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         Lydgate John:     more detail
  1. Lydgate's minor poems : the two nightingale poems by John, 1370?-1451? Lydgate, 2009-10-26
  2. The churl and the bird. translated from the French by John Lydga by Lydgate. John. 1370?-1451?, 1906-01-01
  3. Lydgate 's Complaint of the black knight; Text mit Einleitung un by Lydgate. John. 1370?-1451?, 1896-01-01
  4. Lydgate's Troy book. A.D. 1412-20 Volume 1 by John, 1370?-1451? Lydgate, 2009-10-26
  5. Henry before Agincourt. Part-song for male voices (unaccompanied), words by John Lydgate (1370-1451) (Mortimer Series of modern Part Songs) by Harold Noble, 1947
  6. A lytell treatyse of the horse. the sheep. and the ghoos. by Joh by Lydgate. John. 1370?-1451?, 1906-01-01
  7. Minor poems. The two nightingale poems. (A.D. 1446.) by John, 1370?-1451? Lydgate, 2009-10-26
  8. The assembly of gods or The accord of reason and sensuality in t by Lydgate. John. 1370?-1451?, 1895-01-01
  9. John Lydgate's Fall of Princes: Narrative Tragedy in Its Literary and Political Contexts (Oxford English Monographs) by Nigel Mortimer, 2005-08-18
  10. John Lydgate (Twayne's English Authors Series) by Lois Ebin, 1985-09
  11. The assembly of gods: or The accord of reason and sensuality in the fear of death by John Lydgate 1370?-1451? Triggs Oscar Lovell 1865- [from old catalog] ed, 1895-12-31
  12. John Lydgate and the Making of Public Culture (Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature) by Maura Nolan, 2005-09-19

61. Cronología Ajedrecística
1370 Arabic manuscript written; belonged to Sultan of Egypt 1390.10.10 John I of Aragon requested a 1412 Lydgate; John Lydgate wrote Reson and sensuallyte, a
http://members.fortunecity.es/caalovera/22/22.htm
web hosting domain names email addresses Cronología ajedrecística Ardashir I (Artashir; Artaxerses) ruled Persia until 241. Founder of the Sassanian Kingdom in Iran. Son of Papak. Constantine comes to power (306-337) Byzantine emperor Justinian comes to power (527-565) Chess introduced into ancient Iran (Persia) from India during reign of Persian king Khusrau Nushirwan (Chosroe I Anushiravan) (531-579). (Khusro I) Chaturanga, earliest chess precursor, created in the Punjab. Kalila wa Dimna (FABLES OF PILPAY) written for Khusraw I Nushirawan Shah of Persia (531-578); Muhammad born in Mecca. Form of chess being played in China with dice. Uthman ibn Affan born. Muhammad's son-in-law. Umar I (Omar ibn al-Khattab) born. 2nd caliph. (ibn is 'son of') Khusraw II Parwiz (Parviz), Sasanian king of Persia, comes to power takes Egypt, Syria, and Anatolia from Rome until 627 Chatrang was an accepted noble accomplishment. Chessmen mentioned in the Sanskrit fantasy romance, Vasavadatta by Subandhu. Chaturanga reaches Persia. 1st reference to chess in literature, the Persian romantic KARNAMAK. The Karnamik-I-Ardashir (Records of Ardashir) Muawiyah I born.

62. 43-44 (Nordisk Familjebok / Uggleupplagan. 17. Lux - Mekanik)
upplaga af Mahäbhärata. KFJ Lydgate li dgeit, John, engelsk skald, f. omkr. 1370 i byn Lydgate i Suffolk, d. omkr. 1450, till
http://www.lysator.liu.se/runeberg/nfbq/0040.html
Nordisk familjebok Uggleupplagan. 17. Lux - Mekanik
(1912) Tema: Reference
Table of Contents / Innehåll
Project Runeberg Catalog ... Print (PDF) On this page / på denna sida - Lüderitz, Gustav - Lüderitz, F. A. E., tysk kolonigrundläggare. Se Lüderitzland. - Lüderitzbukten. Se Angra Pequena - Lüderitzland - Lüders, Aleksander Nikolajevitj - Lüders, Heinrich - Lydgate, John - Lydia, aston. - Lydiannas sund. Se Kung Karls land. - Lydien
Below is the raw OCR text from the above scanned image. Do you see an error? Proofread the page now!
Här nedan syns maskintolkade texten från faksimilbilden ovan. Ser du något fel? Korrekturläs sidan nu!
This page has never been proofread. / Denna sida har aldrig korrekturlästs.
Project Runeberg, Sat May 15 18:57:48 2004 (aronsson)
http://www.lysator.liu.se/runeberg/nfbq/0040.html

