The Book Collector 49, 349–64Google Scholar
Edwards, Anthony S. G. and Horobin, Simon 2010. ‘Further books annotated by Stephen Batman’, The Library 11, 227–31Google Scholar
Fairclough, Norman 2015. Language and Power, 3rd edn (London: Routledge)Google Scholar
Falconer, Alexander (ed.) 1954. The Percy Letters: The Correspondence of Thomas Percy & David Dalrymple, Lord Hailes (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press)Google Scholar
Fein, Susanna (ed.) 2016. The Auchinleck Manuscript: New Perspectives (York Medieval Press)Google Scholar
Fjalldall, Magnus 2008. ‘To fall by ambition – Grimur Thorkelin and his Beowulf edition’, Neophilologus 92, 321–32Google Scholar
Fleming, Daniel 2004. ‘Eþel-weard: The first scribe of the Beowulf MS’, Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 105, 177–86Google Scholar
Fox, Adam 2000. Oral and Literate Culture in England 1500–1700 (Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Fox, Denton and Ringler, William A. (intro.) 1980. The Bannatyne Manuscript: National Library of Scotland, Advocates’ MS 1.1.6 (London: Scolar Press, in association with the National Library of Scotland)Google Scholar
Frantzen, Allen 1990. Desire for Origins: New Language, Old English, and Teaching the Tradition (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press)Google Scholar
Frantzen, Allen and Niles, John (eds.) 1997. Anglo-Saxonism and the Construction of Social Identity (Gainesville: University Press of Florida)Google Scholar
Franzen, Christine 1991. The Tremulous Hand of Worcester: A Study of Old English in the Thirteenth Century (Oxford: Clarendon Press)Google Scholar
Fulk, Robert D. (ed. and trans.) 2010. The Beowulf Manuscript (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press)Google Scholar
Furnivall, Frederick J. (ed.) 1868. A Six-Text Print of Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales (London: Chaucer Society)Google Scholar
Furnivall, Frederick J. and Kingsley, G. H. (eds.) 1865. Francis Thynne: Animadversions uppon the annotacions and corrections of some imperfections of impressiones of Chaucer’s workes (London: EETS)Google Scholar
Gatch, Milton 1998. ‘Humfrey Wanley (1672–1726)’, in Damico, Helen and Zavadil, Joseph (eds.), Medieval Scholarship: Bibliographical Studies on the Formation of a Discipline, vol. II (Literature and Philology) (New York: Garland), 4557Google Scholar
Gavrilov, Aleksandr 1997. ‘Techniques of reading in classical antiquity’, The Classical Quarterly 47, 5673Google Scholar
Geddie, William 1912. A Bibliography of Middle Scots Poets (Edinburgh: STS)Google Scholar
Genette, Gérard (trans. Jane Lewin) 1997. Paratexts: Thresholds of Interpretation (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Gillespie, Vincent 2007. ‘Vernacular theology’, in Strohm, Paul (ed.), Middle English: Oxford Twenty-First-Century Approaches to Literature (Oxford University Press), 401–10Google Scholar
Gillespie, Vincent and Ghosh, Kantik (eds.) 2011. After Arundel: Religious Writing in Fifteenth-Century England (Turnhout: Brepols)Google Scholar
Gillespie, Vincent and Hudson, Anne (eds.) 2013. Probable Truth: Editing Medieval Texts from Britain in the Twenty-First Century (Turnhout: Brepols)Google Scholar
Gneuss, Helmut 2001. ‘Humfrey Wanley borrows books in Cambridge’, Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society 12, 145–60Google Scholar
Godden, Malcolm (ed.) 1979. Ælfric’s Catholic Homilies, the Second Series Text (Oxford: EETS)Google Scholar
Goring, Paul 2004. Rhetoric of Sensibility in Eighteenth-Century Culture (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Graham, Timothy 2000. ‘John Joscelyn, pioneer of Old English lexicography’, in Graham (ed.), 83140Google Scholar
Graham, Timothy (ed.) 2000. The Recovery of Old English (Kalamazoo: Medieval Institute Publications)Google Scholar
Gray [Mackay], Pauline 2005. ‘Burns’s O Saw Ye My Maggie’, Burns Chronicle (spring number), 1114Google Scholar
Greg, Walter W. 1950/1. ‘The rationale of copy-text’, Studies in Bibliography 3, 1936Google Scholar
Gregory, E. David 2006. Victorian Songhunters: The Recovery and Editing of English Vernacular Ballads and Folk Lyrics, 1820–1883 (Lanham: Scarecrow Press)Google Scholar
Groom, Nick 1999. The Making of Percy’s Reliques (Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Gunn, Cate 2008. Ancrene Wisse: From Pastoral Literature to Vernacular Spirituality (Cardiff: University of Wales Press)Google Scholar
Haarder, Andreas and Shippey, Thomas 1998. Beowulf: The Critical Heritage (London: Routledge)Google Scholar
Haarländer, Stephanie 2006. Rabanus Maurus zum Kennenlernen (Mainz: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft)Google Scholar
Habinek, Thomas 1985. The Colometry of Latin Prose (Berkeley: University of California Press)Google Scholar
Hales, John and Furnivall, Frederick J. (eds.) 1867–8. Bishop Percy’s Folio Manuscript: Ballads and Romances (London: Truebner)Google Scholar
Hall, Joseph (ed.) 1920. Selections from Early Middle English 1130–1250 (Oxford: Clarendon Press)Google Scholar
de Hamel, Christopher 2016. Meetings with Remarkable Manuscripts (Harmondsworth: Allen Lane)Google Scholar
Hammond, Carolyn J.-B. (ed. and trans.) 2014. Augustine: Confessions, Books 1–8 (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press)Google Scholar
Hanna, Ralph 2005. London Literature, 1300–1380 (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Hardman, Philippa 1992. ‘Fitt divisions in Middle English romances: A consideration of the evidence’, The Yearbook of English Studies 22, 6380Google Scholar
Harlow, C. Geoffrey 1959. ‘Punctuation in some manuscripts of Ælfric’, Review of English Studies, new series 10, 119Google Scholar
Harré, Rom 1972. The Philosophies of Science (Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Harris, Kate 1983. ‘John Gower’s Confessio Amantis: The virtues of bad texts’, in Pearsall, Derek (ed.), Manuscripts and Readers in Fifteenth-Century England (Woodbridge: Brewer), 2740Google Scholar
