Back to Studies in Medievalism
Editorial Note; Tom Shippey, 1-3
Why Francis Junius (1591-1677) became an Anglo-Saxonist, or, The Study of Old English for the Elevation of Dutch; Sophie van Romburgh, 5-36
Franciscus Junius Reads Chaucer: but Why? and How?; Rolf H. Bremmer Jr, 37-72
Transportation to Canterbury: the Rival Envisionings by Stothard and Blake; Betsy Bowden, 73-111
Medieval Mozart: König Garibald and La Clemenza di Tito; Werner Wunderlich, 113-43
Victorian Appropriations: Lady Charlotte Guest translates The Mabinogion;Judith Johnston
The Norse Discovery of America and the American Discovery of Norse (1828-1892); Geraldine Barnes, 167-88
Enthusiast or Philologist? Professional Discourse and the Medievalism of Frederick James Furnivall; Richard Utz, 189-212
Medievalism and a New Leaf by the Spanish Forger; John Block Friedman, 213-37
Touring the Medieval: Tourism, Heritage and Medievalism in Northumbria; Steve Watson, 263-61
Notes on Contributors, 253-64