fbpx
Wikipedia

Andrew Lang

Andrew Lang FBA (31 March 1844 – 20 July 1912) was a Scottish poet, novelist, literary critic, and contributor to the field of anthropology. He is best known as a collector of folk and fairy tales. The Andrew Lang lectures at the University of St Andrews are named after him.

Andrew Lang

Born(1844-03-31)31 March 1844
Selkirk, Selkirkshire, Scotland
Died20 July 1912(1912-07-20) (aged 68)
Banchory, Aberdeenshire, Scotland
Occupation
  • Poet
  • novelist
  • literary critic
  • anthropologist
Alma mater
Period19th century
GenreChildren's literature
Spouse
(m. 1875)

Biography

Lang was born in 1844 in Selkirk, Scottish Borders. He was the eldest of the eight children born to John Lang, the town clerk of Selkirk, and his wife Jane Plenderleath Sellar, who was the daughter of Patrick Sellar, factor to the first Duke of Sutherland. On 17 April 1875, he married Leonora Blanche Alleyne, youngest daughter of C. T. Alleyne of Clifton and Barbados. She was (or should have been) variously credited as author, collaborator, or translator of Lang's Color/Rainbow Fairy Books which he edited.[1]

He was educated at Selkirk Grammar School, Loretto School, and the Edinburgh Academy, as well as the University of St Andrews and Balliol College, Oxford, where he took a first class in the final classical schools in 1868, becoming a fellow and subsequently honorary fellow of Merton College.[2] He soon made a reputation as one of the most able and versatile writers of the day as a journalist, poet, critic, and historian.[3] He was a member of the Order of the White Rose, a Neo-Jacobite society which attracted many writers and artists in the 1890s and 1900s.[4] In 1906, he was elected FBA.[5]

He died of angina pectoris on 20 July 1912 at the Tor-na-Coille Hotel in Banchory, Banchory, survived by his wife. He was buried in the cathedral precincts at St Andrews, where a monument can be visited in the south-east corner of the 19th century section.

Scholarship

Folklore and anthropology

 
"Rumpelstiltskin", by Henry Justice Ford from Lang's Fairy Tales

Lang is now chiefly known for his publications on folklore, mythology, and religion. The interest in folklore was from early life; he read John Ferguson McLennan before coming to Oxford, and then was influenced by E. B. Tylor.[6]

The earliest of his publications is Custom and Myth (1884). In Myth, Ritual and Religion (1887) he explained the "irrational" elements of mythology as survivals from more primitive forms. Lang's Making of Religion was heavily influenced by the 18th century idea of the "noble savage": in it, he maintained the existence of high spiritual ideas among so-called "savage" races, drawing parallels with the contemporary interest in occult phenomena in England.[3] His Blue Fairy Book (1889) was an illustrated edition of fairy tales that has become a classic. This was followed by many other collections of fairy tales, collectively known as Andrew Lang's Fairy Books despite most of the work for them being done by his wife Leonora Blanche Alleyne and a team of mostly female assistants.[7][8] In the preface of the Lilac Fairy Book he credits his wife with translating and transcribing most of the stories in the collections.[9] Lang examined the origins of totemism in Social Origins (1903).

Psychical research

Lang was one of the founders of "psychical research" and his other writings on anthropology include The Book of Dreams and Ghosts (1897), Magic and Religion (1901) and The Secret of the Totem (1905).[3] He served as president of the Society for Psychical Research in 1911.[10]

Lang extensively cited nineteenth- and twentieth-century European spiritualism to challenge the idea of his teacher, Tylor, that belief in spirits and animism were inherently irrational. Lang used Tylor's work and his own psychical research in an effort to posit an anthropological critique of materialism.[11] Andrew Lang fiercely debated with his Folklore Society colleague Edward Clodd over 'Psycho-folklore' a strand of the discipline which aimed to connect folklore with psychical research.[12]

Classical scholarship

He collaborated with S. H. Butcher in a prose translation (1879) of Homer's Odyssey, and with E. Myers and Walter Leaf in a prose version (1883) of the Iliad, both still noted for their archaic but attractive style. He was a Homeric scholar of conservative views.[3] Other works include Homer and the Study of Greek found in Essays in Little (1891), Homer and the Epic (1893); a prose translation of The Homeric Hymns (1899), with literary and mythological essays in which he draws parallels between Greek myths and other mythologies; Homer and his Age (1906); and "Homer and Anthropology" (1908).[13]

Historian

 
Andrew Lang at work

Lang's writings on Scottish history are characterised by a scholarly care for detail, a piquant literary style, and a gift for disentangling complicated questions. The Mystery of Mary Stuart (1901) was a consideration of the fresh light thrown on Mary, Queen of Scots, by the Lennox manuscripts in the University Library, Cambridge, approving of her and criticising her accusers.[3]

He also wrote monographs on The Portraits and Jewels of Mary Stuart (1906) and James VI and the Gowrie Mystery (1902). The somewhat unfavourable view of John Knox presented in his book John Knox and the Reformation (1905) aroused considerable controversy. He gave new information about the continental career of the Young Pretender in Pickle the Spy (1897), an account of Alestair Ruadh MacDonnell, whom he identified with Pickle, a notorious Hanoverian spy. This was followed by The Companions of Pickle (1898) and a monograph on Prince Charles Edward (1900). In 1900 he began a History of Scotland from the Roman Occupation (1900). The Valet's Tragedy (1903), which takes its title from an essay on Dumas's Man in the Iron Mask, collects twelve papers on historical mysteries, and A Monk of Fife (1896) is a fictitious narrative purporting to be written by a young Scot in France in 1429–1431.[3]

Other writings

Lang's earliest publication was a volume of metrical experiments, The Ballads and Lyrics of Old France (1872), and this was followed at intervals by other volumes of dainty verse, Ballades in Blue China (1880, enlarged edition, 1888), Ballads and Verses Vain (1884), selected by Mr Austin Dobson; Rhymes à la Mode (1884), Grass of Parnassus (1888), Ban and Arrière Ban (1894), New Collected Rhymes (1905).[3] His 1890 collection, Old Friends: Essays in Epistolary Parody, contains letters combining characters from different sources, in what is now known as a crossover, including one based on Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey and Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre – an early example of a published derivative work based on Austen.[14]

Lang was active as a journalist in various ways, ranging from sparkling "leaders" for the Daily News to miscellaneous articles for the Morning Post, and for many years he was literary editor of Longman's Magazine; no critic was in more request, whether for occasional articles and introductions to new editions or as editor of dainty reprints.[3]