Harris, Richard (ed.) 1992. A Chorus of Grammars: The Correspondence of George Hickes, and His Collaborators on the Thesaurus linguarum septentrionalium (Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies)Google Scholar
Hart, Horace 2014. New Hart’s Rules for Compositors and Readers (Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Hary 1820 = Jamieson 1820bGoogle Scholar
Haugen, Einar 1966. ‘Dialect, language, nation’, American Anthropologist 68, 922–35Google Scholar
Heine, Bernd and Kuteva, Tania 2007. The Genesis of Grammar: A Reconstruction (Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Hellinga, Lotte 1997. ‘Nicolas Love in print’, in Oguro et al. (eds.), 143–62Google Scholar
Hellinga, Lotte 2014. Texts in Transit: From Manuscript to Proof and Print in the Fifteenth Century (Leiden: Brill)Google Scholar
Henderson, John 2007. The Medieval World of Isidore of Seville (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Henry, Avril 1990. ‘“The pater Noster in a table ypeynted”, and some other presentations of doctrine in the Vernon Manuscript’, in Pearsall (ed.), 89113Google Scholar
Hines, John 2004. Voices in the Past: English Literature and Archaeology (Cambridge: Brewer)Google Scholar
Hines, John, Cohen, Nathalie and Roffey, Simon 2004. ‘Iohannes Gower, Armiger, Poeta: Records and memorials of his life and death’, in Echard (ed.), 2341Google Scholar
Hoggart, Richard 1957. The Uses of Literacy (London: Chatto and Windus)Google Scholar
Horobin, Simon 2006. ‘A new fragment of the Romaunt of the Rose’, Studies in the Age of Chaucer 28, 205–15Google Scholar
Horobin, Simon 2010. ‘Adam Pinkhurst, Geoffrey Chaucer and the Hengwrt manuscript of the Canterbury Tales, The Chaucer Review 44, 351–67Google Scholar
Horobin, Simon and Nafde, Aditi 2015. ‘Stephen Batman and the making of the Parker Library’, Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society 15, 561–82Google Scholar
Houwen, Luuk (ed.) 1990. The Sex Werkdays and Agis (Groningen: Forsten)Google Scholar
Hudson, Anne (ed.) 1978. Selections from English Wycliffite Writings (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Hudson, Anne 1983. ‘“No newe thyng”: The printing of medieval texts in the early Reformation period’, in Gray, Douglas and Stanley, Eric G. (eds.), Middle English Studies Presented to Norman Davis (Oxford: Clarendon Press), 153–74Google Scholar
Hudson, Anne 1985. ‘A new look at The Lay Folks’ Catechism’, Viator 16, 243–58Google Scholar
Hudson, Anne 1988. The Premature Reformation: Wycliffite Texts and Lollard History (Oxford: Clarendon Press)Google Scholar
Hudson, Anne 1994. ‘Piers Plowman and the Peasants’ Revolt’, Yearbook of Langland Studies 8, 85106Google Scholar
Hudson, Anne 1996. ‘“Springing cockel in our clene corn”: Lollard preaching in England around 1400’, in Waugh, Scott and Diehl, Pieter (eds.), Christendom and Its Discontents (Cambridge University Press), 132–47Google Scholar
Hudson, Anne and Gradon, Pamela (eds.) 1983. English Wycliffite Sermons (Oxford: Clarendon Press)Google Scholar
Irvine, Susan (ed.) 1993. Sermons from MS Bodley 343 (Oxford: EETS)Google Scholar
Jack, Ronald D. S. and Rozendaal, Pat (eds.) 1997. The Mercat Antholology of Early Scottish Literature 1375–1707 (Edinburgh: Mercat Press)Google Scholar
Jajdelska, Elspeth 2007. Silent Reading and the Birth of the Narrator (University of Toronto Press)Google Scholar
James, Francis 1956. North Country Bishop: A Biography of William Nicolson (New Haven: Yale University Press)Google Scholar
Jamieson, John (ed.) 1820a. The Bruce: Or, the Metrical History of Robert I, King of Scots, by John Barbour, Archdeacon of Aberdeen (Edinburgh: Ballantyne)Google Scholar
Jamieson, John 1820b. Wallace: Or, The Life and Acts of Sir William Wallace, of Ellerslie (Edinburgh: Ballantyne)Google Scholar
Jasper, David and Smith, Jeremy J. 2019. ‘The Lay Folks’ Mass Book and Thomas Frederick Simmons: Medievalism and the Tractarians’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History 70, 785804Google Scholar
Johnson, Ian 2015. ‘From Nicholas Love’s Mirror to John Heigham’s Life: Paratextual displacements and displaced readers’, in Corbellini et al. (eds.), 190212Google Scholar
Johnson, Ian and Westphall, Allan (eds.) 2013. The Pseudo-Bonaventuran Lives of Christ: Exploring the Middle English Tradition (Turnhout: Brepols)Google Scholar
Jones, Marie Claire 2000. ‘Vernacular literacy in late medieval England: The example of East Anglian medical manuscripts’, PhD thesis, University of GlasgowGoogle Scholar
Jones, Michael R. 2011. ‘“This is no prophecy”: Robert Crowley, Piers Plowman, and Kett’s rebellion’, The Sixteenth Century Journal 42, 3755Google Scholar
Jones, Sir William 1807. The Works of Sir William Jones, vol. III (London: Stockdale and Walker)Google Scholar
Jucker, Andreas and Taavitsainen, Irma 2013. English Historical Pragmatics (Edinburgh University Press)Google Scholar
Kaislanemi, Samuli 2017. ‘Code-switching, script-switching, and typeface-switching in Early Modern English manuscript letters and printed tracts’, in Peikola et al., 165200Google Scholar
Kane, George (ed.) 1988. Piers Plowman: The A Version, rev. edn (London: Athlone Press)Google Scholar
Kane, George and Donaldson, E. Talbot (eds.) 1988. Piers Plowman: The B Version, rev. edn (London: Athlone Press)Google Scholar
Karkov, Catherine 2012. ‘The arts of writing: Voice, image, object’, in Lees, Clare (ed.), The Cambridge History of Early Medieval Literature (Cambridge University Press), 7398Google Scholar
Kelemen, Erick 2006. ‘More evidence for the date of A Testimonie of Antiquitie’, The Library 7, 361–76Google Scholar
Kelly, Stephen and Thompson, John J. (eds.) 2005. Imagining the Book (Turnhout: Brepols)Google Scholar
