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Exeter Book

The Exeter Book, also known as the Codex Exoniensis or Exeter Cathedral Library MS 3501, is a large codex of Old English poetry, believed to have been produced in the late tenth century AD.[1] It is one of the four major manuscripts of Old English poetry, along with the Vercelli Book in Vercelli, Italy, the Nowell Codex in the British Library, and the Junius manuscript in the Bodleian Library in Oxford. The book was donated to what is now the Exeter Cathedral library by Leofric,[2] the first bishop of Exeter, in 1072. It is believed originally to have contained 130[3] or 131 leaves, of which the first 7[3] or 8 have been replaced with other leaves; the original first 8 leaves are lost.[citation needed] The Exeter Book is the largest and perhaps oldest[3][4] known manuscript of Old English literature,[2][5][6][7] containing about a sixth of the Old English poetry that has survived.[2][8]

Exeter Book

In 2016, UNESCO recognized the book as "the foundation volume of English literature, one of the world's principal cultural artefacts".[9][10][11]

History edit

The Exeter Book is generally acknowledged to be one of the great works of the English Benedictine revival of the tenth century; the precise dates that it was written and compiled are unknown, although proposed dates range from 960 to 990.[14] This period saw a rise in monastic activity and productivity under the renewed influence of Benedictine principles and standards. At the opening of the period, Dunstan's importance to the Church and to the English kingdom was established, culminating in his appointment to the Archbishopric at Canterbury under Edgar of England and leading to the monastic reformation by which this era was characterised. Dunstan died in 998, and by the period's close, England under Æthelred faced an increasingly determined Scandinavian incursion, to which it would eventually succumb.

The Exeter Book's heritage becomes traceable from the death of Leofric, bishop of Exeter, in 1072.[15] Among the possessions which he bequeathed in his will to the then-impoverished monastery at Exeter (the precursor to the later cathedral) is one famously described as i mycel Englisc boc be gehwilcum þingum on leoð-wisan geworht: "one large English book on various subjects, composed in verse form".[16] This book has been widely identified by scholars as the Exeter Codex.[16][17]

Leofric's bequest, however, took place at least three generations after the book was written, and it has generally been assumed that it had originated elsewhere.[8] According to Patrick Conner, the original scribe who wrote the text probably did not write it as a single volume, but rather three separate manuscript booklets which were later compiled into the Exeter Book codex.[5] There are a number of missing gatherings and pages.[3] Some marginalia were added to the manuscript by the antiquarians Laurence Nowell in the sixteenth century and George Hickes in the seventeenth.[18]

Contents edit

Aside from eight leaves added to the codex after it was written, the Exeter Book consists entirely of poetry. However, unlike the Junius manuscript, which is dedicated to biblically inspired works, the Exeter Book is noted for the unmatched diversity of genres among its contents, as well as their generally high level of poetic quality.[12]

The poems give a sense of the intellectual sophistication of Anglo-Saxon literary culture. They include numerous saints’ lives, gnomic verses, and wisdom poems, in addition to almost a hundred riddles, numerous smaller heroic poems, and a quantity of elegiac verse. The moving elegies and enigmatic riddles are the most famous of the Exeter Book texts.[11] The elegies primarily explore the themes of alienation, loss, the passage of time, desolation, and death, and deal with subjects including the sorrows of exile, the ruination of the past, and the long separation of lovers. Through them we encounter lonely seafarers, banished wanderers, and mournful lovers.[6][11] The riddles, by contrast, explore the fabric of the world through the prism of the everyday. (See the sections on 'Riddles' and 'Elegies' below.) The Exeter manuscript is also important because it contains two poems signed by the poet Cynewulf, who is one of only twelve Old English poets known to us by name.[11]

According to the Encyclopædia Britannica, "the arrangement of the poems appears to be haphazard, and the book is believed to be copied from an earlier collection".[6] However, whether (or the extent to which) the Exeter Book is a deliberately crafted anthology of related poems or a miscellany of unrelated poems is a matter of debate, as some degree of order has been found in the organisation of its contents.[3]