He edited The Poems and Songs of Robert Burns (1896), and was responsible for the Life and Letters (1897) of JG Lockhart, and The Life, Letters and Diaries (1890) of Sir Stafford Northcote, 1st Earl of Iddesleigh. Lang discussed literary subjects with the same humour and acidity that marked his criticism of fellow folklorists, in Books and Bookmen (1886), Letters to Dead Authors (1886), Letters on Literature (1889), etc.[3]

Works

To 1884

 
Blue plaque, 1 Marloes Road, Kensington, London
 
The prince thanking the Water Fairy, image from The Princess Nobody (1884), illustrated by Richard Doyle, engraved and coloured by Edmund Evans
  • St Leonards Magazine. 1863. This was a reprint of several articles that appeared in the St Leonards Magazine that Lang edited at St Andrews University. Includes the following Lang contributions: Pages 10–13, Dawgley Manor; A sentimental burlesque; Pages 25–26, Nugae Catulus; Pages 27–30, Popular Philosophies; pages 43–50 are Papers by Eminent Contributors, seven short parodies of which six are by Lang.
  • The Ballads and Lyrics of Old France (1872)
  • The Odyssey of Homer Rendered into English Prose (1879) translator with Samuel Henry Butcher
  • Aristotle's Politics Books I. III. IV. (VII.). The Text of Bekker. With an English translation by W. E. Bolland. Together with short introductory essays by A. Lang To page 106 are Lang's Essays, pp. 107–305 are the translation. Lang's essays without the translated text were later published as The Politics of Aristotle. Introductory Essays. 1886.
  • The Folklore of France (1878)
  • Specimens of a Translation of Theocritus. 1879. This was an advance issue of extracts from Theocritus, Bion and Moschus rendered into English prose
  • XXXII Ballades in Blue China (1880)
  • Oxford. Brief historical & descriptive notes (1880). The 1915 edition of this work was illustrated by painter George Francis Carline.[15]
  • 'Theocritus Bion and Moschus. Rendered into English Prose with an Introductory Essay. 1880.
  • Notes by Mr A. Lang on a collection of pictures by Mr J. E. Millais R.A. exhibited at the Fine Arts Society Rooms. 148 New Bond Street. 1881.
  • The Library: with a chapter on modern illustrated books. 1881.
  • The Black Thief. A new and original drama (Adapted from the Irish) in four acts. (1882)
  • Helen of Troy, her life and translation. Done into rhyme from the Greek books. 1882.
  • The Most Pleasant and Delectable Tale of the Marriage of Cupid and Psyche (1882) with William Aldington
  • The Iliad of Homer, a prose translation (1883) with Walter Leaf and Ernest Myers
  • Custom and Myth (1884)
  • The Princess Nobody: A Tale of Fairyland (1884)
  • Ballads and Verses Vain (1884) selected by Austin Dobson
  • Rhymes à la Mode (1884)
  • Much Darker Days. By A. Huge Longway. (1884)
  • Household tales; their origin, diffusion, and relations to the higher myths. [1884]. Separate pre-publication issue of the "introduction" to Bohn's edition of Grimm's Household tales.

1885–1889

  • That Very Mab (1885) with May Kendall
  • Books and Bookmen (1886)
  • Letters to Dead Authors (1886)
  • In the Wrong Paradise (1886) stories
  • The Mark of Cain (1886) novel
  • Lines on the inaugural meeting of the Shelley Society. Reprinted for private distribution from the Saturday Review of 13 March 1886 and edited by Thomas Wise (1886)
  • La Mythologie Traduit de L'Anglais par Léon Léon Parmentier. Avec une préface par Charles Michel et des Additions de l'auteur. (1886) Never published as a complete book in English, although there was a Polish translation. The first 170 pages is a translation of the article in the 'Encyclopædia Britannica'. The rest is a combination of articles and material from 'Custom and Myth'.
  • Almae matres (1887)
  • He (1887 with Walter Herries Pollock) parody
  • Aucassin and Nicolette (1887)
  • Myth, Ritual and Religion (2 vols., 1887)[16]
  • Johnny Nut and the Golden Goose. Done into English from the French of Charles Deulin (1887)
  • Grass of Parnassus. Rhymes old and new. (1888)
  • Perrault's Popular Tales (1888)
  • Gold of Fairnilee (1888)
  • Pictures at Play or Dialogues of the Galleries (1888) with W. E. Henley
  • Prince Prigio (1889)
  • The Blue Fairy Book (1889) (illustrations by Henry J. Ford)
  • Letters on Literature (1889)
  • Lost Leaders (1889)
  • Ode to Golf. Contribution to On the Links; being Golfing Stories by various hands (1889)
  • The Dead Leman and other tales from the French (1889) translator with Paul Sylvester

1890–1899

 
The Arabian Nights Entertainments, Longman Green & co., London 1898
  • The Red Fairy Book (1890)
  • The World's Desire (1890) with H. Rider Haggard
  • Old Friends: Essays in Epistolary Parody (1890)
  • The Strife of Love in a Dream, Being the Elizabethan Version of the First Book of the Hypnerotomachia of Francesco Colonna (1890)
  • The Life, Letters and Diaries of Sir Stafford Northcote, 1st Earl of Iddesleigh (1890)
  • Etudes traditionnistes (1890)
  • How to Fail in Literature (1890)
  • The Blue Poetry Book (1891)
  • Essays in Little (1891)
  • On Calais Sands (1891)
  • Angling Sketches (1891)
  • The Green Fairy Book (1892)
  • The Library with a Chapter on Modern English Illustrated Books (1892) with Austin Dobson
  • William Young Sellar (1892)
  • The True Story Book (1893)
  • Homer and the Epic (1893)
  • Prince Ricardo of Pantouflia (1893)
  • Waverley Novels (by Walter Scott), 48 volumes (1893) editor
  • St. Andrews (1893)
  • Montezuma's Daughter (1893) with H. Rider Haggard
  • Kirk's Secret Commonwealth (1893)
  • The Tercentenary of Izaak Walton (1893)
  • The Yellow Fairy Book (1894)
  • Ban and Arrière Ban (1894)
  • Cock Lane and Common-Sense (1894)
  • Memoir of R. F. Murray (1894)
  • The Red True Story Book (1895)
  • My Own Fairy Book (1895)
  • A Monk of Fife (1895)
  • The Voices of Jeanne D'Arc (1895)
  • The Animal Story Book (1896)
  • The Poems and Songs of Robert Burns (1896) editor
  • The Life and Letters of John Gibson Lockhart (1896) two volumes
  • Pickle the Spy; or the Incognito of Charles, (1897)
  • The Nursery Rhyme Book (1897)
  • The Miracles of Madame Saint Katherine of Fierbois (1897) translator
  • The Pink Fairy Book (1897)
  • A Book of Dreams and Ghosts (1897)
  • Pickle the Spy (1897)
  • Modern Mythology. London: Longmans, Green, and Co. 1897. Retrieved 20 February 2019 – via Internet Archive.
  • The Companions of Pickle (1898)
  • The Arabian Nights Entertainments (1898)
  • The Making of Religion (1898)
  • Selections from Coleridge (1898)
  • Waiting on the Glesca Train (1898)
  • The Red Book of Animal Stories (1899)
  • Parson Kelly (1899) Co-written with A. E. W. Mason
  • The Homeric Hymns (1899) translator
  • The Works of Charles Dickens in Thirty-four Volumes (1899) editor