Kemble, John Mitchell (ed.) 1833. The Anglo-Saxon Poems of Beowulf, The Travellers, and The Battle of Finnesburh (London: Pickering)Google Scholar
Ker, Neil R. 1957. Catalogue of Manuscripts Containing Anglo-Saxon (Oxford: Clarendon Press)Google Scholar
Kerby-Fulton, Kathryn 2014. ‘Confronting the scribe–poet binary: The Z text, writing office redaction, and the Oxford reading circles’, in Kerby-Fulton et al. (eds.), 489515Google Scholar
Kerby-Fulton, Kathryn, Thompson, John J. and Baechle, Sarah (eds.) 2014. New Directions in Medieval Manuscript Studies and Reading Practices (University of Notre Dame Press)Google Scholar
Keynes, Simon and Lapidge, Michael 1983. Alfred the Great (Harmondsworth: Penguin)Google Scholar
Kidd, Colin 1993. Subverting Scotland’s Past (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Kidd, Colin 2007. ‘The English cult of Wallace and the blending of nineteenth-century Britain’, in Cowan (ed.), 136–50Google Scholar
Kiernan, Kevin 1986a. ‘Part One: Thorkelin’s discovery of Beowulf: The Thorkelin transcripts of Beowulf’, Anglistica 25, 141Google Scholar
Kiernan, Kevin 1986b. ‘Part Three: The reliability of the transcripts, and the conclusion: The Thorkelin transcripts of Beowulf’,Anglistica 25, 97151Google Scholar
Kiernan, Kevin 1997. Beowulf and the Beowulf Manuscript (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press)Google Scholar
King, Elspeth (intro.) 1998. William Hamilton of Gilbertfield: The Wallace (Edinburgh: Luath)Google Scholar
King, Elspeth 2007. ‘The material culture of William Wallace’, in Cowan (ed.), 117–35Google Scholar
King, John N. 1982. English Reformation Literature (Princeton University Press)Google Scholar
Klaeber, Frederick, rev. Fulk, Robert D., Bjork, Robert E. and Niles, John D. (eds.) 2014 Klaeber’s Beowulf (University of Toronto Press)Google Scholar
Kirk, John and Macleod, Iseabail (eds.) 2013. Scots: The Language and Its Literature (Amsterdam: Rodopi)Google Scholar
Knight, Ione Kemp (ed.) 1967. Wimbledon’s Sermon (Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press)Google Scholar
Kölbing, Eugen (ed.) 1878–9. Die nordische und die englische Version der Tristan-Sage (Heilbronn: Henniger)Google Scholar
Kopaczyk, Joanna and Jucker, Andreas (eds.) 2013. Communities of Practice in the History of English (Amsterdam: Benjamins)Google Scholar
Kraebel, Andrew B. 2015. ‘A further book annotated by Stephen Batman, with new material for his biography’, The Library 16, 458–66Google Scholar
Kretzschmar, William 2009. The Linguistics of Speech (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Kytö, Merja, Smith, Jeremy J. and Taavitsainen, Irma (eds.) 2017. ‘Interfacing individuality and collaboration in the English-language research world’, Studia Neophilogica 89, special supplement, 14Google Scholar
Kytö, Merja and Peikola, Matti (eds.) 2014. ‘Philology on the move: Manuscript studies at the dawn of the twenty-first century’, Studia Neophilologica 86, special supplement, 18Google Scholar
Laing, Margaret and Williamson, Keith (eds.) 1994. Speaking in Our Own Tongues: Papers from the Edinburgh Colloquium on Historical Dialectology (Woodbridge: Boydell and Brewer)Google Scholar
Lanier, Sidney (ed.) 1883. The Boy’s Percy: Being Old Ballads of War, Adventure and Love from Bishop Thomas Percy’s Reliques of Ancient English Poetry (New York: Scribner)Google Scholar
Lave, Jean and Wenger-Trayner, Etienne 1991. Situated Learning (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Leech, Geoffrey 1983. Principles of Pragmatics (London: Longman)Google Scholar
Lerer, Seth 1993. Chaucer and His Readers (Princeton University Press)Google Scholar
Levy, Lindsay 2014. ‘A life in books: Walter Scott’s library at Abbotsford’, PhD thesis, University of GlasgowGoogle Scholar
Leyden, John 1858. Poems and Ballads: With a Memoir of the Author by Sir Walter Scott; and a Supplement by Robert White (Kelso: Rutherfurd)Google Scholar
Lindberg, Conrad (ed.) 1959–73. MS. Bodley 959: Genesis–Baruch 3.20 in the Earlier Version of the Wycliffite Bible (Stockholm: Almqvist and Wiksell)Google Scholar
Liu, Yin 2017. ‘Stating the obvious in runes’, in Peikola et al., 125–39Google Scholar
Liuzza, Roy M. 2006. ‘Scribes of the mind: Editing Old English, in theory and practice’, in Magennis, Hugh and Wilcox, Jon (eds.), The Power of Words: Anglo-Saxon Studies Presented to Donald G. Scragg on His Seventieth Birthday (Morgantown: West Virginia University Press), 245–77Google Scholar
Lowe, Kathryn 2000. ‘“The Oracle of His Country”? William Somner, Gavelkind, and lexicography in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries’, in Graham (ed.), 281300Google Scholar
Lucas, Peter 1997. ‘“A Testimonye of Verye Ancient Tyme”? Some manuscript models for the Parkerian Anglo-Saxon type-designs’, in Robinson, Pamela R. and Zim, Rivkah (eds.), Of the Making of Books: Medieval Manuscripts, Their Scribes and Readers: Essays Presented to M. B. Parkes (Aldershot: Scolar), 147–88Google Scholar
Lucas, Peter 2016. ‘The earliest modern Anglo-Saxon grammar: Sir Henry Spelman, Abraham Wheelock and William Retchford’, Anglo-Saxon England 45, 379417Google Scholar
Macaulay, George C. (ed.) 1900. The English Works of John Gower (London: EETS)Google Scholar
MacCulloch, Diarmaid 1996. Thomas Cranmer (New Haven: Yale University Press)Google Scholar
MacCulloch, Diarmaid 2013. Silence: A Christian History (Harmondsworth: Penguin)Google Scholar
MacCulloch, Diarmaid 2018. Thomas Cromwell: A Life (Harmondsworth: Allen Lane)Google Scholar
McDiarmid, Matthew P. (ed.) 1968. Hary’s Wallace (Edinburgh: STS)Google Scholar
McDiarmid, Matthew P. and Stevenson, James (eds.) 1980–5. Barbour’s Bruce (Edinburgh: STS)Google Scholar
MacDonald, Alasdair 1986. ‘The Bannatyne manuscript: A Marian anthology’, Innes Review 37, 3647Google Scholar
MacDonald, Alasdair 2012. ‘The revival of Scotland’s older literature’, in Brown and McDougall (eds.), 551–60Google Scholar