None of the poems is given a title in the manuscript, and there is often no obvious indicator of where one text ends and the next begins, other than a plain initial. Consequently, the titles given to the poems in the Exeter Book are those that editors have established over the years, and very often a given poem will be known by several titles.[12] The following is one listing of poems found in the book (titles may vary depending on source):[3][13][19]

Riddles edit

Among the other texts in the Exeter Book, there are over ninety riddles, written in the conventional alliterative style of Old English poetry. Their topics, which range from the religious to the mundane, are represented in an oblique and elliptical manner, challenging the reader to deduce what they are about. Some of the riddles are double entendres, setting out entirely innocent subject matter in language filled with bawdy connotations, such as Riddle 25 below.

Two Exeter Book riddles are presented below, with Modern English translations alongside the Old English originals. Proposed answers to the riddles are included below the text.

Riddle 25 edit

Answer: an onion

Riddle 26 edit

Answer: a Bible

Elegies edit

The Exeter Book contains the Old English poems known as the "elegies": "The Wanderer" (fol. 76b - fol. 78a); "The Seafarer" (fol. 81b - fol. 83a); "The Riming Poem" fol. 94a - fol. 95b); "Deor" (fol. 100a - fol. 100b), "Wulf and Eadwacer" (fol. 100b - fol. 101a); "The Wife's Lament" (fol. 115a - fol. 115b); "The Husband's Message" (fol. 123a - 123b); and "The Ruin" (fol. 123b - fol. 124b).

The term "elegy" can be confusing due to its application to a diverse range of poems and poetic genres from different cultures and time periods. For example, the Oxford English Dictionary defines elegy (in the poetic sense) as a poem either composed in the elegiac metre of Greek and Roman lyric poets, expressing "personal sentiments on a range of subjects, including epigrams, laments, [and] love", or "a poem in another language based on or influenced by this"[20] – hence, from this latter definition, the application of the term "elegy" to the Old English poems, which are not elegiac in their metre. More broadly, the term "elegy" has also been widened by some to include "any serious meditative poem",[21] a definition which would include the Exeter Book elegies. Providing a synthesis of the strictly metrical definition and the broader definition based on subject matter, Anne Klinck argues in The Old English Elegies that "genre should be conceived [...] as a grouping of literary works based, theoretically, upon both outer form (specific meter or structure) and also upon inner form (attitude, tone, purpose – more crudely, subject and audience)".[22]

Editions and translations edit

Included here are facsimiles, editions, and translations that include a significant proportion of texts from the Exeter Book.

Facsimiles edit

  • Chambers, R W; Förster, Max; Flower, Robin (1933). The Exeter Book of Old English Poetry. London: P. Lund, Humphries. OCLC 154109449.
  • Online facsimile

Editions: Old English text only edit

Editions: Old English text and translation edit

  • Thorpe, Benjamin (1842). Codex Exoniensis: A Collection of Anglo-Saxon Poetry, from a Manuscript in the Library of the Dean and Chapter of Exeter. London: The Society of Antiquaries of London. OCLC 562461120.
  • Matto, Michael; Delanty, Greg (2011). The Word Exchange. New York: W. W. Norton & Co. ISBN 978-0393342413. Anthology of Old English poetry, featuring many of the texts from the Exeter Book.
  • Gollancz, Israel (1894). The Exeter book.[23] Early English Text Society, Original series, Volume 104, 194.
  • Foys, Martin et al. (ed.) (2019) Old English Poetry in Facsimile Project, Madison: Center for the History of Print and Digital Culture, University of Wisconsin-Madison; edition with digital images of poems' manuscript pages, and translations.

