in Pearsall, D., ed, New Directions in Later Medieval Manuscript Studies. Essays from the 1998 Harvard Conference , York: The University of York Centre for Medieval Studies, pp. 103-129. K0lbing, E., and Day, M., ed, 1932. The Siege of Jerusalem,
S., and Wilson, W. J. 1935. Census of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts in the Unitied States and Canada , New York: Wilson, i, p. 65. Dutschke, C. W. 1989. Guide to Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts in the Huntington Library ,
England Cambridge Trinity College 1285 O.5.4 s. xv English Latin Scribal Dialect (ff. 1-7): Staffordshire. Linguistic Atlas Grid Reference: 382 310, LP 516 (McIntosh, Samuels, and Benskin 1986, p. 237). A fifteenth-century, mainly Latin, manuscript with only one
the Later Middle Ages: Philological Studies in Honour of Siegfried Wenzel , Medieval & Renaissance Texts and Studies, Binghampton: New York, pp. 179-90, pp. 181-182. Douce, F. 1840. Catalogue of the Printed Books and Manuscripts Bequeathed by Francis Douce, Esq.,
(see Meiss 1974, esp. p. 232), started in c. 1410 after the completion of the Belles Heures in 1409 (New York, Cloister's, Acc. No. 54.1.1).This manuscript (summer portion) formed originally a single volume together with Additional 35311 (winter portion). The
(see Meiss 1974, esp. p. 232), started in c. 1410 after the completion of the Belles Heures in 1409 (New York, Cloister's, Acc. No. 54.1.1).This manuscript (summer portion) formed originally a single volume together with Additional 35311 (winter portion). The
Dunstable in 1209-1210, from which he made excerpts: see Lucas 2006.Thomas Wolsey (b. 1470/71, d. 1530), royal minister, archbishop of York, and cardinal: 'TC' monogram, perhaps for Thomas Cardinalis (see Carley 2000, p. xxxiii), 16th century (f. i).The Old Royal
(see Meiss 1974, esp. p. 232), started in c. 1410 after the completion of the Belles Heures in 1409 (New York, Cloister's, Acc. No. 54.1.1).This manuscript (summer portion) formed originally a single volume together with Additional 35311 (winter portion). The
(see Meiss 1974, esp. p. 232), started in c. 1410 after the completion of the Belles Heures in 1409 (New York, Cloister's, Acc. No. 54.1.1).This manuscript (summer portion) formed originally a single volume together with Additional 35311 (winter portion). The