1900–1909

  • The Grey Fairy Book (1900)
  • Prince Charles Edward (1900)
  • Parson Kelly (1900)
  • The Poems and Ballads of Sir Walter Scott, Bart (1900) editor
  • A History of Scotland – From the Roman Occupation (1900–1907) four volumes[17]
  • Notes and Names in Books (1900)
  • Alfred Tennyson (1901)
  • Magic and Religion (1901)
  • Adventures Among Books (1901)
  • The Crimson Fairy Book (1903)
  • The Mystery of Mary Stuart (1901, new and revised ed., 1904)
  • The Book of Romance (1902)
  • The Disentanglers (1902)
  • James VI and the Gowrie Mystery (1902)
  • Notre-Dame of Paris (1902) translator
  • The Young Ruthvens (1902)
  • The Gowrie Conspiracy: the Confessions of Sprott (1902) editor
  • The Violet Fairy Book (1901)
  • Lyrics (1903)
  • Social England Illustrated (1903) editor
  • The Story of the Golden Fleece (1903)
  • The Valet's Tragedy (1903)
  • Social Origins (1903) with Primal Law by James Jasper Atkinson[18]
  • The Snowman and Other Fairy Stories (1903)
  • Stella Fregelius: A Tale of Three Destinies (1903) with H. Rider Haggard
  • The Brown Fairy Book (1904)
  • Historical Mysteries (1904)
  • The Secret of the Totem (1905)
  • New Collected Rhymes (1905)
  • John Knox and the Reformation (1905)
  • The Puzzle of Dickens's Last Plot (1905)
  • The Clyde Mystery. A Study in Forgeries and Folklore (1905)
  • Adventures among Books (1905)
  • Homer and His Age (1906)
  • The Red Romance Book (1906)
  • The Orange Fairy Book (1906)
  • The Portraits and Jewels of Mary Stuart (1906)
  • Life of Sir Walter Scott (1906)
  • The Story of Joan of Arc[19] (1906)
  • New and Old Letters to Dead Authors (1906)
  • Tales of a Fairy Court (1907)
  • The Olive Fairy Book (1907)
  • Poets' Country (1907) editor, with Churton Collins, W. J. Loftie, E. Hartley Coleridge, Michael Macmillan
  • The King over the Water (1907)
  • Tales of Troy and Greece (1907)
  • The Origins of Religion (1908) essays
  • The Book of Princes and Princesses (1908)
  • Origins of Terms of Human Relationships (1908)
  • Select Poems of Jean Ingelow (1908) editor
  • The Maid of France, being the story of the life and death of Jeanne d'Arc (1908)
  • Three Poets of French Bohemia (1908)
  • The Red Book of Heroes (1909)
  • The Marvellous Musician and Other Stories (1909)
  • Sir George Mackenzie King's Advocate, of Rosehaugh, His Life and Times (1909)

1910–1912

  • The Lilac Fairy Book (1910)
  • Does Ridicule Kill? (1910)
  • Sir Walter Scott and the Border Minstrelsy (1910)
  • The World of Homer (1910)
  • The All Sorts of Stories Book (1911)
  • Ballades and Rhymes (1911)
  • Method in the Study of Totemism (1911)
  • The Book of Saints and Heroes (1912)
  • Shakespeare, Bacon and the Great Unknown (1912)
  • A History of English Literature (1912)
  • In Praise of Frugality (1912)
  • Ode on a Distant Memory of Jane Eyre (1912)
  • Ode to the Opening Century (1912)

Posthumous

  • Highways and Byways in The Border (1913) with John Lang
  • The Strange Story Book (1913) with Mrs. Lang
  • The Poetical Works (1923) edited by Mrs. Lang, four volumes
  • Old Friends Among the Fairies: Puss in Boots and Other Stories. Chosen from the Fairy Books (1926)
  • Tartan Tales From Andrew Lang (1928) edited by Bertha L. Gunterman
  • From Omar Khayyam (1935)

Andrew Lang's Fairy Books

Lang selected and edited 25 collections of stories that were published annually, beginning with The Blue Fairy Book in 1889 and ending with The Strange Story Book in 1913. They are sometimes called Andrew Lang's Fairy Books although the Blue Fairy Book and other Coloured Fairy Books are only 12 in the series. In this chronological list the Coloured Fairy Books alone are numbered.