63. Project Report
2nd half of 15th c.) by John Lydgate (ca.13701449). Neither a manuscript description nor a genealogy of the text will be provided here.
http://web.uvic.ca/hrd/lydgate/about/academic.htm
From Manuscript to Digital Record
The following report describes the process of transforming the text of a medieval manuscript or a fragment of it into human and machine readable code for display on the World Wide Web. During a twelve week work study in the Humanities Computing and Media Center of the University of Victoria I tried to acquire the necessary computer technical skills to do a trial mark up project using Extensible Mark up Language (XML). As a student of German and Medieval Studies, I had virtually no computing knowledge beyond the general essay writing and emailing skills at the beginning of the project. This report will focus not on the manuscript chosen but on the process of marking it up to produce the results . It will center on successes, limits and failures encountered in the process of applying the Berkeley Digital Scriptorium DTD and XML tags for the mark up of medieval documents. Based on those limits and failures additions were made to the existing XML tag set and the DTD as well as new developments for the rendering of the tagged text for viewing in a browser. The manuscript that presented itself as most appropriate to our purpose of marking up a medieval text was the University of Victoria's Special Collections SC 070 Fall of Princes (ca. 2nd half of 15th c.) by John Lydgate (ca.1370-1449). Neither a manuscript description nor a genealogy of the text will be provided here. For a short description of the manuscript see A. Edwards "Lydgate's Fall of Princes; A 'Lost' Manuscript Found"

64. English Language: Literary Manuscripts
John Lydgate (c.13701449) was a monk at the great Benedictine Abbey of St Edmund at Bury. He is credited with some 145,000 lines
http://special.lib.gla.ac.uk/teach/manuscripts/literary.html
Special Collections
Library Home
Special Collections Catalogues
Main Library
... Course Material
English Language Honours Options
Medieval English Manuscripts in Context
Late Medieval English Literature
Resources in Special Collections
Home Page for Medieval mss.
Late Medieval Literary Manuscripts click on the thumbnails to see the images in greater detail
click on the 'back' button to return to this page
Religious and devotional mss. Pragmatic mss. Late Medieval literary mss John Gower Vox Clamantis , etc
England: c.1400 MS Hunter 59 (T.2.17)
'Moral Gower', as Chaucer calls him in Troilus and Criseyde , used the Peasants Revolt of 1381 in his Vox clamantis to describe the faults of the various classes of society. The earlier portion of the work contains a vivid account of the uprising in the form of an allegory; the remainder is a version in Latin of the strictures that he had already made in a 30,000 line poem in French, the Speculum meditantes In this copy of the revised version of the Vox clamantis and Chronica tripertita , the text is preceded by a full page representation of the author firing his shafts at the world (folio 6v). This globe is composed of the elements of air, earth and water in three compartments. A second illustration (folio 129r) includes a shield with the Gower arms supported by two flying angels, with a cloth-covered bier at the foot of the page; Gower did not die, however, until 1408, some years after this manuscript was written. There is a palimpsest of a third illustration on folio 131v, but its details have been lost.