Editions: Translations only edit

  • Crossley-Holland, Kevin (2008). The Exeter Book Riddles. London: Enitharmon Press. ISBN 978-1-904634-46-1. Contains riddles only.
  • Williamson, Craig, (2017) The Complete Old English Poems. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 9780812248470.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Fell, Christine (2007). "Perceptions of Transience". In Malcolm Godden and Michael Lapidge (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Old English Literature. Cambridge: Cambridge UP. pp. 172–89. ISBN 978-0-521-37794-2.
  2. ^ a b c d e Johnson, Keith (2016). "7.1 Manuscript collections". The History of Early English. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781317636069.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Shippey, Tom (2017). The Complete Old English Poems. Translated by Williamson, Craig. University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. x-xi, 299-302. ISBN 978-0-8122-9321-0.
  4. ^ a b "The Exeter Book". Exeter Cathedral.
  5. ^ a b c Conner, Patrick W. (2015). "The Structure of the Exeter Book Codex". In Richards, Mary P. (ed.). Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts: Basic Readings. Routledge. pp. 301–302. ISBN 978-1-317-75890-7.
  6. ^ a b c d Exeter Book at the Encyclopædia Britannica
  7. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Exeter Book". Encyclopædia Britannica. 10. (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 67.
  8. ^ a b c Gameson, Richard (December 1996). "The origin of the Exeter Book of Old English poetry". Anglo-Saxon England. 25. Cambridge University Press: 135–185. doi:10.1017/S0263675100001988. ISSN 1474-0532. S2CID 162992373.
  9. ^ Flood, Alison (22 June 2016). "Unesco lists Exeter Book among 'world's principal cultural artefacts'". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  10. ^ "'Outstanding' Old English poetry book granted Unesco status". BBC News. 21 June 2016.
  11. ^ a b c d e f . The British Library. Archived from the original on 19 June 2023. Retrieved 7 August 2021.
  12. ^ a b c d Conner, Patrick W. (2019). "The Exeter Book". Oxford Bibliographies Online. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/OBO/9780195396584-0094.
  13. ^ a b Treharne, Elaine; Pulsiano, Phillip (2017). "An Introduction to the Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Vernacular Literature". A Companion to Anglo-Saxon Literature (PDF). Wiley Blackwell. pp. 1–10. doi:10.1002/9781405165303.ch1. ISBN 9781405165303.
  14. ^ [2][3][4][5][6][11][12][13]
  15. ^ Förster, Max (1933). "The Donations of Leofric to Exeter". In Chambers, Forster and Flower (ed.). The Exeter Book of Old English Poetry.
  16. ^ a b Alexander, Michael (2008). "Introduction". The First Poems in English. London: Penguin Books. p. xvii. ISBN 9780140433784.
  17. ^ [2][3][8][11][12]
  18. ^ Muir, Bernard J., ed. (2000). The Exeter anthology of Old English poetry: an edition of Exeter Dean and Chapter MS 3501 (2nd ed.). Exeter: University of Exeter Press. pp. 15–16. ISBN 0-85989-630-7.
  19. ^ a b c d e Based on Muir’s (1994) counting:
    • "The Complete Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Poetry". Sacred-texts.com.
    • "The Exeter Book". people.ucalgary.ca. University of Calgary.
  20. ^ "elegy, n.", OED Online, Oxford University Press, retrieved 20 March 2022
  21. ^ The Broadview Anthology of British Literature (Second ed.). Broadview Press. 2011. p. 51. ISBN 9781554810482.
  22. ^ Klinck, Anne L. (1992). The Old English Elegies. McGill-Queen's Press. p. 224.
  23. ^ Mackie, W. S. (William Souter)., Gollancz, I., Mackie, W. S. (William Souter)., Gollancz, I. (18951934). The Exeter book: an anthology of Anglo-Saxon poetry presented to Exeter Cathedral by Loefric, first bishop of Exeter (1050-1071), and still in possession of the dean and chapter. London: Pub. for the Early English Text Society, by K. Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co.
Bibliography
  • Williamson, Craig (1977), The Old English Riddles of the Exeter Book, Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, pp. 3–28, ISBN 0-8078-1272-2
  • Marsden, Richard (2015), The Cambridge Old English Reader (2nd ed.), doi:10.1017/CBO9781107295209, ISBN 9781107295209

