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Medieval Studies

Translations into English

Systematic bibliography of editions of Latin texts including translations is found in:

Many other reference sources are listed in Authors & Texts.

On the Web: The ORB Library, is an alphabetical list of medieval authors and texts (most are English translations). This site includes the Internet Medieval Sourcebook, "comprising public domain and copy-permitted texts. The problem with many of the Internet available texts is that they are too bulky for classroom assignment. For instance, all of Pope Gregory I's letters are available, but in one 500 page document. The Sourcebook then is in two parts. The first is made up of fairly short classroom sized extracts, derived from public domain sources or copy-permitted translations, the second is composed of the full documents, or WWW links to the full documents." Other sites are listed on SUL medieval e-texts.

The World Catalog library union catalog is also useful for identifying translations published as monographs. Search on the author's name and/or work's title (remembering there are uniform entries used for many writers--and texts--but that these are not always uniformly applied and that variants almost always will be found) . Searching on an editor's name if known plus title keywords is sometimes more efficient because of the problem of variant forms of author/title entry.

Speculum (fulltext in JSTOR except for recent five years), usually in its January issue, has published since 1973 an annual list of editions and translations in progress. Current year is shelved in Current Periodicals Rm.

Last modified: November 5, 2007

     
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