References

  1. ^ Lang, Leonora Blanche Alleyne (1894). Andrew Lang (ed.). The Yellow Fairy Book. Longmans, Green & Co. p. 1. Retrieved 26 October 2013.
  2. ^ Levens, R.G.C., ed. (1964). Merton College Register 1900–1964. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. p. 6.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lang, Andrew". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 171.
  4. ^ Pittock, Murray G. H. (17 July 2014). The Invention of Scotland: The Stuart Myth and the Scottish Identity, 1638 to the Present. Taylor & Francis. pp. 116–117. ISBN 978-1-317-60525-6.
  5. ^ "LANG, Andrew". Who's Who. 59: 1016. 1907.
  6. ^ John Wyon Burrow, Evolution and Society: a study in Victorian social theory (1966), p. 237; Google Books.
  7. ^ Day, Andrea (19 September 2017). ""Almost wholly the work of Mrs. Lang": Nora Lang, Literary Labour, and the Fairy Books". Women's Writing. 26 (4): 400–420. doi:10.1080/09699082.2017.1371938. S2CID 164414996.
  8. ^ Lathey, Gillian (13 September 2010). The Role of Translators in Children's Literature: Invisible Storytellers. Routledge. ISBN 9781136925740.
  9. ^ The Lilac Fairy Book by Andrew Lang. 9 February 2009. Retrieved 16 January 2014 – via Project Gutenberg.
  10. ^ Grattan-Guinness, Ivor. (1982). Psychical Research: A Guide to Its History, Principles and Practices: In Celebration of 100 Years of the Society for Psychical Research. Aquarian Press. p. 123. ISBN 0-85030-316-8
  11. ^ Josephson-Storm, Jason (2017). The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 101. ISBN 978-0-226-40336-6.
  12. ^ Bihet, Francesca (2019) Late-Victorian Folklore Studies and Fairy-Lore. In: Betwixt and Between, 18–19 May 2019, Museum of Witchcraft and Magic, Boscastle. http://eprints.chi.ac.uk/4685/
  13. ^ Andrew Lang, "Homer and Anthropology," in Homer and the Classics: Six Lectures Delivered before the University of Oxford by Arthur J. Evans, Andrew Lang, Gilbert Murray, F.B. Jevons, J.L. Myres, and W. Warde Fowler, ed. R.R. Marett, 44-65 (Oxford: The Clarendon Press, 1908).
  14. ^ Sarah Glosson (2020). Performing Jane: A Cultural History of Jane Austen Fandom. Louisiana State University Press. pp. 49–51. ISBN 9780807173350. Project MUSE 76001
  15. ^ Waters, Grant M.. Dictionary of British Artists, Working 1900–1950, (Eastbourne Fine Art, Eastbourne, 1975), p. 59
  16. ^ "Review of Myth, Ritual, and Religion by Andrew Lang, 2 vols". The Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science, and Art. 64 (1671): 640–641. 5 November 1887.
  17. ^ Buckingham, James Silk; Sterling, John; Maurice, Frederick Denison; Stebbing, Henry; Dilke, Charles Wentworth; Hervey, Thomas Kibble; Dixon, William Hepworth; MacColl, Norman; Rendall, Vernon Horace; Murry, John Middleton (21 April 1900). "Review of vol. I of A History of Scotland from the Roman Occupation by Andrew Lang". The Athenæum (3782): 487–488.
  18. ^ "Review of Social Origins by Andrew Lang—Primal Law by J. J. Atkinson". The Athenaeum (3947): 775–776. 20 June 1903.
  19. ^ The Story of Joan of Arc — The Maid of Orleans. By Andrew Lang. Pictures by John Jellicoe. McLoughlin Brothers, New York, 1906. — 97 p. Online: 1, Project Gutenberg; 2, Internet Archive

Relevant literature

  • de Cocq, Antonius P. L. (1968) Andrew Lang: A nineteenth century anthropologist (Diss. Rijksuniversiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands). Tilburg: Zwijsen.
  • Demoor, Marysa. (1983) Andrew Lang (1844-1912) : late victorian humanist and journalistic critic with a descriptive checklist of the Lang letters. Vols. 1–2. RUG. Faculteit Letteren en Wijsbegeerte.
  • Demoor, Marysa (1987). Andrew Lang’s Letters to Edmund Gosse: The Record of a Fruitful Collaboration as Poets, Critics, and Biographers. The Review of English Studies, 38(152), 492–509.
  • Lang, Andrew.(1989) “Friends over the Ocean: Andrew Lang’s American Correspondents, 1881-1921.” Edited by Marysa Demoor. Werken / Uitgegeven Door de Faculteit van de Letteren En Wijsbegegeerte, Rijksuniversiteit. Gent: Universa.
  • Lang, Andrew. (1990)Dear Stevenson: Letters from Andrew Lang to Robert Louis Stevenson with Five Letters from Stevenson to Lang. Edited by Marysa Demoor. Leuven: Peeters.
  • Green, Roger Lancelyn. (1946) Andrew Lang: A critical biography with a short-title bibliography. Leicester: Ward.
  • Lang, Andrew. 2015. The Edinburgh Critical Edition of the Selected Writings of Andrew Lang, Volume I. Edited by Andrew Teverson, Alexandra Warwick, and Leigh Wilson. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. 456 pages. ISBN 9781474400213 (hard cover).
  • Lang, Andrew. 2015. The Edinburgh Critical Edition of the Selected Writings of Andrew Lang, Volume II. Edited by Andrew Teverson, Alexandra Warwick, and Leigh Wilson. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. 416 pages. ISBN 9781474400237 (hard cover).

External links

  • Works by Andrew Lang at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by Andrew Lang at Faded Page (Canada)
  • Works by Mrs. Andrew Lang at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Andrew Lang at Internet Archive
  • Works by or about Leonora Blanche Lang at Internet Archive
  • Works by Andrew Lang at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Andrew Lang Fairy Tale Books
  • Andrew Lang, , Longmans, Green and Co., 1909. (1889–90 Gifford Lectures)
  • Andrew Lang, , transcribed from the 1886 Longman's edition.
  • Andrew Lang, Introduction to 18 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine Marian Roalfe Cox's Cinderella: Three Hundred and Forty-Five Variants of Cinderella, Catskin and, Cap O' Rushes, Abstracted and Tabulated with a Discussion of Medieval Analogues and Notes.
  • Lang, Andrew (1903), A History of Scotland from the Roman Occupation (c. 79 – 1545), vol. I (Third ed.), New York: Dodd, Mead, and Co.
  • Lang, Andrew (1907), A History of Scotland from the Roman Occupation (1546–1624), vol. II (Third ed.), Edinburgh: William Blackwood and Sons
  • Lang, Andrew (1904), A History of Scotland from the Roman Occupation (1625–1689), vol. III, New York: Dodd, Mead, and Co.
  • Lang, Andrew (1907), A History of Scotland from the Roman Occupation (1689–1747), vol. IV, New York: Dodd, Mead, and Co.
  • Lang, Andrew; Lang, John (1914), Highways and Byways in The Border (New ed.), London: MacMillan and Co., ISBN 9787240005712
  • Lang, Andrew (1898), The Highlands of Scotland in 1750 (from Manuscript 104 in the King's Library, British Museum), Edinburgh: William Blackwood & Sons
  • Lang, Andrew (1902), The Mystery of Mary Stuart (Third ed.), London: Longmans, Green, and Co.
  • Lang, Andrew (1903), Charles Edward Stuart, The Young Chevalier (New ed.), London: Longmans, Green, and Co.
  • Lang, Andrew (1897), Pickle the Spy, or The Incognito of Prince Charles (Third ed.), London: Longmans, Green, and Co.
  • Lang, Andrew (1898), The Companions of Pickle, London: Longmans, Green, and Co.
  • Lang, Andrew (1902), James VI and the Gowrie Mystery, London: Longmans, Green, and Co.
  • andrewlangessays.com Japanese
Non-profit organization positions
Preceded by
Henry Arthur Smith
President of the Society for Psychical Research
1911
Succeeded by