External links edit

  • The Exeter Book — digitisation
  • — transcription
  • James Grout: Exeter Book of Riddles, part of the Encyclopædia Romana


exeter, book, confused, with, liber, exoniensis, exeter, text, also, known, codex, exoniensis, exeter, cathedral, library, 3501, large, codex, english, poetry, believed, have, been, produced, late, tenth, century, four, major, manuscripts, english, poetry, alo. Not to be confused with Liber Exoniensis or The Exeter Text The Exeter Book also known as the Codex Exoniensis or Exeter Cathedral Library MS 3501 is a large codex of Old English poetry believed to have been produced in the late tenth century AD 1 It is one of the four major manuscripts of Old English poetry along with the Vercelli Book in Vercelli Italy the Nowell Codex in the British Library and the Junius manuscript in the Bodleian Library in Oxford The book was donated to what is now the Exeter Cathedral library by Leofric 2 the first bishop of Exeter in 1072 It is believed originally to have contained 130 3 or 131 leaves of which the first 7 3 or 8 have been replaced with other leaves the original first 8 leaves are lost citation needed The Exeter Book is the largest and perhaps oldest 3 4 known manuscript of Old English literature 2 5 6 7 containing about a sixth of the Old English poetry that has survived 2 8 Exeter BookIn 2016 UNESCO recognized the book as the foundation volume of English literature one of the world s principal cultural artefacts 9 10 11 Contents 1 History 2 Contents 3 Riddles 3 1 Riddle 25 3 2 Riddle 26 4 Elegies 5 Editions and translations 5 1 Facsimiles 5 2 Editions Old English text only 5 3 Editions Old English text and translation 5 4 Editions Translations only 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editThe Exeter Book is generally acknowledged to be one of the great works of the English Benedictine revival of the tenth century the precise dates that it was written and compiled are unknown although proposed dates range from 960 to 990 14 This period saw a rise in monastic activity and productivity under the renewed influence of Benedictine principles and standards At the opening of the period Dunstan s importance to the Church and to the English kingdom was established culminating in his appointment to the Archbishopric at Canterbury under Edgar of England and leading to the monastic reformation by which this era was characterised Dunstan died in 998 and by the period s close England under AEthelred faced an increasingly determined Scandinavian incursion to which it would eventually succumb The Exeter Book s heritage becomes traceable from the death of Leofric bishop of Exeter in 1072 15 Among the possessions which he bequeathed in his will to the then impoverished monastery at Exeter the precursor to the later cathedral is one famously described as i mycel Englisc boc be gehwilcum thingum on leod wisan geworht one large English book on various subjects composed in verse form 16 This book has been widely identified by scholars as the Exeter Codex 16 17 Leofric s bequest however took place at least three generations after the book was written and it has generally been assumed that it had originated elsewhere 8 According to Patrick Conner the original scribe who wrote the text probably did not write it as a single volume but rather three separate manuscript booklets which were later compiled into the Exeter Book codex 5 There are a number of missing gatherings and pages 3 Some marginalia were added to the manuscript by the antiquarians Laurence Nowell in the sixteenth century and George Hickes in the seventeenth 18 Contents editAside from eight leaves added to the codex after it was written the Exeter Book consists entirely of poetry However unlike the Junius manuscript which is dedicated to biblically inspired works the Exeter Book is noted for the unmatched diversity of genres among its contents as well as their generally high level of poetic quality 12 The poems give a sense of the intellectual sophistication of Anglo Saxon literary culture They include numerous saints lives gnomic verses and wisdom poems in addition to almost a hundred riddles numerous smaller heroic poems and a quantity of elegiac verse The moving elegies and enigmatic riddles are