65. Jonathan H. Hsy - Chaucer Chronology
1370 Chaucer serves in the army (once again) in France. 1370 John Lydgate, poet/monk and admirer of Chaucer, is born (dies 1450).
http://www.english.upenn.edu/~jhsy/chaucer-chron.html

66. Caxton, William
The books from Caxton’s press in Westminster included editions of the poets Chaucer, John Gower, and John Lydgate (c. 1370–1449).
http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0016748.html
Your browser does not support inline frames or is currently configured not to display inline frames. // Show bread crumbs navigation path. breadcrumbs('four'); //> ENCYCLOPAEDIA Hutchinson's
Encyclopaedia
Men's Health ... Wildlife Frames not supported
Frames not supported Encyclopaedia Search Click a letter for the index
A
B C D ... Z
Or search the encyclopaedia: Caxton, William English printer. He learned the art of printing in Cologne, Germany, in 1471 and set up a press in Belgium where he produced the first book printed in English, his own version of a French romance, Recuyell of the Historyes of Troye (1474). Returning to England in 1476, he established himself in London, where he produced the first book printed in England, Dictes or Sayengis of the Philosophres c. . Altogether he printed about 100 books.
makeButton("REFERENCE.HOME","R1") makeButtonNoSize("REFERENCE.HOME","R2") makeButton("REFERENCE.HOME","R3") makeButton("REFERENCE.HOME","R4")
Your browser does not support inline frames or is currently configured not to display inline frames. servePixl("REFERENCE.HOME"); //accipter 1x1 pixel

67. Zahlen
E BW. 1370 = GREGORY; Pope Gregory xi (13291378) is an avid chessplayer. 1412 = Lydgate; John Lydgate wrote Reson and sensuallyte, a romantic allegory.
http://www.chessworld.org/timeline.htm
Timeline Start = INDIA; Chess introduced into Persia from India during reign of Khusrau Nushirwan. (531-578). E [BW] = Chaturanga, earliest chess precursor, created in the Punjab. E [BW] = CHINA; Form of chess being played in China with dice. E [BW] = FABLES OF PILPAY written for Khusraw I Nushirawan (531-578) E [BW] = Chatrang was an accepted noble accomplishment. E [BW] = Chaturanga reaches Persia. E [BW] = KARNAMAK; 1 st reference to chess in literature, the Persian romantic KARNAMAK. E [BW] = VASAV; Chessmen mentioned in the Sanskrit fantasy romance, Vasavadatta by Subandhu. E [BW] = SANSKRIT; Chess mentioned in a Sanskrit romance. E [BW] = Earliest chess pieces identified. E [BW] = EGYPT; Chess introduced in Egypt. E [BW] = Chaturanga mentioned in the Sanskrit, Harshacharita, by Bana. E [BW] = Chatrang (old Persian word for chess) developed from chaturanga. E [BW] = Islamic conquest of Persia changes chatrang to shatranj. E [BW] = OMAR; The Caliph Omar sanctions chess among the Islamic people. E [BW] = Buddhists spread chatrang eastward.

68. Literature In Britain: The Middle Ages
103. John Lydgate (?13701449) . 105. Robert Henryson
http://www.sogang.ac.kr/~anthony/books/Medieval.htm
Literature in English Society Before 1660 A Historical Survey Brother Anthony, An Sonjae Sogang University Press Seoul, Korea
Contents Introduction vii (below) 1. Literature and Society before 1066 Caedmon's Hymn Christianity enters England Bede The Germanic Inheritance The Dream of the Rood Relations with the European Continent The Genesis Poems Heroic Poetry Beowulf The Elegies The Vikings King Alfred the Great Monastic Revival From Maldon to Hastings The Celtic tradition: Ireland, Scotland, Wales 2. The Middle Ages before 1300 Social history The Universities The Church The development of narrative literature Geoffrey of Monmouth Layamon's Brut Fine amor The Matter of Britain Tristan and Iseult Marie de France The Matter of Rome and Antiquity Le Roman d'Eneas Le Roman de Troie
Le Roman de Thebes Alexandre le Grand
The Matter of France The Song of Roland The Matter of England King Horn Havelok the Dane Sir Orfeo Bevis of Hampton and Guy of Warwick Other narrative forms Fabliau and beast-fable Lyric poetry in France Lyric poetry in England Le Roman de la Rose Dante Alighieri 3. The Fourteenth Century

