Bestiaries and Their Users in the Middle AgesSutton Pub., 1998 - 242 pages Bestiaries are among the most interesting and varied books of the Middle Ages. Collections of illustrations depicting real and mythical animals and plants accompanied a text which can be traced back to the earliest centuries of the Christian era. Dr. Baxter, employing a completely fresh and comprehensive approach, has undertaken extensive new research into a large corpus of Bestiaries, applying modern narrative theory to their texts and images to reveal the messages encoded in themmessages which were systematically altered as Bestiaries were expanded and restructured. By applying the results of this analysis to medieval library records, he has been able to identify important centres of Bestiary use, and to present a radically different picture of what Bestiaries were to their medieval users. |
Contents
TABLES page | 11 |
Chapter Two NARRATIVE IN THE PHYSIOLOGUS | 29 |
Chapter orders of B text and Laud Misc 247 | 30 |
Copyright | |
28 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
abbey actants Adam animals aquila Ashmole Bestiary Aspis Augustinian autalops Benedictine bestiae Bestiary text Bibl birds Bodleian Library Bodley Bonnacon Brussels Brussels Physiologus caladrius Cambridge University Library Canterbury Castor catalogue Cervus chapter order Christ church Cistercian contains creation Devil domestic beasts Douce Druce eius Elephans Elephantus Etymologiae evidence ex-libris follows Formica Genesis gift houses hydrus Ibid identify illustrated includes inscription Isidore Isidore's James James's Lapides Igniferi Latin Bestiaries Laud Misc Liber Lincoln lion Manticora manuscripts material McCulloch medieval book lists Mermecolion miniatures moralization Morgan group Muratova mustela narrative nature naturis bestiarum nycticorax Onager Oxford Pantera Pantheologus passage peredixion Peterborough Physiologus text Pierpont Morgan plate priory production quire quod quotation Royal rubric Second Family books sermons Simia Solinus St Augustine's St Petersburg story Stowe structure surviving Bestiaries textual Third Family twelfth century Unicornis users volumes Vulpis Worksop zoology
