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The Battle of Brunanburh
A Casebook

Edited by Michael Livingston

The Battle of Brunanburh


This casebook fills a major gap in our cultural knowledge of the Middle Ages. It gathers together for the first time the key historical and literary primary sources for the study of the Battle of Brunanburh (AD 937); a key moment in the history of the British Isles. 



Produced by an international team of experts, the volume offers the sources in their language of origin – Old English, Old Norse, Welsh, Irish, Latin, Anglo-Norman, Middle English, Early Modern English – with facing-page translations and explanatory notes. Many of the sources are translated here for the first time.



In addition, the volume includes a substantial introduction from Michael Livingston and ten wide-ranging essays that provide cultural contexts and lay to rest many of the most controversial questions about the conflict –  including the key matter of where the battle likely took place, identified here . The essays show the lasting significance of this nation-defining battle – both in terms of history and in terms of its impact across more than a thousand years of literature.



‘The concept of bringing together all available written materials relating to a single significant event in early English history, together with commentary by a range of experts, is extremely worthwhile.’                                     



Donald Scragg, Professor Emeritus, University of Manchester




Contributions by
John K. Bollard, Thomas A. Bredehoft, Paul Cavil, Richard Coates, Robert Payson Creed, Stephen Harding, Marged Haycock, Ulrike Hogg, A. Keith Kelly, Joanne Parker, Robert Rouse and Scott Thompson Smith


Contents



 



Preface: The Shape of the Volume



 



·         Introduction: The Roads to Brunanburh (Michael Livingston)



 



·         Accounts of the Battle 



(This section is the “heart” of the book: editions of the medieval sources central to



studying Brunanburh, with facing-page translations.)



 



     1.         Armes Prydein Vawr



     2.         Carta dirige gressus



     3.         Rex pius Athelstan



     4.         Anglo-Saxon Chronicle [Versions A and B], Battle of Brunanburh



     5.         Glaswawt Taliessin



     6.         Annales Cambriae



     7.         Æthelweard, Chronicon



     8.         Wulfstan of Winchester, Vita S. Ethelwoldi



     9.         Ælfric of Eynsham, Epilogue to Judges



     10.       Athelstan’s Prayer



     11.       Eadmer of Canterbury, Vita Odonis    



     12.       Anglo-Saxon Chronicle [Version F]        



     13.       Symeon of Durham, Libellus de exordio



     14.       Eadmer of Canterbury, Vita Oswaldi



     15.       Anglo-Saxon Chronicle [Version E]        



     16.       John of Worcester, Chronicon   



     17.       William of Malmesbury, Gesta regum Anglorum



     18.       Henry of Huntingdon, Historia Anglorum        



     19.       Geoffrey Gaimar, Estoire des Engleis    



     20.       Symeon of Durham, Historia regum      



     21.       Chronicle of Ramsey       



     22.       Chronicle of Melrose       



     23.       Gwynfardd Brycheiniog, Canu y Dewi



     24.       Roger of Howden, Chronicle    



     25.       Egil’s Saga       



     26.       Roger Wendover, Flores historiarum     



     27.       Matthew Paris, Chronica majora           



     28.       Livere de Reis de Engleterre        



     29.       Bartholomew of Cotton, Historia Anglicana     



     30.       Annals of Winchester     



     31.       John of Oxnead, Chronicle       



     32.       Robert of Gloucester, Metrical Chronicle          



     33.       Annals of Waverley       



     34.       Brut y Tywysogion          



     35.       Brenhinedd y Saesson     



     36.       Peter of Langtoft, Chronicle     



     37.       Stanzaic Guy of Warwick           



     38.       Anonymous Short English Metrical Chronicle        



     39.       Ranulf Higden, Polychronicon    



     40.       Robert Mannyng of Brunne, Chronicle



     41.       Scottish Chronicle (alias Pictish Chronicle)



     42.       John of Fordun, Chronica gentis Scotorum           



     43.       Eulogium historiarum     



     44.       Brut y Saesson   



     45.       Richard of Cirencester, Speculum historiale       



     46.       Pseudo-Ingulf, Chronicle of Crowland    



     47.       Prose Brut        



     48.       Book of Hyde    



     49.       Walter Bower, Scotichronicon    



     50.       Annals of Ulster           



     51.       Hector Boece, Historiae          



     52.       Annals of Clonmacnoise



     53.       Annals of the Four Masters        



 




  • Notes on the Sources



 




  • Essays on the Sources



 



The Welsh Sources Pertaining to the Battle (John K. Bollard, with Marged Haycock)



 



Preliorum maximum: The Latin Tradition (Scott Thompson Smith)



 



The Battle of Brunanburhin Old English Studies (Thomas A. Bredehoft)



 



The Battle of Brunanburhas a Poem (Robert P. Creed)



 



Truth and a Good Story: Egil’s Saga and Brunanburh (A. Keith Kelly)



 



Romancing the Past: The Middle English Tradition (Robert Rouse)



 




  • Essays on the Battle



 



The Place-Name Debate (Paul Cavill)



 



Wirral: Folkore and Locations (Stephen Harding)



 



The Sociolinguistic Context of Brunanburh (Richard Coates)



 



Brunanburh and the Victorian Imagination (Joanne Parker)



 



Bibliography



 



Index



'... this will be the definitive text ...' (Fortean Times, December 2011)



‘a massive and admirable volume on the Battle of Brunanburh. It is designed as a casebook – a teaching tool and a scholarly examination in one. It is as definitive as it is possible to be about the battle and succeeds admirable as a case study of how to examine an obscure medieval battle’ (Stephen Morillo Journal of Military History April 2012)



Michael Livingston is Assistant Professor of English at The Military College of South Carolina and author of scholarly editions of Siege of Jerusalem (2004), In Praise of Peace (2005), and The Middle English Metrical Paraphrase of the Old Testament (2011).



 



John K. Bollard,Independent Scholar of Welsh  •  Thomas A. Bredehoft, West Virginia University  •  Paul Cavill, University of Nottingham   •  Richard Coates, University of the West of England   •   Robert P. Creed, University of Massachusetts-Amherst    •   Stephen Harding, University of Nottingham   •   Marged Haycock, University of Wales, Aberystwyth   •   Ulrike Hogg, National Library of Scotland   •   A. Keith Kelly, Georgia Gwinnett College  •  Michael Livingston, The Citadel   •   Joanne Parker, University of Exeter   •   Robert Rouse, University of British Columbia   •   Scott Thompson Smith, Pennsylvania State University




Publication Details:


Imprint:
 University of Exeter Press


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