69. Br Anthony's 'The Middle Ages': Contents
5. The Fifteenth Century 102 Poetry after Chaucer 103 Thomas Hoccleve 103 John Lydgate (?13701449) 105 Robert Henryson 106 William Dunbar 107 Charles d
http://www.sogang.ac.kr/~anthony/Medcontents.htm
Literature in British Society :
The Middle Ages By Brother Anthony, of Taize Seoul : Sogang University Press, 1997 Contents Introduction vii Literature and Society before 1066 (page 1)
Caedmon's Hymn
Christianity enters England 2
Bede 3
The Germanic Inheritance 4
The Dream of the Rood
Relations with the European Continent 8
The Genesis Poems 8
Heroic Poetry 10
Beowulf The Elegies 12 The Vikings 14 King Alfred the Great 15 Monastic Revival 17 From Maldon to Hastings 17 The Celtic tradition: Ireland, Scotland, Wales 19 The Middle Ages before 1300 Social history 23 The Universities 25 The Church 26 The development of narrative literature 28 Geoffrey of Monmouth 28 Layamon's Brut Fin' amor The Matter of Britain 32 Tristan and Iseult Marie de France 32 Chretien de Troyes 33 Arthurian Romance after Chretien 34 The Matter of Rome and Antiquity 36 Le Roman d'Eneas Le Roman de Troie Le Roman de Thebes Alexandre le Grand The Matter of France 38 The Song of Roland The Matter of England 39 King Horn Havelok the Dane Sir Orfeo Bevis of Hampton and Guy of Warwick Other narrative forms 45 Fabliau and beast-fable 46 Lyric poetry in France 46 Lyric poetry in England 47 Le Roman de la Rose Dante Alighieri 49

70. Geoffrey Chaucer
136970 Serves with John of Gaunt s army in France. 1370-78 Frequently sent on diplomatic missions to the with the Siege of Thebes , compiled by J. Lydgate.
http://www.britainunlimited.com/Biogs/Chaucer.htm
Who was He? Poet and Courtier. Date and Place of Birth: 1342/3. London, England. Family Background: Son of John Chaucer a prosperous wine merchant who was probably deputy to the King's Butler. Education: St. Paul's Cathedral School. Chronology: The English defeat the French at the Battle of Crecy. Main period of the Black Death (Bubonic plaque which had an appalling effect on the population numbers of Europe.) English victory at Poitiers. He became a Page in the house of Prince Lionel, later to become the Duke of Clarence. Treaty of Bretigny gives a temporary cessation in the Hundred Years War with France. Severe outbreak of the plague once again. Travels to Spain. Death of his father. Birth of his son Thomas. Serves as a Valettus and later Squire in the Court of King Edward the Third. Travels to France on duties for the King. Serves with John of Gaunt's army in France. Frequently sent on diplomatic missions to the continent, visiting Italy (Genoa and Florence) in 1372 and again in 1378 (Milan).

71. JRULM: Special Collections And Exhibitions: Postcards
Slaying of Patroclus ms.. English MS 1, fol. 78v. The slaying of Patroclus, from The Siege of Troy by John Lydgate (c. 13701450); MS copy, fifteenth century.
http://rylibweb.man.ac.uk/data1/dg/postcard/
Library Home Special Collections
LIBRARY POSTCARDS
The eight images shown below have been added to the collection of postcards marketed by the John Rylands University Library. The postcards cost 35p each and may be purchased from the Library’s Sales Point on Blue Area Ground Floor of the Main Library.
Alcoves and gallery, reading room, John Rylands Library, Deansgate.
View from the main staircase, John Rylands Library, Deansgate.
View of the reading room from the gallery, John Rylands Library, Deansgate.
Armenian MS 12, fol. 4v. Christ’s entry into Jerusalem, from a seventeenth-century Armenian Gospel Book. English MS 1, fol. 78v. The slaying of Patroclus, from The Siege of Troy by John Lydgate ( c . 1370-1450); MS copy, fifteenth century. Latin MS 8, fol. 89r. Illustration from a twelfth-century Spanish MS of Beatus’s commentary on the Apocalypse. Latin MS 11, fol. 88r. St Luke receives the Word of God, from the twelfth-century Dinant Gospels.

