B.D.H. Miller |
The Bodley Version of Mandeville's Travels. (Early English Text Society 253), by M. C. Seymour |
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35/1, p. 71 |
R.A. Browne |
Æsopica: A Series of Texts Relating to Æsop or Ascribed to him or Closely Connected with the Literary Tradition that Bears his Name, Vol. I: Greek and Latin Texts, by Ben Edwin Perry |
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27/2, p. 114 |
NANCY MASON BRADBURY |
Tony Davenport, Medieval Narrative: An Introduction |
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78/1, p. 130 |
J. Keith Atkinson |
Boethian Fictions. Narratives in the Medieval French Versions of the Consolatio Philosophiae, by Richard A. Dwyer |
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47/1, p. 141 |
ELISABETH SCHULZE-BUSACKER |
Jeanne-Marie Boivin, Naissance de la fable: L'Isopet de Lyon et l'Isopet I — Avionnet, Essais sur le Moyen Âge 33 |
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77/1, p. 141 |
Nigel Harris |
Nürnberger Prosa-Äsop. Altdeutsche Textbibliothek 107, by Klaus Grubmüller |
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65/1, p. 171 |
D.R. McLintock |
The Nibelungenlied: A Literary Analysis, by Hugo Bekker |
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41/3, p. 258 |
Maldwyn Mills |
Sir Eglamour of Artois. Early English Text Society No. 256, by Frances E. Richardson |
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35/3, p. 269 |
Beryl Smalley |
The Friar as Critic. Literary Attitudes in the Later Middle Ages, by Judson Boyce Allen |
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41/3, p. 276 |
SALLY MAPSTONE |
Fabula Docet: Studies in the Background and Interpretation of Henryson's Morali Fabillis, Odense University Studies in English, 4, by Marianne Powell |
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55/2, p. 300 |
Margaret Connolly |
Edward Wheatley, Mastering Aesop: Medieval Education, Chaucer, and his Followers |
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70/2, p. 335 |
Karl Steel |
Jill Mann, From Aesop to Reynard: Beast Literature in Medieval Britain |
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80/1, p. 342 |