andrew, lang, other, people, named, disambiguation, march, 1844, july, 1912, scottish, poet, novelist, literary, critic, contributor, field, anthropology, best, known, collector, folk, fairy, tales, lectures, university, andrews, named, after, fbaborn, 1844, m. For other people named Andrew Lang see Andrew Lang disambiguation Andrew Lang FBA 31 March 1844 20 July 1912 was a Scottish poet novelist literary critic and contributor to the field of anthropology He is best known as a collector of folk and fairy tales The Andrew Lang lectures at the University of St Andrews are named after him Andrew LangFBABorn 1844 03 31 31 March 1844Selkirk Selkirkshire ScotlandDied20 July 1912 1912 07 20 aged 68 Banchory Aberdeenshire ScotlandOccupationPoetnovelistliterary criticanthropologistAlma materUniversity of St AndrewsBalliol College OxfordPeriod19th centuryGenreChildren s literatureSpouseLeonora Blanche Alleyne m 1875 wbr Contents 1 Biography 2 Scholarship 2 1 Folklore and anthropology 2 2 Psychical research 2 3 Classical scholarship 2 4 Historian 2 5 Other writings 3 Works 3 1 To 1884 3 2 1885 1889 3 3 1890 1899 3 4 1900 1909 3 5 1910 1912 3 6 Posthumous 3 7 Andrew Lang s Fairy Books 4 References 5 Relevant literature 6 External linksBiography EditLang was born in 1844 in Selkirk Scottish Borders He was the eldest of the eight children born to John Lang the town clerk of Selkirk and his wife Jane Plenderleath Sellar who was the daughter of Patrick Sellar factor to the first Duke of Sutherland On 17 April 1875 he married Leonora Blanche Alleyne youngest daughter of C T Alleyne of Clifton and Barbados She was or should have been variously credited as author collaborator or translator of Lang s Color Rainbow Fairy Books which he edited 1 He was educated at Selkirk Grammar School Loretto School and the Edinburgh Academy as well as the University of St Andrews and Balliol College Oxford where he took a first class in the final classical schools in 1868 becoming a fellow and subsequently honorary fellow of Merton College 2 He soon made a reputation as one of the most able and versatile writers of the day as a journalist poet critic and historian 3 He was a member of the Order of the White Rose a Neo Jacobite society which attracted many writers and artists in the 1890s and 1900s 4 In 1906 he was elected FBA 5 He died of angina pectoris on 20 July 1912 at the Tor na Coille Hotel in Banchory Banchory survived by his wife He was buried in the cathedral precincts at St Andrews where a monument can be visited in the south east corner of the 19th century section Scholarship EditFolklore and anthropology Edit Rumpelstiltskin by Henry Justice Ford from Lang s Fairy Tales Lang is now chiefly known for his publications on folklore mythology and religion The interest in folklore was from early life he read John Ferguson McLennan before coming to Oxford and then was influenced by E B Tylor 6 The earliest of his publications is Custom and Myth 1884 In Myth Ritual and Religion 1887 he explained the irrational elements of mythology as survivals from more primitive forms Lang s Making of Religion was heavily influenced by the 18th century idea of the noble savage in it he maintained the existence of high spiritual ideas among so called savage races drawing parallels with the contemporary interest in occult phenomena in England 3 His Blue Fairy Book 1889 was an illustrated edition of fairy tales that has become a classic This was followed by many other collections of fairy tales collectively known as Andrew Lang s Fairy Books despite most of the work for them being done by his wife Leonora Blanche Alleyne and a team of mostly female assistants 7 8 In the preface of the Lilac Fairy Book he credits his wife with translating and transcribing most of the stories in the collections 9 Lang examined the origins of totemism in Social Origins 1903 Psychical research Edit Lang was one of the founders of psychical research and his other writings on anthropology include The Book of Dreams and Ghosts 1897 Magic and Religion 1901 and The Secret of the Totem 1905 3 He served as president of the Society for Psychical Research in 1911 10 Lang extensively cited nineteenth and twentieth century European spiritualism to challenge the idea of his teacher Tylor that belief in spirits and animism were inherently irrational Lang used Tylor s work and his own psychical research in an effort to posit an anthropological critique of materialism 11 Andrew Lang fiercely debated with his Folklore Society colleague Edward Clodd over Psycho folklore a strand of the discipline which aimed to connect folklore with psychical research 12 Classical scholarship Edit See also English translations of Homer Lang He collaborated with S H Butcher in a prose translation 1879 of Homer s Odyssey and with E Myers and Walter Leaf in a prose version 1883 of the Iliad both still noted for their archaic but attractive style He was a Homeric scholar of conservative views 3 Other works include Homer and the Study of Greek found in Essays in Little 1891 Homer and the Epic 1893 a prose translation of The Homeric Hymns 1899 with literary and mythological essays in which he draws parallels between Greek myths and other mythologies Homer and his Age 1906 and Homer and Anthropology 1908 13 Historian Edit Andrew Lang at work Lang s writings on Scottish history are characterised by a scholarly care for detail a piquant literary style and a gift for disentangling complicated questions The Mystery of Mary Stuart 1901 was a consideration of the fresh light thrown on Mary Queen of Scots by the Lennox manuscripts in the University Library Cambridge approving of her and criticising her accusers 3 He also wrote monographs on The Portraits and Jewels of Mary Stuart 1906 and James VI and the Gowrie Mystery 1902 The somewhat unfavourable view of John Knox presented in his book John Knox and the Reformation 1905 aroused considerable controversy He gave new information about the continental career of the Young Pretender in Pickle the Spy 1897 an account of Alestair Ruadh MacDonnell whom he identified with Pickle a notorious Hanoverian spy This was followed by The Companions of Pickle 1898 and a monograph