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IV. Tiere in nicht-tierbestimmter Literatur
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The red dragon in early Arthurian chronicles : its transformation and political implications
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I. Tiere im Mittelalter
II. Tiere in Tierallegorese und Tierkunde
III. Tierdichtung
IV. Tiere in nicht-tierbestimmter Literatur
Philologienübergreifendes
Einzelne Philologien
Antike Literatur
Lateinische Literatur
Französische und okzitanische Literatur
Italienische Literatur
Spanische und katalanische Literatur
Portugiesische Literatur
Nordische Literatur
Englische Literatur
Chaucer and medieval hunting
Bird lore and the Valentine's Day tradition in Chaucer's Parlement of foules
Chaucer's Text that seith that Hunters ben nat hooly men
The Physiologus and Beast Lore in Anglo-Saxon England
Animals in religious and non-religious Anglo-Saxon writings
Cultural symbols in transition: animal lore in late English and Scottish poetry
Ornamentale Tiermotive in der altenglischen Versdichtung
Spenser's Pageant of the Seven Deadly Sins
'From dumb beasts learn wisdom and knowledge.' Animal Symbolism in the 'Ancrene Wisse'
Of 'Briddes and Beestes': Chaucer's Use of Animal Imagery as a Means of Audience Influence in Four Major Poetic Works
Hunting in Middle English Literature
Chaucer and the Unnatural History of Animals
Die sieben Todsünden in der mittelenglischen erbaulichen Literatur
“Sumum menn wile þincan syllic þis to gehyrenne”: Ælfric on animals -- his sources and their application
Cultural symbols in translation: animal lore in late English and Scottish poetry
Some dynamics of story-telling: animals in the early lives of St Cuthbert
Exemplum et similitudo: natural law in the Manciple's Tale and the Squire's Tale
The medieval plough team on stage: wordplay and reality in the Towneley Mactacio Abel
Transition of Anglo-Saxon culture as seen in animal descriptions in Old English poetry and Anglo-Saxon art
Animal similes in Pearl
Fox, bull and lion in the Towneley Coliphizacio
The Outer Limits : Border Characters in Medieval Manuscript Illuminations and Middle English Mystery Plays (Ph. D., dactyl.) [Ann Arbor Microfilms, 90-19873]
Animal imagery in Wulf and Eadwacer and the possibilities of interpretation
The “Ysengrimus”, Allegory and Meaning: A Historical, Theological, and Literary Study
Geoffrey's so-called animal symbolism and Insular Celtic tradition
Caedmon, the clean animal
Lion Hearts, Saracen Heads, Dog Tails: The Body of the Conqueror in Richard Coer de Lyon
Beowulf's last fight (Beowulf, 2702b–2705)
The red dragon in early Arthurian chronicles : its transformation and political implications
The deaths of Beowulf and Odysseus: narrative time and mythological tale-types
Beowulf: the monsters and the comics
Beowulf 3074-75: Beowulf appraises his reward
Ealond utan at Beowulf, line 2334a
"Stonc aefter stane" (Beowulf, I.2288a): philology, narrative context, and the waking dragon
Three "cups" and a funeral in Beowulf
Beowulf and some fictions of the Geatish succession
Beowulf, gold-luck, and God's will
The dragon of Corriehills
“eald enta geweorc” and the relics of empire: revisiting the dragon's lair in Beowulf
The dragon in Beowulf: Cain's Seed, heresy, and Islam.
Warriors, wyrms, and wyrd: the paradoxical fate of the Germanic hero/king in Beowulf
Gold-Hall and Earth-Dragon: 'Beowulf' as Metaphor
Christian and folkloric tradition in Beowulf: death and the dragon episode
The dragon's treasure in Beowulf
Affective criticism, oral poetics, and Beowulf's fight with the dragon
Elements of the marvellous in the characterization of Beowulf: a reconsideration of the textual evidence
Beowulf
The approach to the dragon-fight in Beowulf, Aldhelm and the "traditions folkloriques" of Jacques Le Goff
Heorot and dragon-slaying in Beowulf
The Dredeful Dragon and the Grymly Bore: political overtones in Caxton's Kyng Arthur
More about the Fight with the Dragon. “Beowulf” 2208b - 3182
"Op; n p; næt an ongan ... draca ricsian"
The dragon in "Beowulf" revisited
The firedrake in Beowulf
Water Imagery and the Baptism Motif in “Beowulf”
"We stryve as dide the houndes for the boon": animals and Chaucer's romance vision
"Rather be used/ than be eaten"? Harry Bailly's animals and the Nun's Priest's Tale
Names of the beasts: tracking the animot in medieval texts
Niederländische Literatur
Deutsche Literatur
Keltische Literatur
V. Tiere
VI. Quellen
Interimsfolder: Zweifelsfälle
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2007-10-02
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