The 'Fonthill Letter', preserved among the muniments of Christ Church, Canterbury, at Canterbury Cathedral. <Content to be developed.>
A reading-list for the 'Fonthill Letter'
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Text and translation
- KCD 328; BCS 591 (text)
- Earle, Hand-Book, pp. 162-5
- Harmer, SEHD, no. 18 (text, translation, and notes)
- Wyatt 1919, pp. 112-15
- EHD i, no. 102 (translation)
- S 1445 (CantCC 104) (text, translation, and commentary)
- Marsden
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Commentary
- Simon Keynes, 'The Fonthill Letter', Words, Texts and Manuscripts: Studies in Anglo-Saxon Culture presented to Helmut Gneuss on the Occasion of his Sixty-Fifth Birthday, ed. M. Korhammer, with K. Reichl and H. Sauer (Cambridge, 1992), pp. 53-97
- Mechthild Gretsch, 'The Language of the Fonthill Letter', ASE 23 (1994), 57-102
- M. Boynton and S. Reynolds, 'The Author of the Fonthill Letter', ASE 25 (1996), 91-5
- Wormald, Making of English Law (1999), pp. 120, 144-8
- Carole Hough, 'Cattle Tracking in the Fonthill Letter', EHR 115 (2000), 864-92
- Mechthild Gretsch, 'The Fonthill Letter: Language, Law, and the Discourse of Disciplines', Anglia 123 (2005), 667-86
- S. Smith, 'Of Kings and Cattle-Thieves: the Rhetorical Work of the Fonthill Letter', JEGP 106 (2007), 446-67
- Pratt, Political Thought of Alfred (2007), pp. 37-8, 101-2, 237
- Nicholas Brooks, 'The Fonthill Letter, Ealdorman Ordlaf and Anglo-Saxon Law in Practice', Early Medieval Studies in Memory of Patrick Wormald, ed. S. Baxter, et al. (Farnham, 2009), pp. 301-17
- J. Niles, <to be added>
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October 2011