Skip to main content
MEDIUM ÆVUM
user menu 2
Donate
Join
Members
Main navigation
About Us
Journal
Monographs
Essay Prize
Events
Main navigation
About Us
People
Conflict of Interest Policy
Constitution
Journal
For Contributors
Get MÆ
Monographs
Browse / Buy / Download
Submit a Proposal
Essay Prize
Essay Prize Rules
Submit your Entry
Events
Ox. Med. Grad. Conf.
Annual Lecture & Gen. Meeting
Day Conference
Username or email address
Enter your username or email address.
Password
Reset your password
hexameter
Articles
Author(s)
Title
Issue
A. Keith Bate
JOSEPH OF EXETER—RELIGIOUS POET
40/3
p. 222
Reviews
Author(s)
Title
Issue
J.H. Mozley
The Shorter Latin Poems of Master Henry of Avranches relating to England
, by Josiah Cox Russell, John Paul Heironimus
5/3
p. 215
Peter Godman
Lateinisches Hexameter-Lexikon. Dichterisches Formelgut von Ennius bis zum Archipoeta (Monumenta Germaniae Historica Hilfsmittel, 4 i). Teil 1: A-C
50/2
p. 311
languages
lateinisch
Late Latin
Old French
Gallo-Romance
Old Norse
Old High German
Latin
Church Slavonic
French
German
Italian
works
De Bello Trojano
Antiocheis
De Institutione Cyri
Vita Sancti Martini
Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum
Metamorphoses of Ovid
Ennius
Archipoeta
people
John
Sulpicius Severus
Joseph of Exeter
Guibert of Gembloux
Martène
Durand
Julianus Caesar
Stephen Langton
Henry III
Ennius
Richard Marsh
Eustace Falconberg
Claudius
Henry of Avranches
Ovid
Peter of Blois
Gerald of Wales
subjects
hexameter
devotion
elegiac
Expression
poetics
courtliness
cosmopolitanism
elegiacs
artificiality
epistolary
crusades
virginity
hagiography
rhetoric
symbolism
cliches
influence
religion
narrative
oral
literary
formulaic
poetry
research
metre
medieval
Latin
Aristotelianism
proverbs
reference
places
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Croyland
Gembloux
Pannonie
Turonorum
Liège
Salisbury Cathedral
St. Edmund
Bodley
Italia
St. Thomas
St. Guthlac
Pandulphus
Robert Passelewe
Christchurch
Germany
Louvain
Cambridge University Library
Paris
England
Oxford
Heidelberg
Munich
Winchester
Bruxelles
Göttingen
Ovid