on Prince Charles Edward 1900 In 1900 he began a History of Scotland from the Roman Occupation 1900 The Valet s Tragedy 1903 which takes its title from an essay on Dumas s Man in the Iron Mask collects twelve papers on historical mysteries and A Monk of Fife 1896 is a fictitious narrative purporting to be written by a young Scot in France in 1429 1431 3 Other writings Edit Lang s earliest publication was a volume of metrical experiments The Ballads and Lyrics of Old France 1872 and this was followed at intervals by other volumes of dainty verse Ballades in Blue China 1880 enlarged edition 1888 Ballads and Verses Vain 1884 selected by Mr Austin Dobson Rhymes a la Mode 1884 Grass of Parnassus 1888 Ban and Arriere Ban 1894 New Collected Rhymes 1905 3 His 1890 collection Old Friends Essays in Epistolary Parody contains letters combining characters from different sources in what is now known as a crossover including one based on Jane Austen s Northanger Abbey and Charlotte Bronte s Jane Eyre an early example of a published derivative work based on Austen 14 Lang was active as a journalist in various ways ranging from sparkling leaders for the Daily News to miscellaneous articles for the Morning Post and for many years he was literary editor of Longman s Magazine no critic was in more request whether for occasional articles and introductions to new editions or as editor of dainty reprints 3 He edited The Poems and Songs of Robert Burns 1896 and was responsible for the Life and Letters 1897 of JG Lockhart and The Life Letters and Diaries 1890 of Sir Stafford Northcote 1st Earl of Iddesleigh Lang discussed literary subjects with the same humour and acidity that marked his criticism of fellow folklorists in Books and Bookmen 1886 Letters to Dead Authors 1886 Letters on Literature 1889 etc 3 Works EditTo 1884 Edit Blue plaque 1 Marloes Road Kensington London The prince thanking the Water Fairy image from The Princess Nobody 1884 illustrated by Richard Doyle engraved and coloured by Edmund Evans St Leonards Magazine 1863 This was a reprint of several articles that appeared in the St Leonards Magazine that Lang edited at St Andrews University Includes the following Lang contributions Pages 10 13 Dawgley Manor A sentimental burlesque Pages 25 26 Nugae Catulus Pages 27 30 Popular Philosophies pages 43 50 are Papers by Eminent Contributors seven short parodies of which six are by Lang The Ballads and Lyrics of Old France 1872 The Odyssey of Homer Rendered into English Prose 1879 translator with Samuel Henry Butcher Aristotle s Politics Books I III IV VII The Text of Bekker With an English translation by W E Bolland Together with short introductory essays by A Lang To page 106 are Lang s Essays pp 107 305 are the translation Lang s essays without the translated text were later published as The Politics of Aristotle Introductory Essays 1886 The Folklore of France 1878 Specimens of a Translation of Theocritus 1879 This was an advance issue of extracts from Theocritus Bion and Moschus rendered into English prose XXXII Ballades in Blue China 1880 Oxford Brief historical amp descriptive notes 1880 The 1915 edition of this work was illustrated by painter George Francis Carline 15 Theocritus Bion and Moschus Rendered into English Prose with an Introductory Essay 1880 Notes by Mr A Lang on a collection of pictures by Mr J E Millais R A exhibited at the Fine Arts Society Rooms 148 New Bond Street 1881 The Library with a chapter on modern illustrated books 1881 The Black Thief A new and original drama Adapted from the Irish in four acts 1882 Helen of Troy her life and translation Done into rhyme from the Greek books 1882 The Most Pleasant and Delectable Tale of the Marriage of Cupid and Psyche 1882 with William Aldington The Iliad of Homer a prose translation 1883 with Walter Leaf and Ernest Myers Custom and Myth 1884 The Princess Nobody A Tale of Fairyland 1884 Ballads and Verses Vain 1884 selected by Austin Dobson Rhymes a la Mode 1884 Much Darker Days By A Huge Longway 1884 Household tales their origin diffusion and relations to the higher myths 1884 Separate pre publication issue of the introduction to Bohn s edition of Grimm s Household tales 1885 1889 Edit That Very Mab 1885 with May Kendall Books and Bookmen 1886 Letters to Dead Authors 1886 In the Wrong Paradise 1886 stories The Mark of Cain 1886 novel Lines on the inaugural meeting of the Shelley Society Reprinted for private distribution from the Saturday Review of 13 March 1886 and edited by Thomas Wise 1886 La Mythologie Traduit de L Anglais par Leon Leon Parmentier Avec une preface par Charles Michel et des Additions de l auteur 1886 Never published as a complete book in English although there was a Polish translation The first 170 pages is a translation of the article in the Encyclopaedia Britannica The rest is a combination of articles and material from Custom and Myth Almae matres 1887 He 1887 with Walter Herries Pollock parody Aucassin and Nicolette 1887 Myth Ritual and Religion 2 vols 1887 16 Johnny Nut and the Golden Goose Done into English from the French of Charles Deulin 1887 Grass of Parnassus Rhymes old and new 1888 Perrault s Popular Tales 1888 Gold of Fairnilee 1888 Pictures at Play or Dialogues of the Galleries 1888 with W E Henley Prince Prigio 1889 The Blue Fairy Book 1889 illustrations by Henry J Ford Letters on Literature 1889 Lost Leaders 1889 Ode to Golf Contribution to On the Links being Golfing Stories by various hands 1889 The Dead Leman and other tales from the French 1889 translator with Paul Sylvester1890 1899 Edit The Arabian Nights Entertainments Longman Green amp co London 1898 The Red Fairy Book 1890 The World s Desire 1890 with H Rider Haggard Old Friends Essays in Epistolary Parody 1890 The Strife of Love in a Dream Being the Elizabethan Version of the First Book of the Hypnerotomachia of Francesco Colonna 1890 The Life Letters and Diaries of Sir Stafford Northcote 1st Earl of Iddesleigh 1890 Etudes traditionnistes 1890 How to Fail in Literature 1890 The Blue Poetry Book 1891 Essays in Little 1891 On Calais Sands 1891 Angling Sketches 1891 The Green Fairy Book 1892 The Library with a Chapter on Modern English Illustrated Books 