McDougall, Warren 2012. ‘Developing a marketplace for books: Edinburgh’, in Brown and McDougall (eds.), 118–31Google Scholar
McGann, Jerome 1983. A Critique of Modern Textual Criticism (University of Chicago Press)Google Scholar
McGann, Jerome (ed.) 2010. Online Humanities Scholarship: The Shape of Things to Come (Houston: Rice University Press)Google Scholar
McIntosh, Angus 1989. ‘Is Sir Tristrem an English or a Scottish Poem?’, in Mackenzie, J. Lachlan and Todd, Richard (eds.), In Other Words: Transcultural Studies in Philology, Translation, and Lexicology Presented to Hans Heinrich Meier (Dordrecht: Foris), 8595Google Scholar
Mackay, Francesca 2012. ‘The development of reading practices as represented in the textual afterlife of Nicholas Love’s Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ’, MPhil thesis, University of GlasgowGoogle Scholar
Mackay, Francesca 2017. ‘How the page functions: Reading Pitscottie’s Cronicles in manuscript and print’, in Peikola et al., 4165Google Scholar
McKenzie, Donald F. 2002. ‘Printing and publishing 1557–1700: Constraints on the London book trades’, in Barnard et al. (eds.), 553–67Google Scholar
McKitterick, Rosamund 1989. The Carolingians and the Written Word (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
McLoughlin, Kate 1994. ‘Magdalene College MS Pepys 2498 and Stephen Batman’s reading practices’, Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society 10, 521–34Google Scholar
McNeill, George (ed.) 1886. Sir Tristrem (Edinburgh: STS)Google Scholar
Machan, Tim William 1994. Textual Criticism and Middle English Texts (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press)Google Scholar
Machan, Tim William 2003. English in the Middle Ages (Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Machan, Tim William 2011. ‘The visual pragmatics of code-switching in late Middle English literature’, in Schendl, Herbert and Wright, Laura (eds.), Code-Switching in Early English (Berlin: De Gruyter), 303–33Google Scholar
Machan, Tim William (ed.) 2017. Imagining Medieval English (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Mack, Frances (ed.) 1963. The English Text of the Ancrene Riwle, edited from Cotton MS. Titus D.xviii (London: EETS)Google Scholar
Macy, Gary 1994. ‘The dogma of transubstantiation in the Middle Ages’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History 45, 1141Google Scholar
Magennis, Hugh 2005. ‘Ælfric’s Lives of the Saints and Cotton Julius E.vii: Adaptation, appropriation and the disappearing book’, in Kelly and Thompson (eds.), 99109Google Scholar
Marcus, Imogen 2017 ‘Whose letters are they anyway? Addressing the issue of scribal writing in Bess of Hardwick’s Early Modern English letters’, in Peikola et al., 219–47Google Scholar
Matthews, David 1999. The Making of Middle English (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press)Google Scholar
Matthews, David (ed.) 2000. The Invention of Middle English: An Anthology of Primary Sources (Turnhout: Brepols)Google Scholar
Mele-Marrero, Margarita 2012. ‘A testimonie’s stance: Editorial positioning in Ælfric’s Sermo in die Pasce’, Studia Anglica Posnaniensia 47, 8195Google Scholar
Millett, Bella 2005. ‘The discontinuity of English prose: Structural innovation in the Trinity and Lambeth Homilies’, in Oizumi et al. (eds.), 129–50Google Scholar
Millett, Bella (ed.) 2005. Ancrene Wisse (Oxford: EETS)Google Scholar
Millett, Bella 2007. ‘The pastoral context of the Trinity and Lambeth Homilies’, in Scase (ed.) 2007a, 4364Google Scholar
Millett, Bella 2013. ‘Whatever happened to electronic editing?’, in Gillespie and Hudson (eds.), 3954Google Scholar
Millgate, Jane 2000. ‘The early publication history of Scott’s Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border’, Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 94, 551–64Google Scholar
Minnis, Alastair and Brewer, Charlotte (eds.) 1992. Crux and Controversy in Middle English Textual Criticism (Woodbridge: Boydell and Brewer)Google Scholar
Mitchell, Bruce 2005. ‘Some reflections on the punctuation of Old English prose’, in Oizumi et al. (eds.), 151–62Google Scholar
Mitchell, Jerome 2015. Scott, Chaucer, and Medieval Romance (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky)Google Scholar
Mohrmann, G. P. (Jerry) (intro.) 1969. Thomas Sheridan: A Discourse, Being Introductory to His Course of Lectures on Elocution and the English Language, 1759 (Los Angeles: William Andrews Clark Memorial Library)Google Scholar
Momma, Haruko 2013. From Philology to English Studies (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Mooney, Linne 2006. ‘Chaucer’s scribe’, Speculum 81, 97138Google Scholar
Mooney, Linne and Stubbs, Estelle 2013. Scribes and the City: London Guildhall Clerks and the Dissemination of Middle English Literature 1375–1425 (York Medieval Press)Google Scholar
Moore, Colette 2014. Quoting Speech in Early English (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Moore, Colette 2017. ‘Discourse variation, mise-en-page, and textual organisation in Middle English saints’ lives’, in Peikola et al., 2340Google Scholar
Morris, Richard (ed.) 1871. Cursor Mundi (London: EETS)Google Scholar
Morrison, Stephen 2013. ‘Scribal performance in a late Middle English sermon cycle’, in Driver and O’Mara (eds.), 117–31Google Scholar
Murphy, Michael 1969. ‘Religious polemics in the genesis of Old English studies’, Huntington Library Quarterly 32, 241–8Google Scholar
Murphy, Michael 2015. ‘Allan Ramsay’s poetic language of Anglo-Scottish rapprochement’, Études écossaises 17, 1330Google Scholar
Murray, Kylie 2009. ‘Dream and vision in late-medieval Scotland: The epic case of William Wallace’, Proceedings of the Harvard Celtic Colloquium 29, 177–98Google Scholar
Nichols, Stephen 1990. ‘Introduction: Philology in a manuscript culture’, Speculum 65, 110Google Scholar
