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Longer titles found: Bannatyne manuscript (Clan MacLeod) (view)

searching for Bannatyne Manuscript 15 found (102 total)

alternate case: bannatyne Manuscript

Lament for the Makaris (923 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article

"I that in Heill wes and Gladnes", also known as "The Lament for the Makaris", is a poem in the form of a danse macabre by the Scottish poet William Dunbar
Clan Morrison (3,354 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
Morrisons claimed to descend from the original stock of Morrisons. The Bannatyne Manuscript dates from about 1830 and is thought to have probably been written
The Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedie (1,008 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
The Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedie is the earliest surviving example of the Scottish version of the flyting genre in poetry. The genre takes the form of
The Morall Fabillis of Esope the Phrygian (4,584 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
The Morall Fabillis of Esope the Phrygian is a work of Northern Renaissance literature composed in Middle Scots by the fifteenth century Scottish makar
John Bellenden (617 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
Poetry, ed. M. M. Gray, London (1935): Bannatyne Manuscript (Hunterian Club, 1873), 9-20. Bannatyne Manuscript (1873), 3-8 Register of the Great Seal
Katherine Bellenden (1,024 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
Van Heijnsbergen, Theo, 'Literature in Queen Mary's Edinburgh: the Bannatyne Manuscript', in, The Renaissance in Scotland (Brill, 1994), p. 218. Durkan,
Waternish (896 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
possessed himself with the whole Lews ...". Similarly, the garbled Bannatyne Manuscript indicates that the MacNeacails held Lewis from the Kings of Mann
William Stewart (makar) (886 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article
2024), 212–13. MacDonald (1996), 196. See the whole poem here (Bannatyne Manuscript): Craigie, W. A., ed., Maitland Folio Manuscript, vol. 1, STS (1919)
Clan MacPhail (4,773 words) [view diff] case mismatch in snippet view article find links to article
century Bannatyne manuscript; a 13th-century Hebridean lord who was an ally of Olaf the Black, king of Mann and the Isles. The Bannatyne manuscript states
Thomas Arthur (tailor) (745 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article
Interaction Between Literature and History in Queen Mary’s Edinburgh: the Bannatyne Manuscript and its Prosopographical Context', The Renaissance in Scotland (Leiden
Thomas Bellenden of Auchnoule (858 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
Van Heijnsbergen, Theo, 'Literature in Queen Mary's Edinburgh: the Bannatyne Manuscript', in, The Renaissance in Scotland (Brill, 1994), pp. 191–6. Joseph
David Lyndsay (2,476 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
Pinkerton, John, Scottish Poems: Lindsay's Eight interludes from the Bannatyne Manuscript, vol.2, London (1792) Chalmers, George, ed., The poetical works of
James V (7,377 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
Van Heijnsbergen, Theo, 'Literature in Queen Mary's Edinburgh: the Bannatyne Manuscript', in The Renaissance in Scotland (Brill, 1994), pp. 191–196. Bingham
Greenside, Edinburgh (1,815 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
Van Heijnsbergen, Theo, 'Literature in Queen Mary's Edinburgh: the Bannatyne Manuscript', in, The Renaissance in Scotland (Brill, 1994), p. 206 Marguerite
List of carols at the Nine Lessons and Carols, King's College Chapel (802 words) [view diff] case mismatch in snippet view article find links to article
2008] Greenwell, Dora Tranchell, Peter Illuminare Jerusalem 1985 Bannatyne manuscript in John MacQueen; Winifred MacQueen (1972), A Choice of Scottish