the most famous of the Exeter Book texts 11 The elegies primarily explore the themes of alienation loss the passage of time desolation and death and deal with subjects including the sorrows of exile the ruination of the past and the long separation of lovers Through them we encounter lonely seafarers banished wanderers and mournful lovers 6 11 The riddles by contrast explore the fabric of the world through the prism of the everyday See the sections on Riddles and Elegies below The Exeter manuscript is also important because it contains two poems signed by the poet Cynewulf who is one of only twelve Old English poets known to us by name 11 According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica the arrangement of the poems appears to be haphazard and the book is believed to be copied from an earlier collection 6 However whether or the extent to which the Exeter Book is a deliberately crafted anthology of related poems or a miscellany of unrelated poems is a matter of debate as some degree of order has been found in the organisation of its contents 3 None of the poems is given a title in the manuscript and there is often no obvious indicator of where one text ends and the next begins other than a plain initial Consequently the titles given to the poems in the Exeter Book are those that editors have established over the years and very often a given poem will be known by several titles 12 The following is one listing of poems found in the book titles may vary depending on source 3 13 19 Christ I II III Guthlac A and B Azarias The Phoenix Juliana The Wanderer The Gifts of Men Precepts The Seafarer Vainglory Widsith The Fortunes of Men Maxims I The Order of the World The Rhyming Poem The Panther The Whale The Partridge Soul and Body II Deor Wulf and Eadwacer Riddles 1 57 3 59 19 The Wife s Lament The Judgment Day I Resignation The Descent into Hell Alms Giving Pharaoh The Lord s Prayer I Homiletic Fragment II Riddle 28b 3 30b 19 Riddle 58 3 60 19 The Husband s Message The Ruin Riddles 59 91 3 61 95 19 Riddles editMain article Exeter Book Riddles Among the other texts in the Exeter Book there are over ninety riddles written in the conventional alliterative style of Old English poetry Their topics which range from the religious to the mundane are represented in an oblique and elliptical manner challenging the reader to deduce what they are about Some of the riddles are double entendres setting out entirely innocent subject matter in language filled with bawdy connotations such as Riddle 25 below Two Exeter Book riddles are presented below with Modern English translations alongside the Old English originals Proposed answers to the riddles are included below the text Riddle 25 edit Ic eom wunderlicu wiht wifum on hyhte neahbuendum nyt naegum sceththe burgsittendra nymthe bonan anum Stathol min is steapheah stonde ic on bedde neodan ruh nathwaer Nethed hwilum ful cyrtenu ceorles dohtor modwlonc meowle thaet heo on mec gripe raesed mec on reodne reafath min heafod feged mec on faesten Feleth sona mines gemotes seo the mec nearwad wif wundenlocc Waet bid thaet eage I am a wondrous creature for women in expectation a service for neighbours I harm none of the citizens except my slayer alone My stem is erect I stand up in bed hairy somewhere down below A very comely peasant s daughter dares sometimes proud maiden that she grips at me attacks me in my redness plunders my head confines me in a stronghold feels my encounter directly woman with braided hair Wet be that eye Riddle 25 Marsden 2015 Answer an onionRiddle 26 edit Mec feonda sum feore besnythede woruldstrenga binom waette siththan dyfde on waetre dyde eft thonan sette on sunnan thaer ic swithe beleas herum tham the ic haefde Heard mec siththan snad seaxses ecg sindrum begrunden fingras feoldan ond mec fugles wyn geond speddropum spyrede geneahhe ofer brunne brerd beamtelge swealg streames daele stop eft on mec sithade sweartlast Mec siththan wrah haeled hleobordum hyde bethenede gierede mec mid golde forthon me gliwedon wraetlic weorc smitha wire bifongen Nu tha gereno ond se reada telg ond tha wuldorgesteald wide maere dryhtfolca helm nales dol wite Gif min bearn wera brucan willad hy beod thy gesundran ond thy sigefaestran heortum thy hwaetran