72. Tenterden. Kent. The Jewel Of The Weald
The books from Caxton s press in Westminster included editions of the poets; Chaucer, John Gower, and John Lydgate (c. 13701449).
http://www.ukpages.net/kent/tenterden.htm
Tenterden
and St Michaels
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UK-Pages. Tenterden. Your guide to Eating, Sleeping and enjoying Tenterden, described by many as the "Jewel of the Weald" Please use this guide to find many good Hotels, B&B's, Restaurants, Pubs, Cafes, Tea Rooms, auctions and craft fairs in the Weald. Click on the links below to find out more about the town, and all the facilities on offer
Where to sleep locally
A bit of History
One of the most charming towns of the South, it has a broad High Street lined with Trees, Shops and dwellings nearly all with their original faacades dating from Elizabethan to Georgian times. The Georgian predominates, with most of the houses being built between 1720 and 1760. The town also has many fine old inns. Please see the Eating pages. The tower of the parish church of St Mildreds dominates the town. Built in the 15th century, it rises more than 100ft above the ground, and from the top on a clear day it is possible to see right across the Weald to the Channel coast. It is even possible to see shipping on the channel and the French Coast. A fine view indeed. The tower is open only at certain times of the year.

73. List Of English Language Poets
Lovelace (16181658); Amy Lowell (1874-1925); Robert Lowell?; John Lydgate? (1370-1450); John Lyly? (1553-1606); George Lyttelton
http://www.fastload.org/li/List_of_English_language_poets.html
List of English language poets
Home Up
About 'List of English language poets'
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Poets who wrote or write much of their poetry in the English language

74. List Of English Language Poets. Everything You Wanted To Know
Robert Lowell; Mina Loy. John Lydgate (13701450); John Lyly (1553-1606); George Lyttelton, Lord Lyttelton (1709-1773); Hugh MacDiarmid
http://www.smartpedia.com/smart/browse/List_of_English_language_poets

75. The British Columbia Digital Library: Collections By Subject: British Texts
the Professor Reimer s research and publications, including hypertext versions of his subject s writings, on the medieval English poet John Lydgate (1370?1449
http://bcdlib.tc.ca/links-subjects-british_texts.html
The British Columbia Digital Library
Digital Library Collections By Subject: British Texts
See also Collections by Title Includes medieval illuminated manuscripts. See also under Literature: General Works ; literature time periods; and Women
  • Act of Union Virtual Library . Belfast: Library and Informatervices Council (Northern Ireland). Hosted by the Centre for Data Digitisation and Analysis, School of Sociology and Social Policy, Queen's University of Belfast, this collection consists of digital facsimiles of pamphlets, parliamentary papers, and statutes relating to the 1801 Act of Union between Britain and Ireland. Full-text searches or bibliographic searches are possible, or you can browse through the collection by original format. Date accessed: 2003-03-10. Date added: 2003-03-10. Arctic Blue Books Online . Winnipeg: Archives and Special Collections, University of Manitoba Libraries. Summary: "... a searchable, World-Wide Web version of Andrew Taylor's unique index to the 19th Century British Parliamentary Papers concerned with the Canadian Arctic." As of April 2003, the Blue Books themselves are digitized and linked to the index. Date accessed: 2003-08-06. Date added: 2003-08-06. The Auchinleck Manuscript . Edinburgh: National Library of Scotland. Summary: "The Auchinleck Manuscript (NLS Adv MS 19.2.1) is one of the National Library of Scotland’s greatest treasures. Produced in London in the 1330s, it provides a unique insight into the English language and literature that Chaucer and his generation grew up with and were influenced by. It acquired its name from its first known owner, Lord Auchinleck, who discovered the manuscript in 1740 and donated it to the precursor of the National Library in 1744." Date accessed: 2003-08-04. Date added: 2003-08-04.

