Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Introduction
- Memories of Viking Age Cultural Contact: England in the Íslendingasögur
- Expressions of Cultural Disability: Navigating (Non)Normativity in the Hebrew–Italian Melekh Artus (King Artus)
- “All the rancour and enmity between us”. The War Between Richard, Earl Marshal, and King Henry III: Its Origins and Resolution
- Royal Consumption and Gifts of Deer in Thirteenth-Century England
- Travers and Trappe in the Palace of Pandarus: A Note
- Benedictine Devotion to England’s Saints: Thomas de la Mare, John of Tynemouth, and the Sanctilogium in Cotton Tiberius E. i
- The Rise of Admission by Apprenticeship Among the Freemen of Norwich, 1365–1415
- Nuns on the Run, or the “Sturdy and Wilful Dames” of Syon Abbey and their Disobedience to the Tudor State ca. 1530–1600
- Taking the Tour: Heritage Management in A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 February 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Introduction
- Memories of Viking Age Cultural Contact: England in the Íslendingasögur
- Expressions of Cultural Disability: Navigating (Non)Normativity in the Hebrew–Italian Melekh Artus (King Artus)
- “All the rancour and enmity between us”. The War Between Richard, Earl Marshal, and King Henry III: Its Origins and Resolution
- Royal Consumption and Gifts of Deer in Thirteenth-Century England
- Travers and Trappe in the Palace of Pandarus: A Note
- Benedictine Devotion to England’s Saints: Thomas de la Mare, John of Tynemouth, and the Sanctilogium in Cotton Tiberius E. i
- The Rise of Admission by Apprenticeship Among the Freemen of Norwich, 1365–1415
- Nuns on the Run, or the “Sturdy and Wilful Dames” of Syon Abbey and their Disobedience to the Tudor State ca. 1530–1600
- Taking the Tour: Heritage Management in A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court
Summary
WHEN THE MEDIEVAL Academy of America met in Boston in 2016, Bob Bjork from Arizona State's Center for Medieval & Renaissance Studies said that Studies in Medieval and Renaissance History, which they had published for some years, was in need of a new editor. Independently, Paul Szarmach and Joel Rosenthal indicated an interest in taking this on. Then they discovered their mutual interest and, since they were old friends who had co-edited a number of projects and as a team had run an international conference, they offered to be joint or co-editors. This was an easy pairing, as Paul's special interest was Old English literature and he also had a broad knowledge, from a career of editing and administering, of a vast range of medieval topics. And Joel, though primarily a social historian of the later Middle Ages, had also worked a bit on Anglo-Saxon and early medieval history.
Together they co-edited four volumes of the series (Volume 16 is forthcoming). But before they could really turn to Volume 17, which would have been their last, Paul died. This made a memorial volume of the series, both a professional and a serious personal obligation. As Joel needed a co-editor—especially since he wanted to solicit contributions from Paul's primary area of expertise—he turned to Virginia Blanton. She is Curators’ Distinguished Professor in the Department of English, University of Missouri, Kansas City. Paul had been her doctoral supervisor at SUNY Binghamton. She and Helene Scheck had co-edited (Inter)Texts: Studies in Early Anglo-Saxon Culture Presented to Paul E. Szarmach, and she knew both Paul's field of concentration and many of the scholars with whom he had had so much contact and influence.
Our invitation to publish this volume with memorial tributes to Paul Szarmach from colleagues, students, and old friends met with so much interest, it became necessary to divide the essays into two volumes. Vol. 17 includes several essays that had been submitted and accepted while Paul still was able to read and approve them, as well as five others in his memory. Vol. 18, which will conclude Joel's stint as editor of SMRH, will fittingly close the chapter on his long-time collaboration with Paul.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Studies in Medieval and Renaissance HistoryEssays in Memory of Paul E. Szarmach, pp. ix - xPublisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2023