ond thy hygeblithran ferthe thy frodran habbath freonda thy ma swaesra ond gesibbra sothra ond godra tilra ond getreowra tha hyra tyr ond ead estum ycad ond hy arstafum lissum bilecgad ond hi lufan faethmum faeste clyppad Frige hwaet ic hatte nithum to nytte Nama min is maere haelethum gifre ond halig sylf Some fiend robbed me from life deprived me of worldly strengths wetted next dipped in water took out again set in the sun deprived violently of the hair that I had after the hard knife s edge cut me ground from impurities fingers folded and a bird s delight spread useful drops over me swallowed tree ink over the ruddy rim portion of liquid stepped on me again travelled with black track After a man clad me with protective boards covered with hide adorned me with gold Forthwith adorned me in ornamental works of smiths encased with wire Now the trappings and the red dye and the wondrous setting widely make known the helm of the lord s folk never again guard fools If children of men want to use me they will be by that the safer and the more sure of victory the bolder in heart and the happier in mind in spirit the wiser They will have friends the more dearer and closer righteous and more virtuous more good and more loyal those whose glory and happiness will gladly increase and them with benefits and kindnesses and they of love will clasp tightly with embraces Ask what I am called as a service to people My name is famous bountiful to men and my self holy Riddle 26 Marsden 2015 Answer a BibleElegies editThe Exeter Book contains the Old English poems known as the elegies The Wanderer fol 76b fol 78a The Seafarer fol 81b fol 83a The Riming Poem fol 94a fol 95b Deor fol 100a fol 100b Wulf and Eadwacer fol 100b fol 101a The Wife s Lament fol 115a fol 115b The Husband s Message fol 123a 123b and The Ruin fol 123b fol 124b The term elegy can be confusing due to its application to a diverse range of poems and poetic genres from different cultures and time periods For example the Oxford English Dictionary defines elegy in the poetic sense as a poem either composed in the elegiac metre of Greek and Roman lyric poets expressing personal sentiments on a range of subjects including epigrams laments and love or a poem in another language based on or influenced by this 20 hence from this latter definition the application of the term elegy to the Old English poems which are not elegiac in their metre More broadly the term elegy has also been widened by some to include any serious meditative poem 21 a definition which would include the Exeter Book elegies Providing a synthesis of the strictly metrical definition and the broader definition based on subject matter Anne Klinck argues in The Old English Elegies that genre should be conceived as a grouping of literary works based theoretically upon both outer form specific meter or structure and also upon inner form attitude tone purpose more crudely subject and audience 22 Editions and translations editIncluded here are facsimiles editions and translations that include a significant proportion of texts from the Exeter Book Facsimiles edit Chambers R W Forster Max Flower Robin 1933 The Exeter Book of Old English Poetry London P Lund Humphries OCLC 154109449 Online facsimileEditions Old English text only edit Krapp George Philip Dobbie Elliot Van Kirk eds 1936 The Exeter Book The Anglo Saxon Poetic Records Vol III New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 08767 5 Muir Bernard J ed 2000 The Exeter Anthology of Old English Poetry An Edition of Exeter Dean and Chapter MS 3501 2nd ed Exeter University of Exeter Press ISBN 0 85989 630 7 Editions Old English text and translation edit Thorpe Benjamin 1842 Codex Exoniensis A Collection of Anglo Saxon Poetry from a Manuscript in the Library of the Dean and Chapter of Exeter London The Society of Antiquaries of London OCLC 562461120 Matto Michael Delanty Greg 2011 The Word Exchange New York W W Norton amp Co ISBN 978 0393342413 Anthology of Old English poetry featuring many of the texts from the Exeter Book Gollancz Israel 1894 The Exeter book 23 Early English Text Society Original series Volume 104 194 Foys Martin et al ed 2019 Old English Poetry in Facsimile Project Madison Center for the History of Print and Digital