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The Metrical Epilogue to the Alfredian Pastoral Care: a postscript from Junius
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 September 2008
Extract
When Old English studies were in their infancy in the seventeenth century, scholars such as Franciscus junius (1591–1677) had very little to study in print. With no grammar and no dictionary (until Somner's in 1659) they had to teach themselves the language from original sources. Junius, whose interest in Germanic studies became active in the early 1650s, was so proficient, not only at Old English, but also at the cognate languages that he became virtually the founding-father of Germanic philology. Over the years Junius made transcripts in his own distinctive imitation-Anglo-Saxon minuscule script of many Old English texts, transcripts that have subsequently proved invaluable, especially where the original manuscripts have been damaged or lost.
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References
1 For a preliminary list of early printed books containing Anglo-Saxon, see Adams, E. N., Old English Scholarship in England from 1566–1800, Yale Stud, in Eng. 55 (New Haven, CT, 1917)Google Scholar, Appendix III (b), but her ascriptions of the types used by the various printers are not reliable. Adams no doubt drew on the pioneering list of ‘Libri Saxonici Typis Impressi’ in Hickes's, G.Linguarum Veterum Septentrionalium Thesaurus Grammatico-Criticus et Archaeologicus, 2 vols. (Oxford, 1705) II, 325–6.Google Scholar
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6 EEMF 23 (Copenhagen, 1991). I should like to take this opportunity of thanking Professors Robinson and Stanley for their graciousness in learning of the omission, for encouraging me to write this article and for their interest in it.
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