//=time() ?>
Anne and Mary, mother and daughter, each with a book in her hand. So lovely!
From a 15th-century Book of Hours https://t.co/eHJ1EeCrBY
A medieval English version of 'Veni Creator Spiritus': Com, Shuppere, Holy Gost https://t.co/z25LXiFDBy
Today is the beginning of Passiontide, the last fortnight in Lent. 'Þe kynges baneres beth forth ylad', and some other medieval texts for this season: https://t.co/G2KOn9hxmR
'Hoard up your goldhoard in heaven': treasure, dragons, wordhoards, and an Anglo-Saxon sermon for the first Sunday in Lent https://t.co/O3ZYCuae8D
The coming of Christ 'the golden blossom': an Anglo-Saxon reflection on Advent, season of poetry and paradox https://t.co/03f6s2WEpe
My latest column for @HistoryToday: Chaucer's vision of a post-truth world https://t.co/tdzFDMGgJT
'This yonder night I saw a sight,
A star as bright as any day,
And ever among a maiden sung,
By by, lully, lullay.'
https://t.co/tEJv8bWPWs
The Christmas story in medieval Opus Anglicanum. Glorious!
https://t.co/ZcwiXWx31Y
The siege of London in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (BL Cotton Tiberius B IV, f.67). 'Þa comon þa scipo to Grenawic'...
Christ the Bird and the Play of Hope: An Anglo-Saxon poem on the Ascension http://t.co/cdQnFKwdB4