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Renaut de Montauban and the Pseudo-Turpin’s Renaut d’Aubépine: Two Names for One Person?
Neophilologus, 2008Is the Pseudo-Turpin’s enigmatic Rainaldus de Albo Spino just an early name of the later Renaut de Montauban of high renown? The arguments commonly offered against this identification are disproved, and three new arguments based on a closer analysis of the Pseudo-Turpin text itself make a positive answer almost unavoidable. The emergence of the toponym
exaly +2 more sources
Girart d’ Amiens and the Pseudo-Turpin Chronicle
Zeitschrift Fur Romanische Philologie, 1960exaly +2 more sources
A Note on the Pseudo-Turpin Translations of Nicolas de Senlis and William de Briane
Zeitschrift Fur Romanische Philologie, 1970exaly +2 more sources
THE MIDDLE ENGLISH "PSEUDO-TURPIN CHRONICLE"
Medium Ævum, 1996Because this article introduces an unpublished and little-known Middle English text, it engages necessarily in a diverse set of enquiries. As a consequence, the article is divided into sections which consider (I) the manuscript, (II) a history of the Pseudo-Turpin Chronicle as it originated on the Continent, (III) the relationship of the Middle English
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ClassifyingThe Pseudo-Turpin Chronicle
Cataloging & Classification Quarterly, 2013This study focuses on the library classification practices of The Pseudo-Turpin Chronicle. The Pseudo-Turpin Chronicle has been called an enigmatic work by scholars, and the mystery has carried into library classification. The work's language of origin is not its national language.
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