76. Vox Ultima Crucis
14. Vox ultima Crucis. John Lydgate. 1370?1450? TARYE no lenger; toward thyn heritage Hast on thy weye, and be of ryght good chere.
http://john.fremlin.de/pgbev/poems/pgbev-14.html
Vox ultima Crucis
John Lydgate. 1370?-1450?
TARYE no lenger; toward thyn heritage
Hast on thy weye, and be of ryght good chere.
Go eche day onward on thy pylgrymage;
Thynke howe short tyme thou hast abyden here.
Thy place is bygged above the sterres clere,
Noon erthly palys wrought in so statly wyse.
Come on, my frend, my brother most entere!
For the I offered my blood in sacryfice.
bygged
built
palys
palace
The Oxford Book of English Verse, HTML edition

77. Untitled Document
Egypt; in Cairo; (C manuscript) 1370 GREGORY; Pope 1390.10.10 John I of Aragon requested a 1412 Lydgate; John Lydgate wrote Reson and sensuallyte, a romantic
http://www.cex.org.br/html/sobre/Timeline/0-1799.htm
INDIA; Chess introduced into Persia from India during reign of Khusrau Nushirwan. (531-578).
Chaturanga, earliest chess precursor, created in the Punjab.
CHINA; Form of chess being played in China with dice.
FABLES OF PILPAY written for Khusraw I Nushirawan (531-578)
Muhammad born in Mecca.
AFFAN; Uthman ibn Affan born. Muhammad's son-in-law.
Umar I (Omar ibn al-Khattab) born. 2nd caliph. (ibn is 'son of')
Chatrang was an accepted noble accomplishment.
Khusraw II Parwiz, Sasanian king of Persia, comes to power
Chaturanga reaches Persia.
KARNAMAK; 1st reference to chess in literature, the Persian romantic KARNAMAK.
VASAV; Chessmen mentioned in the Sanskrit fantasy romance, Vasavadatta by Subandhu.

78. Seznam Básníků Angličtiny
Lowell; Mina Loyová; John Lydgate (13701450); John Lyly (1553-1606); George Lyttelton, pán Lyttelton (1709-1773); Hugh MacDiarmid
http://wikipedia.infostar.cz/l/li/list_of_english_language_poets.html
švodn­ str¡nka Tato str¡nka v origin¡le
Seznam b¡sn­ků angličtiny
B¡sn­ci, kteř­ si zapisovali nebo ps¡t hodně jejich poezie v Angličtina Tabulka s obsahem showTocToggle (" přehl­dka ", " se schovat ") 1-B
2 C-D

3 E-G

4 H-K
...
9 T-Z
-B

79. The Millennium Library: Who's Who - Geoffrey Chaucer
One of his first works The Book of the Duchess (c. 1370), a dream vision poem Among contemporaries influenced by Chaucer are John Gower, John Lydgate.
http://www.millenniumlibrary.co.uk/millib/reference/notes.php?entry=Geoffrey Cha

80. 2002 Congress Program
Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 432101370; kiser.1 U of Notre Dame) Virtuous Prolongation Lydgate s Canacee John Ganim (U of California, Riverside) The
http://ncs.rutgers.edu/congress2002/2002program.htm
2002 Congress Program PARTICIPANTS PLEASE NOTE: Papers cannot be given by anyone other than the proposer. If any contributors discover that they will be unable to attend the congress in person, will they please contact the Program Chair as soon as possible (Lisa J. Kiser, Department of English, 164 W. 17 th Ave., Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210-1370; kiser.1@osu.edu ). Participants, congress attendees, and all other NCS members are encouraged to join the e-seminars (announced below) that are connected to several of the sessions and panels. Finally, those wishing to have A/V equipment available in their session rooms should notify the Program Chair at kiser.1@osu.edu if they have not already done so. Thursday, July 18 am Trustees' Meeting (Center for British Studies) Registration and Book Exhibit (Hale Lawn) Special Group Meetings (Places TBA) Chaucer Studio: Past Present, Future (Tom Burton) NCS Bibliography (Mark Allen) Chaucer Encyclopedia (Dan Ransom, H.A. Kelly, Richard Newhauser) Langland in Boulder, NEH Group (Joan Baker, Louise Bishop, Thomas Goodman)

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