King Alfred's Anglo-Saxon version of the ... History of the world by Orosius, containing a preface, notes, a literal Engl. tr., mr. Hampson's Essay on king Alfred's geography [&c.] by J. Bosworth, Volume 31859 |
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Page vii
... Wulfstan , subsequently mentioned . We shall now speak of his works generally , and endeavour to ascertain at what time they were written . Though a want of documents may prevent us from arriving at a certainty , a few dates are ...
... Wulfstan , subsequently mentioned . We shall now speak of his works generally , and endeavour to ascertain at what time they were written . Though a want of documents may prevent us from arriving at a certainty , a few dates are ...
Page ix
... Wulfstan to undertake their voyages , he at least induced them to relate to him in detail what they had seen , which he wrote down from their dictation , and inserted the narrative in his translation of Orosius , together with his own ...
... Wulfstan to undertake their voyages , he at least induced them to relate to him in detail what they had seen , which he wrote down from their dictation , and inserted the narrative in his translation of Orosius , together with his own ...
Page xxiv
... Wulfstan , written in Anglo - Saxon by King Alfred the Great containing , -1 A facsimile copy of the whole A. S. text from C , and as far as it exists in L ; together sixteen facsimile pages , -2 A printed A. S. text , based on these ...
... Wulfstan , written in Anglo - Saxon by King Alfred the Great containing , -1 A facsimile copy of the whole A. S. text from C , and as far as it exists in L ; together sixteen facsimile pages , -2 A printed A. S. text , based on these ...
Page xl
... Wulf- stan . These important additions deserve especial notice both as to their matter , and as being the original ... Wulfstan . 8 1st . We have [ § 11 and 12 ] Alfred's description of Europe ; or , as he calls it , Germania , for at ...
... Wulf- stan . These important additions deserve especial notice both as to their matter , and as being the original ... Wulfstan . 8 1st . We have [ § 11 and 12 ] Alfred's description of Europe ; or , as he calls it , Germania , for at ...
Page xli
... Wulfstan's Voyage , [ § 20-23 . ] This voyage was confined to the Baltic , being from Schleswig to Truso in Prussia . Forster , in p . 53 of his Northern voyages , hesitates not to say : " There was a Jutlander of the name of Wulfstan ...
... Wulfstan's Voyage , [ § 20-23 . ] This voyage was confined to the Baltic , being from Schleswig to Truso in Prussia . Forster , in p . 53 of his Northern voyages , hesitates not to say : " There was a Jutlander of the name of Wulfstan ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abotrites accents Adam of Bremen Alfred's description altered ancient Anglo Anglo-Saxon text Barrington Boii called century CHAPTER Charlemagne copy Cotton Dacia Dahlmann Danube description of Europe Duke ealle edition Elstob English facsimile feng to romana Forster g hé Geography German Germania h hé h read hæfde hæt hætt Hakluyt Haver Helmingham Hall heóra hím híne hióra Hippo Regius hít hund hýre Icelandic John Spelman Junius Jutland King Alfred King Alfred's land Latin Lauderdale letters lond manuscript Marcomanni Northmen notes Ohthere and Wulfstan omitted original OROS Orosius Plegmund printed read hí romana anwealde Saga Saxon scribe sindon Slavonic Suevi Thuringia toromano translation various readings version of Orosius voyages of Ohthere wæron wið Wilzi word writing written Wulfstan þæm þære þæs þæt þam þemon
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Page xliii - OVID'S Works, complete. Literally translated into Prose. 3 vols. 5^. each. PASCAL'S Thoughts. Translated from the Text of M. Auguste Molinier by C. Kegan Paul. 3rd Edition, y, dd. PAULI'S (Dr. R.) Life of Alfred the Great. Translated from the German. To which is appended Alfred's ANGLO-SAXON VERSION OF OROSIUS. With a literal Translation interpaged, Notes, and an ANGLO-SAXON GRAMMAR and GLOSSARY, by B. Thorpe. 5^. PAUSANIAS
Page xxx - By his last will, he bequeathed to the university of Oxford all his printed books and manuscripts on Saxon and Northern literature, for the use of the Saxon professor; all his manuscripts, printed books, and pamphlets, prints, and drawings, maps, and copperplates relating to British topography, (of which, in 1808, he had nearly printed a complete catalogue); his interleaved copies of the
Page xxxvi - ANALECTA Anglo-Saxonica : a Selection in Prose and Verse, from Anglo-Saxon Authors of various Ages ; with a Glossary. Designed chiefly as a first book for students. By BENJAMIN THORPE, FSA A New Edition with corrections and improvements. Post 8vo, cloth. 7s 6d ENGLISH Retraced, or Remarks on the " Breeches" Bible (the Genevan Version) and the English of the present day.
Page xxxviii - Vineland from Greenland, doubtless for the purpose of strengthening his countrymen in their Christian faith. The notices given by the old Icelandic voyage-chroniclers respecting the climate, the soil and the productions of this new country are very characteristic. Nay, we have even a statement of this kind as old as the eleventh century, from a writer not a Northman, Adam of Bremen ; he states, on the authority of Svein Estridson, the king of Denmark, a nephew of Canute the Great, that the country...
Page xxxviii - In the mean time it is the total result of the nautical, geographical and astronomical evidences in the original documents, which places the situation of the countries discovered beyond all doubt. The number of days...
Page xl - A remarkable confirmation of the statement made by Nestor would be afforded if we could, as is probable, venture to assume that the Igvar occurring on several Swedish Runic stones is the Russian Grand Prince Igor.
Page xiv - Dr. Dee died at Mortlack in Surrey, very • poor, enforced many times to sell some book or other to buy his dinner with, as Dr. Napier of Linford, in Buckinghamshire, oft related, who knew him very well.
Page xxxvii - A German named Tyrker, who accompanied Leif on this voyage, was the man who found the wild vines, which he recognized from having seen them in his own land, and Leif gave the country its name from this circumstance. Two years...
Page lv - Alfred epitomized this detail in the following simple style : " Alaric, the most Christian and the mildest of kings, sacked Rome, with so little violence, that he ordered no man should be slain, — and that Pelagius, qui ausus est profiteri, se esse sine macula atque peccato, Id.
Page lvi - ... Christianity. The tone pervading the work is that of a Christian, impressed with a proper sense of justice and humanity, deprecating ambition, conquest and glory, gained at the expense of human blood and human happiness. This History of Orosius was undertaken at the request of S. Augustine and dedicated " to him. Orosius commenced writing about AD 410, when Honorius was emperor of the West, and when S. Augustine had finished ten books of his City of God.