Nichols, Stephen 2017. ‘Codex as critic: One manuscript’s dialogue with The Romance of the Rose’, Digital Philology 6, 90120Google Scholar
O’Keeffe, Katharine O’Brien 1990. Visible Song: Transitional Literacy in Old English Verse (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Ogburn, Vincent 1936. ‘Thomas Percy’s unfinished collection, Ancient English and Scottish Poems’, English Literary History 3, 183–9Google Scholar
Oguro, Shoichi, Beadle, Richard and Sargent, Michael (eds.) 1997. Nicholas Love at Waseda (Cambridge: Brewer)Google Scholar
Oizumi, Akio, Fisiak, Jacek and Scahill, John (eds.), Text and Language in Medieval English Prose: A Festschrift for Tadao Kubouchi (Frankfurt am Main: Lang)Google Scholar
Okasha, Elizabeth 1992. ‘Literacy in Anglo-Saxon England: The evidence from inscriptions’, in Medieval Europe 1992: Art and Symbolism, vol. VII (pre-printed conference papers, University of York), 87–8.Google Scholar
Otten, Willemien 2000. ‘Between Augustinian sign and Carolingian reality: The presence of Ambrose and Augustine in the eucharistic debate between Paschasius Radbertus and Ratramnus of Corbie’, Nederlands archief voor kerkgeschiedenis 80, 137–56Google Scholar
Page, Raymond I. 1999. An Introduction to English Runes (Woodbridge: Boydell)Google Scholar
Pahta, Päivi and Jucker, Andreas (eds.) 2011. Communicating Early English Manuscripts (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Parkes, Malcolm B. 1991. ‘The literacy of the laity’, reprinted and updated in Scribes, Scripts and Readers (London: Hambledon), 275–97Google Scholar
Parkes, Malcolm B. 1992. Pause and Effect: A History of Punctuation in the West (London: Scolar)Google Scholar
Parkes, Malcolm B. 1997a. ‘Archaizing hands in English manuscripts’, in Carley, J. P. and Tite, C. G. C. (eds.), Books and Collectors 1200–1700: Essays Presented to Andrew Watson (London: British Library), 101–41Google Scholar
Parkes, Malcolm B. 1997b. ‘Stephen Batman’s manuscripts’, in Kanno, M., Yamshita, H., Kawasaki, M., Asakawa, J. and Shirai, N. (eds.), Medieval Heritage: Essays in Honour of Tadahiro Ikegami (Tokyo: Yushodo), 125–56Google Scholar
Parkes, Malcolm B. 1997c. ‘Punctuation in copies of Nicholas Love’s Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ’, in Oguro et al. (eds.), 4759Google Scholar
Parkes, Malcolm B. 1999. ‘Medieval punctuation and the modern editor’, in Ferrari, A. (ed.), Filologia classica e filologia romanza (Spoleto: Centro Italiano di Studi sull’ alto Medioevo), 337–49Google Scholar
Patterson, Lee 1987. Negotiating the Past (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press)Google Scholar
Pearsall, Derek 1977. Old English and Middle English Poetry (London: Routledge)Google Scholar
Pearsall, Derek 1984. ‘Thomas Speght (ca. 1550–?)’, in Ruggiers (ed.), 7192Google Scholar
Pearsall, Derek (ed.) 1990. Studies in the Vernon Manuscript (Cambridge: Brewer)Google Scholar
Pearsall, Derek 2013. ‘Variants vs variance’, in Gillespie and Hudson (eds.), 197205Google Scholar
Pearsall, Derek and Cunningham, Ian B. (intro.) 1977. The Auchinleck Manuscript (London: Scolar Press)Google Scholar
Peikola, Matti 2003. ‘The Wycliffite Bible and “Central Midlands Standard”: Assessing the manuscript evidence’, Nordic Journal of English Studies 2, 2951Google Scholar
Peikola, Matti 2008. ‘Aspects of mise-en-page in manuscripts of the Wycliffite Bible’, in Renevey and Caie (eds.), 2867Google Scholar
Peikola, Matti 2011. ‘Copying space, length of entries, and textual transmission in Middle English tables of lessons’, in Thaisen and Rutkowska (eds.), 107–24Google Scholar
Peikola, Matti 2015. ‘Manuscript paratexts in the making: British Library MS Harley 6333 as a liturgical compilation’, in Corbellini et al. (eds.), 4467Google Scholar
Peikola, Matti, Makilahde, Aleksi, Salmi, Hanna, Varila, Mari-Liisa and Skaffari, Janne (eds.) 2017. Verbal and Visual Communication in Early English Texts (Turnhout: Brepols)Google Scholar
Perry, Ryan 2007. ‘The Clopton manuscript and the Beauchamp affinity: Patronage and reception issues in a West Midlands reading community’, in Scase (ed.) 2007a: 131–59Google Scholar
Perry, Ryan 2013a. ‘Editorial politics in the Vernon manuscript’, in Scase (ed.) 2013b: 7195Google Scholar
Perry, Ryan 2013b. ‘“Some sprytuall matter of gostly edyfycacion”: Readers and readings of Nicholas Love’s Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ’, in Johnson and Westphall (eds.), 79126Google Scholar
Pittock, Murray 2010. Material Culture and Sedition 1688–1760 (Basingstoke: Palgrave)Google Scholar
Plumer, Danielle Cunliffe 2000. ‘The construction of structure in the earliest editions of Old English poetry’, in Graham (ed.), 243–80Google Scholar
Powell, Susan 1997. ‘What Caxton did to the Festial’, Journal of the Early Book Society 11, 4877Google Scholar
Powell, Susan (ed.) 2009. John Mirk’s Festial (Oxford: EETS)Google Scholar
Powell, Susan 2011. ‘After Arundel but before Luther: The first half-century of print’, in Gillespie and Ghosh (eds.), 523–41Google Scholar
Prescott, Andrew 1997. ‘The electronic Beowulf and digital restoration’, Literary and Linguistic Computing 12, 185–95Google Scholar
Pulsiano, Philip 2000. ‘William L’Isle and the editing of Old English’, in Graham (ed.), 173206Google Scholar
Putter, Ad, Jefferson, Judith and Minkova, Donka 2014. ‘Dialect, rhyme, and emendation in Sir Tristrem’, Journal of English and Germanic Philology 113, 7392Google Scholar
Ratia, Maura and Suhr, Carla 2017. ‘Verbal and visual communication in title pages of Early Modern English specialised medical texts’, in Peikola et al., 6793Google Scholar
Raven, James 2002. ‘The economic context’, in Barnard et al. (eds.), 568–82Google Scholar
Renevey, Denis and Caie, Graham D. (eds.) 2008. Medieval Texts in Context (London: Routledge)Google Scholar