Culture University of Wisconsin Madison edition with digital images of poems manuscript pages and translations Editions Translations only edit Crossley Holland Kevin 1982 The Anglo Saxon World Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 953871 3 Anthology of Old English poetry and prose featuring poems from the Exeter Book Crossley Holland Kevin 2008 The Exeter Book Riddles London Enitharmon Press ISBN 978 1 904634 46 1 Contains riddles only Williamson Craig 2017 The Complete Old English Poems University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 9780812248470 See also editAnglo Saxon literature Old English languageReferences edit Fell Christine 2007 Perceptions of Transience In Malcolm Godden and Michael Lapidge ed The Cambridge Companion to Old English Literature Cambridge Cambridge UP pp 172 89 ISBN 978 0 521 37794 2 a b c d e Johnson Keith 2016 7 1 Manuscript collections The History of Early English Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9781317636069 a b c d e f g h i j k l Shippey Tom 2017 The Complete Old English Poems Translated by Williamson Craig University of Pennsylvania Press pp x xi 299 302 ISBN 978 0 8122 9321 0 a b The Exeter Book Exeter Cathedral a b c Conner Patrick W 2015 The Structure of the Exeter Book Codex In Richards Mary P ed Anglo Saxon Manuscripts Basic Readings Routledge pp 301 302 ISBN 978 1 317 75890 7 a b c d Exeter Book at the Encyclopaedia Britannica Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Exeter Book Encyclopaedia Britannica 10 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 67 a b c Gameson Richard December 1996 The origin of the Exeter Book of Old English poetry Anglo Saxon England 25 Cambridge University Press 135 185 doi 10 1017 S0263675100001988 ISSN 1474 0532 S2CID 162992373 Flood Alison 22 June 2016 Unesco lists Exeter Book among world s principal cultural artefacts The Guardian Retrieved 26 June 2016 Outstanding Old English poetry book granted Unesco status BBC News 21 June 2016 a b c d e f Exeter Book The British Library Archived from the original on 19 June 2023 Retrieved 7 August 2021 a b c d Conner Patrick W 2019 The Exeter Book Oxford Bibliographies Online Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 OBO 9780195396584 0094 a b Treharne Elaine Pulsiano Phillip 2017 An Introduction to the Corpus of Anglo Saxon Vernacular Literature A Companion to Anglo Saxon Literature PDF Wiley Blackwell pp 1 10 doi 10 1002 9781405165303 ch1 ISBN 9781405165303 2 3 4 5 6 11 12 13 Forster Max 1933 The Donations of Leofric to Exeter In Chambers Forster and Flower ed The Exeter Book of Old English Poetry a b Alexander Michael 2008 Introduction The First Poems in English London Penguin Books p xvii ISBN 9780140433784 2 3 8 11 12 Muir Bernard J ed 2000 The Exeter anthology of Old English poetry an edition of Exeter Dean and Chapter MS 3501 2nd ed Exeter University of Exeter Press pp 15 16 ISBN 0 85989 630 7 a b c d e Based on Muir s 1994 counting The Complete Corpus of Anglo Saxon Poetry Sacred texts com The Exeter Book people ucalgary ca University of Calgary elegy n OED Online Oxford University Press retrieved 20 March 2022 The Broadview Anthology of British Literature Second ed Broadview Press 2011 p 51 ISBN 9781554810482 Klinck Anne L 1992 The Old English Elegies McGill Queen s Press p 224 Mackie W S William Souter Gollancz I Mackie W S William Souter Gollancz I 18951934 The Exeter book an anthology of Anglo Saxon poetry presented to Exeter Cathedral by Loefric first bishop of Exeter 1050 1071 and still in possession of the dean and chapter London Pub for the Early English Text Society by K Paul Trench Trubner amp Co BibliographyWilliamson Craig 1977 The Old English Riddles of the Exeter Book Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina Press pp 3 28 ISBN 0 8078 1272 2 Marsden Richard 2015 The Cambridge Old English Reader 2nd ed doi 10 1017 CBO9781107295209 ISBN 9781107295209External links editThe Exeter Book digitisation The Exeter Book transcription James Grout Exeter Book of Riddles part of the Encyclopaedia Romana Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Exeter Book amp oldid 1215131051, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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