1892 with Austin Dobson William Young Sellar 1892 The True Story Book 1893 Homer and the Epic 1893 Prince Ricardo of Pantouflia 1893 Waverley Novels by Walter Scott 48 volumes 1893 editor St Andrews 1893 Montezuma s Daughter 1893 with H Rider Haggard Kirk s Secret Commonwealth 1893 The Tercentenary of Izaak Walton 1893 The Yellow Fairy Book 1894 Ban and Arriere Ban 1894 Cock Lane and Common Sense 1894 Memoir of R F Murray 1894 The Red True Story Book 1895 My Own Fairy Book 1895 A Monk of Fife 1895 The Voices of Jeanne D Arc 1895 The Animal Story Book 1896 The Poems and Songs of Robert Burns 1896 editor The Life and Letters of John Gibson Lockhart 1896 two volumes Pickle the Spy or the Incognito of Charles 1897 The Nursery Rhyme Book 1897 The Miracles of Madame Saint Katherine of Fierbois 1897 translator The Pink Fairy Book 1897 A Book of Dreams and Ghosts 1897 Pickle the Spy 1897 Modern Mythology London Longmans Green and Co 1897 Retrieved 20 February 2019 via Internet Archive The Companions of Pickle 1898 The Arabian Nights Entertainments 1898 The Making of Religion 1898 Selections from Coleridge 1898 Waiting on the Glesca Train 1898 The Red Book of Animal Stories 1899 Parson Kelly 1899 Co written with A E W Mason The Homeric Hymns 1899 translator The Works of Charles Dickens in Thirty four Volumes 1899 editor1900 1909 Edit The Grey Fairy Book 1900 Prince Charles Edward 1900 Parson Kelly 1900 The Poems and Ballads of Sir Walter Scott Bart 1900 editor A History of Scotland From the Roman Occupation 1900 1907 four volumes 17 Notes and Names in Books 1900 Alfred Tennyson 1901 Magic and Religion 1901 Adventures Among Books 1901 The Crimson Fairy Book 1903 The Mystery of Mary Stuart 1901 new and revised ed 1904 The Book of Romance 1902 The Disentanglers 1902 James VI and the Gowrie Mystery 1902 Notre Dame of Paris 1902 translator The Young Ruthvens 1902 The Gowrie Conspiracy the Confessions of Sprott 1902 editor The Violet Fairy Book 1901 Lyrics 1903 Social England Illustrated 1903 editor The Story of the Golden Fleece 1903 The Valet s Tragedy 1903 Social Origins 1903 with Primal Law by James Jasper Atkinson 18 The Snowman and Other Fairy Stories 1903 Stella Fregelius A Tale of Three Destinies 1903 with H Rider Haggard The Brown Fairy Book 1904 Historical Mysteries 1904 The Secret of the Totem 1905 New Collected Rhymes 1905 John Knox and the Reformation 1905 The Puzzle of Dickens s Last Plot 1905 The Clyde Mystery A Study in Forgeries and Folklore 1905 Adventures among Books 1905 Homer and His Age 1906 The Red Romance Book 1906 The Orange Fairy Book 1906 The Portraits and Jewels of Mary Stuart 1906 Life of Sir Walter Scott 1906 The Story of Joan of Arc 19 1906 New and Old Letters to Dead Authors 1906 Tales of a Fairy Court 1907 The Olive Fairy Book 1907 Poets Country 1907 editor with Churton Collins W J Loftie E Hartley Coleridge Michael Macmillan The King over the Water 1907 Tales of Troy and Greece 1907 The Origins of Religion 1908 essays The Book of Princes and Princesses 1908 Origins of Terms of Human Relationships 1908 Select Poems of Jean Ingelow 1908 editor The Maid of France being the story of the life and death of Jeanne d Arc 1908 Three Poets of French Bohemia 1908 The Red Book of Heroes 1909 The Marvellous Musician and Other Stories 1909 Sir George Mackenzie King s Advocate of Rosehaugh His Life and Times 1909 1910 1912 Edit The Lilac Fairy Book 1910 Does Ridicule Kill 1910 Sir Walter Scott and the Border Minstrelsy 1910 The World of Homer 1910 The All Sorts of Stories Book 1911 Ballades and Rhymes 1911 Method in the Study of Totemism 1911 The Book of Saints and Heroes 1912 Shakespeare Bacon and the Great Unknown 1912 A History of English Literature 1912 In Praise of Frugality 1912 Ode on a Distant Memory of Jane Eyre 1912 Ode to the Opening Century 1912 Posthumous Edit Highways and Byways in The Border 1913 with John Lang The Strange Story Book 1913 with Mrs Lang The Poetical Works 1923 edited by Mrs Lang four volumes Old Friends Among the Fairies Puss in Boots and Other Stories Chosen from the Fairy Books 1926 Tartan Tales From Andrew Lang 1928 edited by Bertha L Gunterman From Omar Khayyam 1935 Andrew Lang s Fairy Books Edit Lang selected and edited 25 collections of stories that were published annually beginning with The Blue Fairy Book in 1889 and ending with The Strange Story Book in 1913 They are sometimes called Andrew Lang s Fairy Books although the Blue Fairy Book and other Coloured Fairy Books are only 12 in the series In this chronological list the Coloured Fairy Books alone are numbered 1 The Blue Fairy Book 1889 2 The Red Fairy Book 1890 The Blue Poetry Book 1891 3 The Green Fairy Book 1892 The True Story Book 1893 4 The Yellow Fairy Book 1894 The Red True Story Book 1895 The Animal Story Book 1896 5 The Pink Fairy Book 1897 The Arabian Nights Entertainments 1898 The Red Book of Animal Stories 1899 6 The Grey Fairy Book 1900 7 The Violet Fairy Book 1901 The Book of Romance 1902 8 The Crimson Fairy Book 1903 9 The Brown Fairy Book 1904 The Red Romance Book 1905 10 The Orange Fairy Book 1906 11 The Olive Fairy Book 1907 The Book of Princes and Princesses 1908 The Red Book of Heroes 1909 12 The Lilac Fairy Book 1910 The All Sorts of Stories Book 1911 The Book of Saints and Heroes 1912 The Strange Story Book 1913 Children s literature portalReferences Edit Lang Leonora Blanche Alleyne 1894 Andrew Lang ed The Yellow Fairy Book Longmans Green amp Co p 1 Retrieved 26 October 2013 Levens R G C ed 1964 Merton College Register 1900 1964 Oxford Basil Blackwell p 6 a b c d e f g h i One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Lang Andrew Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 171 Pittock Murray G H 17 July 2014 The Invention of Scotland The Stuart Myth and the Scottish Identity 1638 to the Present Taylor amp Francis pp 116 117 ISBN 978 1 317 60525 6 LANG Andrew Who s Who 59 1016 1907 John Wyon Burrow Evolution and Society a study in Victorian social theory 1966 p 237 Google Books Day Andrea 19 September 2017 Almost wholly the work of Mrs Lang Nora Lang Literary Labour and the Fairy Books Women s Writing 26 4 400 420 doi 10 1080 09699082 2017 1371938 S2CID 