Rennie, Susan 2012. Jamieson’s Dictionary of Scots (Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Reynolds, Leighton and Wilson, Nigel G. 2013. Scribes and Scholars: A Guide to the Transmission of Greek and Latin Literature, 3rd edn (Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Ricks, Christopher (ed.) 1988. A. E. Housman: Collected Poems and Selected Prose (Harmondsworth: Penguin)Google Scholar
Riddy, Felicity 2007. ‘Unmapping the Territory: Blind Hary’s Wallace’ in Cowan (ed.), 107–16Google Scholar
Robinson, Pamela 1990. ‘The Vernon manuscript as a “Coucher Book”’, in Pearsall (ed.), 1528Google Scholar
Rogers, H. Leslie 1985. ‘The Battle of Maldon: David Casley’s transcript’, Notes and Queries New Series, 32, 147–55Google Scholar
Ruggiers, Paul (ed.) 1984. Editing Chaucer: The Great Tradition (Norman: Pilgrim Books)Google Scholar
Saenger, Paul 1997. Space between Words: The Origins of Silent Reading (Stanford University Press)Google Scholar
Salter, Elisabeth 2015. Popular Reading in English c. 1400–1600 (Manchester University Press)Google Scholar
Salter, Elizabeth 1956. ‘Punctuation in an early manuscript of Nicholas Love’s Mirror’, Review of English Studies, New Series 7, 1118Google Scholar
Samuels, Michael L. 1963. ‘Some applications of Middle English dialectology’, English Studies 44, 8194Google Scholar
Samuels, Michael L. 1981. ‘Spelling and dialect in the late and post-Middle English periods’, in Benskin and Samuels (eds.), 4354Google Scholar
Samuels, Michael L. 1985. ‘Langland’s dialect’, Medium Ævum 54, 232–47Google Scholar
Samuels, Michael L. and Smith, Jeremy J. 1981. ‘The language of Gower’, Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 82, 295304Google Scholar
Sandved, Arthur 1981. ‘Prolegomena to a renewed study of the rise of standard English’, in Benskin and Samuels (eds.), 3142Google Scholar
Santini, Monica 2010. The Impetus of Amateur Scholarship: Discussing and Editing Medieval Romances in Late Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Britain (Berne: Lang)Google Scholar
Sargent, Michael 1997. ‘The textual affiliations of the Waseda manuscript of Nicholas Love’s Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ’, in Oguro et al. (eds.), 175274Google Scholar
Sargent, Michael (ed.) 2004. The Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ: A Reading Text (University of Exeter Press)Google Scholar
Sargent, Michael (ed.) 2005. Nicholas Love, The Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ: A Full Critical Edition (University of Exeter Press)Google Scholar
Saul, Nigel 2001. Death, Art and Memory in Medieval England (Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
de Saussure, Ferdinand (Bally, Charles and Sechehaye, Albert eds.) 1916. Cours de linguistique générale (Paris: Payot)Google Scholar
Scanlon, Larry 2007. ‘Langland, apocalypse and the early modern editor’, in McMullan, Gordon and Matthews, David (eds.), Reading the Medieval in Early Modern England (Cambridge University Press), 5173Google Scholar
Scase, Wendy 1992. ‘Reginald Pecock, John Carpenter, and John Colop’s “Common-Profit” books: Aspects of book ownership and circulation in fifteenth-century London’, Medium Ævum 61, 261–74Google Scholar
Scase, Wendy (ed.) 2007a. Essays in Manuscript Geography (Turnhout: Brepols)Google Scholar
Scase, Wendy 2007b. Literature and Complaint in England, 1272–1553 (Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Scase, Wendy 2013a. ‘Some Vernon analogues and their patrons’, in Scase (ed.) 2013b: 247–68Google Scholar
Scase, Wendy (ed.) 2013b. The Making of the Vernon Manuscript (Turnhout: Brepols)Google Scholar
Scase, Wendy 2013c. ‘The patronage of the Vernon manuscript’, in Scase (ed.) 2013b: 269–93Google Scholar
Scott, Diane 2015. ‘Silent reading and the medieval text: The development of reading practices in the early prints of William Langland and John Lydgate’, PhD thesis, University of GlasgowGoogle Scholar
Scott, Walter (ed.) 1802–3. Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border (Edinburgh: Cadell and Davies)Google Scholar
Scott, Walter (ed.) 1804. Sir Tristrem; a Metrical Romance of The Thirteenth Century; by Thomas of Erceldoune, called The Rhymer (Edinburgh: Constable)Google Scholar
Scott, Walter 1805. The Lay of the Last Minstrel (London: Longman)Google Scholar
Scott, Walter 1808. Marmion (Edinburgh: Constable)Google Scholar
Scott, Walter 1829. ‘Memoir of George Bannatyne’, in Anon (ed.), Memorials of George Bannatyne (Edinburgh: Bannatyne Club), 124Google Scholar
Sebba, Mark 2009. ‘Sociolinguistic approaches to writing systems research’, Writing Systems Research 1, 3549Google Scholar
Senra Silva, Inmaculada 1998. ‘The rune “ēþel” and scribal writing habits in the Beowulf manuscript’, Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 99, 241–7Google Scholar
Sharpe, Kevin 2000. Reading Revolutions (New Haven: Yale University Press)Google Scholar
Sher, Richard B. 2006. The Enlightenment and the Book (University of Chicago Press)Google Scholar
Sherman, William 2008. Used Books (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press)Google Scholar
Sherman, William 2013. ‘Punctuation as configuration; or, how many sentences are there in Sonnet 1’, Early Modern Literary Studies (online publication = https://extra.shu.ac.uk/emls/si-21/04-Sherman_Punctuation%20as%20Configuration.htm, last consulted on 25 May 2019)Google Scholar
Sibbald, James 1802. Chronicle of Scottish Poetry: From the Thirteenth Century to the Union of the Crowns (Edinburgh: Sibbald)Google Scholar
Simpson, Grant 1998. Scottish Handwriting 1150–1650 (East Linton: Tuckwell)Google Scholar
Sisam, Kenneth 1953. ‘Humfrey Wanley’, in Studies in the History of Old English Literature (Oxford: Clarendon Press), 259–77Google Scholar
