Some screenshots from the Crossing Borders Digital Resource. Featuring a selection of texts translated between Latin, French, Irish, Welsh, English & Norse (1200-1600); maps of transmission, articles and a database. Find the site here: https://t.co/zTKkoKp8hT #medievaltwitter
Nous apprenons avec tristesse le décès du professeur Rosamond McKitterick, dont les travaux ont tant contribué à renouveler notre compréhension de la société carolingienne.
Dans cette vidéo parue récemment, on pourra l'entendre revenir sur son parcours : https://t.co/yA5sgjDHtt
'At early morn the daylight springeth,
The angels in heaven merry singeth,
The world is blithe and glad.
The fiends of hell are sorrowful and mad,
Now the king, God's son,
The strength of death hath overcome.'
A 14th-century poem for Easter dawn: https://t.co/YAz4LYw9IU
Easter Eve is traditionally the time of the Harrowing of Hell, when Christ descended into the underworld and set its captives free. This story inspired many powerful retellings in medieval literature and art, including this majestic Anglo-Saxon poem: https://t.co/YAviKJPIFm
The best of trees began to speak words:
'It was long ago – I remember it yet –
that I was cut down at the edge of a forest,
removed from my root.'
In the Anglo-Saxon poem 'The Dream of the Rood', the Cross recalls the Crucifixion: https://t.co/fbBEwcnTui
Today is the feast of the Annunciation to the Virgin Mary, 'Lady Day'. In England it was once the spring quarter-day, when contracts would begin and servants took new jobs, and until 1752 it was also the start of the New Year. A day for new beginnings, new life of many kinds.
Can anyone with better eyes (or legal terminology knowledge) than me, decipher the first word here? From a register of wills, Ireland, 1830s. Most entries have a £sum (value of the estate) in this column, but a few, like this, have an entry in the format [illegible]+see+year(s)
Today is the feast of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, known in medieval England as 'Our Lady Day in harvest'.
An Anglo-Saxon version of a popular legend about the end of Mary's life on earth, in which a much-loved woman reaches the harvest of her days: https://t.co/6bD5VNQ5md
The Harrowing of Hell: Christ bending over to pull souls out of Hellmouth and trampling Satan underfoot. #HolySaturday
BL Cotton MS Tiberius C VI; the 'Tiberius Psalter'; 11th century; (?) Old Minster, Winchester; f.14r @BLMedieval
We look forward to hosting tonight's documentary screening of Treasure From the Bog, followed by an 'In Conversation' with the Library’s interim Head of Preservation and Conservation, Dr. John Gillis and Dr. Rachel Moss at the @TLRHub. #SoldOut#FaddanMorePsalter#Conservation
It's the eve of Michaelmas, the great feast of St Michael and All Angels - an invocation of the powers of light as the year turns towards the darker days of autumn. Here's a thread on Michaelmas daisies, geese, moons, and other namesakes of the angels' feast.