164414996 Lathey Gillian 13 September 2010 The Role of Translators in Children s Literature Invisible Storytellers Routledge ISBN 9781136925740 The Lilac Fairy Book by Andrew Lang 9 February 2009 Retrieved 16 January 2014 via Project Gutenberg Grattan Guinness Ivor 1982 Psychical Research A Guide to Its History Principles and Practices In Celebration of 100 Years of the Society for Psychical Research Aquarian Press p 123 ISBN 0 85030 316 8 Josephson Storm Jason 2017 The Myth of Disenchantment Magic Modernity and the Birth of the Human Sciences Chicago University of Chicago Press p 101 ISBN 978 0 226 40336 6 Bihet Francesca 2019 Late Victorian Folklore Studies and Fairy Lore In Betwixt and Between 18 19 May 2019 Museum of Witchcraft and Magic Boscastle http eprints chi ac uk 4685 Andrew Lang Homer and Anthropology in Homer and the Classics Six Lectures Delivered before the University of Oxford by Arthur J Evans Andrew Lang Gilbert Murray F B Jevons J L Myres and W Warde Fowler ed R R Marett 44 65 Oxford The Clarendon Press 1908 Sarah Glosson 2020 Performing Jane A Cultural History of Jane Austen Fandom Louisiana State University Press pp 49 51 ISBN 9780807173350 Project MUSE 76001 Waters Grant M Dictionary of British Artists Working 1900 1950 Eastbourne Fine Art Eastbourne 1975 p 59 Review of Myth Ritual and Religion by Andrew Lang 2 vols The Saturday Review of Politics Literature Science and Art 64 1671 640 641 5 November 1887 Buckingham James Silk Sterling John Maurice Frederick Denison Stebbing Henry Dilke Charles Wentworth Hervey Thomas Kibble Dixon William Hepworth MacColl Norman Rendall Vernon Horace Murry John Middleton 21 April 1900 Review of vol I of A History of Scotland from the Roman Occupation by Andrew Lang The Athenaeum 3782 487 488 Review of Social Origins by Andrew Lang Primal Law by J J Atkinson The Athenaeum 3947 775 776 20 June 1903 The Story of Joan of Arc The Maid of Orleans By Andrew Lang Pictures by John Jellicoe McLoughlin Brothers New York 1906 97 p Online 1 Project Gutenberg 2 Internet Archive Relevant literature Edit de Cocq Antonius P L 1968 Andrew Lang A nineteenth century anthropologist Diss Rijksuniversiteit Utrecht The Netherlands Tilburg Zwijsen Demoor Marysa 1983 Andrew Lang 1844 1912 late victorian humanist and journalistic critic with a descriptive checklist of the Lang letters Vols 1 2 RUG Faculteit Letteren en Wijsbegeerte Demoor Marysa 1987 Andrew Lang s Letters to Edmund Gosse The Record of a Fruitful Collaboration as Poets Critics and Biographers The Review of English Studies 38 152 492 509 Lang Andrew 1989 Friends over the Ocean Andrew Lang s American Correspondents 1881 1921 Edited by Marysa Demoor Werken Uitgegeven Door de Faculteit van de Letteren En Wijsbegegeerte Rijksuniversiteit Gent Universa Lang Andrew 1990 Dear Stevenson Letters from Andrew Lang to Robert Louis Stevenson with Five Letters from Stevenson to Lang Edited by Marysa Demoor Leuven Peeters Green Roger Lancelyn 1946 Andrew Lang A critical biography with a short title bibliography Leicester Ward Lang Andrew 2015 The Edinburgh Critical Edition of the Selected Writings of Andrew Lang Volume I Edited by Andrew Teverson Alexandra Warwick and Leigh Wilson Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 456 pages ISBN 9781474400213 hard cover Lang Andrew 2015 The Edinburgh Critical Edition of the Selected Writings of Andrew Lang Volume II Edited by Andrew Teverson Alexandra Warwick and Leigh Wilson Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 416 pages ISBN 9781474400237 hard cover External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Andrew Lang Wikiquote has quotations related to Andrew Lang Wikisource has original works by or about Andrew Lang Works by Andrew Lang at Project Gutenberg Works by Andrew Lang at Faded Page Canada Works by Mrs Andrew Lang at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Andrew Lang at Internet Archive Works by or about Leonora Blanche Lang at Internet Archive Works by Andrew Lang at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Andrew Lang Fairy Tale Books Index to the fairy tales in the Andrew Lang Fairy Tale Books A Monk of Fife Complete Book Online Andrew Lang The Making of Religion Longmans Green and Co 1909 1889 90 Gifford Lectures Andrew Lang Letters to Dead Authors transcribed from the 1886 Longman s edition Andrew Lang Introduction to Archived 18 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine Marian Roalfe Cox s Cinderella Three Hundred and Forty Five Variants of Cinderella Catskin and Cap O Rushes Abstracted and Tabulated with a Discussion of Medieval Analogues and Notes Lang Andrew 1903 A History of Scotland from the Roman Occupation c 79 1545 vol I Third ed New York Dodd Mead and Co Lang Andrew 1907 A History of Scotland from the Roman Occupation 1546 1624 vol II Third ed Edinburgh William Blackwood and Sons Lang Andrew 1904 A History of Scotland from the Roman Occupation 1625 1689 vol III New York Dodd Mead and Co Lang Andrew 1907 A History of Scotland from the Roman Occupation 1689 1747 vol IV New York Dodd Mead and Co Lang Andrew Lang John 1914 Highways and Byways in The Border New ed London MacMillan and Co ISBN 9787240005712 Lang Andrew 1898 The Highlands of Scotland in 1750 from Manuscript 104 in the King s Library British Museum Edinburgh William Blackwood amp Sons Lang Andrew 1902 The Mystery of Mary Stuart Third ed London Longmans Green and Co Lang Andrew 1903 Charles Edward Stuart The Young Chevalier New ed London Longmans Green and Co Lang Andrew 1897 Pickle the Spy or The Incognito of Prince Charles Third ed London Longmans Green and Co Lang Andrew 1898 The Companions of Pickle London Longmans Green and Co Lang Andrew 1902 James VI and the Gowrie Mystery London Longmans Green and Co andrewlangessays com Japanese Andrew Lang Collection General Collection Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Yale University Non profit organization positionsPreceded byHenry Arthur Smith President of the Society for Psychical Research1911 Succeeded byWilliam Boyd Carpenter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Andrew Lang amp oldid 1147044545, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.