Skeat, Walter W. (ed.) 1870–89. The Bruce, or, the book of the most excellent and noble Prince, Robert de Broyss, King of Scots, compiled by John Barbour (London: EETS)Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 1988a. ‘The Trinity Gower D-Scribe and his work on two early Canterbury Tales manuscripts’, in Smith (ed.), 5169Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 1988b. ‘Spelling and tradition in fifteenth-century copies of Gower’s Confessio Amantis’, in Smith (ed.), 96113Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. (ed.) 1988c. The Language of Chaucer and His Contemporaries: Essays by M. L. Samuels and Jeremy J. Smith (Aberdeen University Press)Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 1996. An Historical Study of English (London: Routledge)Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 2000a. ‘The letters s and z in South-Eastern Middle English’, Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 101, 403–13Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 2000b. ‘Standard language in Early Middle English?’, in Taavitsainen, Irma, Nevalainen, Terttu, Pahta, Päivi and Rissanen, Matti (eds.), Placing Middle English in Context (Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter), 125–39Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 2004. ‘John Gower and London English’, in Echard (ed.), 6172Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 2008. ‘Issues of linguistic categorisation in the evolution of written Middle English’, in Renevey and Caie (eds.), 211–24Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 2010. ‘Scots and English in the letters of John Knox’, in McGinley, Kevin and Royan, Nicola (eds.), The Apparelling of Truth: Literature and Literary Culture in the Reign of James VI: A Festschrift for Roderick J. Lyall (Cambridge Scholars), 110Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 2012a. Older Scots: A Linguistic Reader (Woodbridge: STS)Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 2012b. ‘The historiography of the English language’, in Bergs, Alexander and Brinton, Laurel (eds.), English Historical Linguistics (Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter), 1295–312Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 2013a. ‘Mapping the language of the Vernon manuscript’, in Scase (ed.), 4970Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 2013b. ‘Punctuating Mirk’s Festial: A Scottish text and its implications’, in Driver and O’Mara (eds.), 161–92Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 2013c. ‘The language of the letters of Archibald Campbell, Lord Ilay (1682–1761)’, in Anderson (ed.), 2744Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 2016. ‘Scots and English across the Union’, Scottish Literary Review 8, 1732Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 2017a. ‘From secreit script to public print: Punctuation, news management, and the condemnation of the Earl of Bothwell’, Huntington Library Quarterly 80, 223–38Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 2017b. ‘The afterlives of Nicholas Love’, Studia Neophilologica 89, 5974Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. 2019. ‘Chaucer and London English’, in Johnson, Ian (ed.), Geoffrey Chaucer in Context (Cambridge University Press), 3542Google Scholar
Smith, Jeremy J. and Kay, Christian J. 2011. ‘The pragmatics of punctuation in Older Scots’, in Pahta and Jucker (eds.), 212–25Google Scholar
Smithers, Geoffrey V. (ed.) 1957. Kyng Alisaunder (London: EETS)Google Scholar
Somerset, Fiona 2013. Feeling like Saints: Lollard Writings after Wyclif (Ithaca: Cornell University Press)Google Scholar
SPAT = Scottish Printing Archival Trust 1990. A Reputation for Excellence: A History of the Edinburgh Printing Industry (Edinburgh: Merchiston Publishing)Google Scholar
SPAT = Scottish Printing Archival Trust 1996. A Reputation for Excellence: A History of the Dundee and Perth Printing Industries (Edinburgh: Merchiston Publishing)Google Scholar
Spencer, Helen 1993. English Preaching in the Late Middle Ages (Oxford: Clarendon Press)Google Scholar
Spencer, Helen 2004. ‘Sermon literature’, in Edwards, Anthony S. G. (ed.), A Companion to Middle English Prose (Cambridge: Brewer), 151–74Google Scholar
Spencer, Helen 2015. ‘F. J. Furnivall’s Six of the Best: The Six-Text Canterbury Tales and the Chaucer Society’, Review of English Studies, New Series, 66, 601–23Google Scholar
Spurlock, Scott 2011. ‘Cromwell’s Edinburgh press and the development of print culture in Scotland’, Scottish Historical Review 90, 179203Google Scholar
Stanley, Eric G. 1969. ‘Laʒamon’s antiquarian sentiments’, Medium Ævum 38, 2337Google Scholar
Stenroos, Merja forthcoming. ‘A variationist approach to Middle English dialects’Google Scholar
Stock, Brian 1983. The Implications of Literacy: Written Language and Models of Interpretation in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries (Princeton University Press)Google Scholar
Stock, Brian 2001. After Augustine: The Meditative Reader and the Text (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press)Google Scholar
Suhr, Carla 2011. Publishing for the Masses: Early Modern English Witchcraft Pamphlets (Helsinki: Mémoires de la Société Néophilologique)Google Scholar
Summit, Jennifer 2008. Memory’s Library: Medieval Books in Early Modern England (University of Chicago Press)Google Scholar
Swain, Larry J. 2011. ‘Whose text for whom? Transmission history of Ælfric of Eynsham’s Letter to Sigeweard’, in Thaisen and Rutkowska (eds.), 3152Google Scholar
Swales, John 1990. Genre Analysis: English in Academic and Research Settings (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Swan, Mary 2007. ‘Mobile libraries: Old English manuscript production in Worcester and the West Midlands, 1090–1215’, in Scase (ed.), 2942Google Scholar
Swan, Mary 2010. ‘Reading for the ear: Lambeth Palace Library, MS 487, Item 10’, Leeds Studies in English 41, 214–24Google Scholar
Swan, Mary and Treharne, Elaine (eds.) 2000. Rewriting Old English in the Twelfth Century (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Thaisen, Jacob and Rutkowska, Hanna (eds.) 2011. Scribes, Printers, and the Accidentals of Their Texts (Frankfurt am Main: Lang)Google Scholar
