History, hagiography, romance… A Middle English prose Brut’s layered portrayal of Athelstan
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.4000/medievalista.6924Palabras clave:
Athelstan, chronicle, Brut, legend, narrativeResumen
Athelstan’s reputation and accomplishments as the king credited with being the first to rule over all of England led to his being celebrated in the Middle Ages in art, coinage, romance, travel narratives, and chronicles. In the prose Brut tradition, his depiction is, for the most part, focused on his military accomplishments, with little elaboration. However, the abbreviated Middle English prose Brut preserved in Edinburgh University Library MS 184 and two other manuscripts is unusual in its blending of narrative elements from historical accounts, hagiography, and romance to portray Athelstan as an English hero, and in its telling its 15-century audience where they could still see physical relics of Athelstan’s reign in their own day, giving them the opportunity to be vicariously connected to the storied history of their nation. This article traces sources and traditions this Brut’s compiler most likely drew from and considers what implications this may have for our understanding of this particular manuscript and of the evolution and adaptation of Brut chronicles in the late Middle Ages.
Bibliographical references
Manuscript Sources
Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Library, MS 184.
London, British Library, MS Harley 63.
Printed Sources
Aelred of Rievaulx – Genealogia regum Anglorum. In MIGNE, J. P. Migne (ed.) – Patrologiœ cursus completus, series Latina, 122 Vols. (Paris: 1844-1864), xcv (1855), cols. 724-725.
BRIE, Friedrich W. D. (ed.) – The Brut or The chronicles of England. 2 Vols. Oxford: EETS, O.S. 131 and 136, 1906-08. Vols. 1 and 2 reprinted together, 1999.
EDWARDS, Edward (ed.) – Liber Monasterii de Hyda. London: Rolls Series 45, 1866.
HALES, John W.; Frederick J. Furnivall (eds.) – Bishop Percy’s folio manuscript, Vol. II, Part II. London: N. Trübner, 1868.
HAYDON, Frank Scott (ed.) – Eulogium historiarum. Vol. 2. Rolls Series 9: London, 1857.
HENRY OF HUNTINGDON – Historia Anglorum. Ed. and trans. Diana Greenway, Oxford: Clarendon P, 1996.
HIGDEN, Ranulf – Polychronicon Ranulphi Higden, monachi Cestrensis; together with the English translation of John of Trevisa and of an unknown writer in the 15th century. Ed. Vols. 1-2, C. Babington; ed. Vols. 3-9, J. R. Lumby, vol. 9. London, 1865-1866.
KNIGHTON, Henry – Chronicon Henrici Knighton. Ed. J. R. Lumby. Rolls Series 92: London, 1889-1895.
LUARD, Henry Richards (ed.) – Flores historiarum. Vol. 1. London: Rolls Series 95, 1890.
LYDGATE, John – The minor poems of John Lydgate. Part II. Ed. Henry Noble Maccracken. Oxford: EETS, O.S. 192, 1934.
MARVIN, Julia – The oldest Anglo-Norman prose Brut chronicle: An edition and translation. Woodbridge: Boydell, 2006.
O’FARREL-TATE, Una (ed.) – The abridged English metrical Brut. Heidelberg: C. Winter, 2002.
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STUBBS, William – Memoriale fratris Walteri de Coventria: The historical collections of Walter of Coventry. 2 vols. London, 1872-1873.
TROUNCE, A. McI. (ed.) – Athelston: A Middle English romance. EETS, O.S. 224, 1951.
WILLIAM OF MALMESBURY – Gesta regum Anglorum. Vol. I. Ed. and trans. R. A. B. Mynors, R. M. Thomson, & M. Winterbottom. Oxford: Clarendon P, 1998.
ZETT, Edward (ed.) – An anonymous short metrical chronicle. London: EETS, O.S. 196, 1935.
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Studies
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