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Featured researches published by Christine Rauer.


Anglo-Saxon England | 2003

The sources of the Old English Martyrology

Christine Rauer

For much of the ninth century, Anglo-Saxon interest in literary culture was apparently not as great as it could have been. Medieval and modern commentators have spoken of a pronounced early-ninth-century neglect of English libraries, which seems to have affected contemporary literature as well as the literary legacy which had been inherited from the seventh and eighth centuries. It appears that fewer books and texts were produced; the Latin texts produced may to some extent have been of inferior linguistic quality, and were, so it would seem, used with greater difficulties by a smaller and less educated readership. Comparatively fewer books seem to have survived the ninth century than any other period of Anglo-Saxon history.


Amsterdamer Beiträge zur älteren Germanistik | 2017

Early Mercian Text Production: Authors, Dialects, and Reputations

Christine Rauer

There are suggestions that King Alfred’s legendary literary renaissance may have been a reaction to the efforts of the neighbouring kingdom of Mercia. According to Asser, Alfred assembled a group of literary scholars from this rival Mercian tradition at his court. But it is not clear what early literary activities these scholars could have been involved in to justify their pre-Alfredian reputation. This article tries to outline the historical and literary evidence for early Mercian text production, and the importance of this ‘other’ early literary corpus. What is our current knowledge of Mercian text production and the political and literary relationship of Mercia with Canterbury? What was the relationship of Alfred’s educational movement with its Mercian forerunner? Why is modern scholarship better informed about Alfred’s movement than any Mercian rival culture? If our current knowledge of this area is insufficient for the writing of a literary history of Mercia, a provisional list of texts and bibliography, published electronically for convenient updating, may prove useful in the meantime.


Modern Language Review | 2003

The Anglo-Saxon Warrior Ethic: Reconstructing Lordship in Early English Literature

Christine Rauer; John M. Hill

An application of anthropological research to Old English heroic literature. Anglo-Saxon poems and fragments seem to preserve a long-standing Germanic code of heroic values, but John Hill shows that these values are probably not much older than the poems that record and advance them.


Modern Language Review | 2003

Beowulf and the dragon : parallels and analogues

Raymond P. Tripp; Christine Rauer


Archive | 2013

The Old English martyrology : edition, translation and commentary

Christine Rauer


Neophilologus | 2013

Errors and Textual Problems in the Old English Martyrology

Christine Rauer


Speculum | 2018

Rebecca Pinner, The Cult of St Edmund in Medieval East Anglia. Woodbridge, UK: Boydell Press, 2015. Pp. xi, 276; 4 color plates, 8 black-and-white figures, 1 map, and 3 tables.

Christine Rauer


Oxford Bibliographies Online Datasets | 2017

95. ISBN: 978-1-78327-035-4.

Christine Rauer


Neophilologus | 2017

Anglo-Saxon Hagiography

Christine Rauer


The Review of English Studies | 2014

Mann and Gender in Old English Prose: A Pilot Study

Christine Rauer

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