Thomson, Ann 1995. ‘Joseph Morgan et le monde islamique’, Dix-huitième Siècle 27, 349–63Google Scholar
Thompson, John 2004. ‘Bishop Thomas Percy’s contributions to Langland scholarship: Two annotated Piers Plowman prints in Belfast’, in Matsuda, Takami, Linenthal, Richard and Scahill, John (eds.), The Medieval Book and a Modern Collector: Essays in Honour of Toshiyuki Takamiya (Cambridge: Brewer), 451–60Google Scholar
Thompson, John. 2013a. ‘Preaching with a pen: Audience and self-regulation in the writing and reception of John Mirk and Nicholas Love’, in Driver and O’Mara (eds.), 101–16Google Scholar
Thompson, John 2013b. ‘Reading miscellaneously in and around the English pseudo-Bonaventuran tradition’, in Johnson and Westphall (eds.), 127–50Google Scholar
Thompson, John 2014a. ‘Foreword to Part III’, in Kerby-Fulton et al., 159–64Google Scholar
Thompson, John 2014b. ‘Love in the 1530s’, in Meale, Carole and Pearsall, Derek (eds.), Makers and Users of Medieval Books: Essays in Honour of A. S. G. Edwards (Woodbridge: Brewer), 191201Google Scholar
Thorkelin, Grimur Jonsson (ed.) 1815. De Danorum rebus gestis secul. III & IV. Poëma danicum dialecto anglosaxonica (Copenhagen: Rangel)Google Scholar
Thorne, J. R. and Uhart, Marie-Claire 1986. ‘Robert Crowley’s Piers Plowman’, Medium Ævum 55, 248–54Google Scholar
Tolkien, J. R. R. (ed.) 1962. The English Text of the Ancrene Riwle: Ancrene Wisse, edited from MS. Corpus Christi College Cambridge 402 (London: EETS)Google Scholar
Treharne, Elaine 2012. Living through the Conquest: The Politics of Early English 1020–1230 (Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Turville-Petre, Thorlac 1990. ‘The Vernon and Clopton manuscripts’, in Pearsall (ed.), 2944Google Scholar
Tyrkkö, Jukka 2017. ‘Quantifying contrasts: A method of computational analysis of visual features on the early printed page’, in Peikola et al. (eds.), 95122Google Scholar
Varila, Mari-Liisa, Salmi, Hanna, Mäkilähde, Aleksi, Skaffari, Janne and Peikola, Matti 2017. ‘Disciplinary decoding: Towards understanding the language of visual and material features’, in Peikola et al. (eds.), 120Google Scholar
Verweij, Sebastiaan 2016. The Literary Culture of Early Modern Scotland (Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Wakelin, Daniel 2018. Designing English (Oxford: Bodleian Library)Google Scholar
Walker, Greg 2005. Writing under Tyranny (Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Walsh, Brian 2013. ‘“A priestly farewell”: Gower’s tomb and religious change in Pericles’, Religion and Literature 45, 81113Google Scholar
Walsham, Alexandra 2007. ‘Inventing the Lollard past: The afterlife of a medieval sermon in early modern England’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History 58, 628–55Google Scholar
Warner, Lawrence 2014. The Myth of Piers Plowman (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Warner, Lawrence 2015. ‘Scribes, misattributed: Hoccleve and Pinkhurst’, Studies in the Age of Chaucer 37, 55100Google Scholar
Warner, Lawrence 2018. Chaucer’s Scribes: London Textual Production, 1384–1432 (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
von Wartburg, Walther 1946. Evolution et structure de la langue française (Berne: Francke)Google Scholar
Watson, Nicholas 1995. ‘Censorship and cultural change in late-medieval England: Vernacular theology, the Oxford translation debate, and Arundel’s Constitutions of 1409’, Speculum 70, 822–64Google Scholar
Whitaker, Thomas (ed.) 1813. Uisio Willi de Petro Plouhman (London: John Murray)Google Scholar
White, Hugh (trans.) 1993. Ancrene Wisse (Harmondsworth: Penguin)Google Scholar
Williams, Abigail 2017. The Social Life of Books (New Haven: Yale University Press)Google Scholar
Windeatt, Barry 1984. ‘Thomas Tyrwhitt (1730–1786)’, in Ruggiers (ed.), 117–43Google Scholar
Wingfield, Emily 2016. ‘The Ruthven manuscript of Gavin Douglas’s Eneados and a new manuscript witness of Julius Caesar Scaliger’s Epidorpides’, Renaissance Studies 30, 430–42Google Scholar
Wittig, Kurt 1958. The Scottish Tradition in Literature (Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd)Google Scholar
Wood, Andy 2007. The 1549 Rebellions and the Making of Early Modern England (Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Wormald, Patrick 1977. ‘The uses of literacy in Anglo-Saxon England and its neighbours’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 27, 95114Google Scholar
Wright, Cyril E. 1960. Humfrey Wanley, Saxonist and Library-Keeper (Gollancz Lecture) (London: Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Wright, Cyril E. 1972. Fontes Harleiani (London: British Museum)Google Scholar
Zettersten, Arne (ed.) 1976. The English Text of the Ancrene Riwle, Edited from Magdalene College, Cambridge MS Pepys 2498 (London: EETS)Google Scholar
Zettersten, Arne (ed.) 1979. Waldere (Manchester University Press)Google Scholar
Zettersten, Arne and Diensberg, Bernhard (eds.) 2000. The English Text of the Ancrene Riwle: The Vernon Text (Oxford: EETS)Google Scholar
Zumthor, Paul 1972. Essai de poétique médiévale (Paris: Seuil)Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Jeremy J. Smith, University of Glasgow
  • Book: Transforming Early English
  • Online publication: 08 May 2020
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108333474.010
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Jeremy J. Smith, University of Glasgow
  • Book: Transforming Early English
  • Online publication: 08 May 2020
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108333474.010
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Jeremy J. Smith, University of Glasgow
  • Book: Transforming Early English
  • Online publication: 08 May 2020
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108333474.010
Available formats
×