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INDEX
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS vii
- LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS viii
- 1 IRISH NARRATIVE LITERATURE AND THE CLASSICAL TRADITION, 900–1300 1
-
Part I The Irish Classical sagas
- 2. Imtheachta Aeniasa and its place in medieval Irish textual history 23
- 3 HISTORY AND HISTORIA: USES OF THE TROY STORY IN MEDIEVAL IRELAND AND WALES 40
- 4 THE USES OF EXAGGERATION IN MERUGUD UILIXIS MEIC LEIRTIS AND IN FINGAL CHLAINNE TANNTAIL 58
- 5 THE MEDIEVAL IRISH WANDERING OF ULYSSES BETWEEN LITERACY AND ORALITY 83
-
Part II The dynamics of Classical allusion
- 6. Demonology, allegory and translation: the Furies and the Morrígan 99
- 7 RECONSTRUCTING THE MEDIEVAL IRISH BOOKSHELF: A CASE STUDY OF FINGAL RÓNÁIN AND THE HORSE-EARED KINGS 123
- 8 ‘THE METAPHORICAL HECTOR’: THE LITERARY PORTRAYAL OF MURCHAD MAC BRÍAIN 140
-
Part III Classical models for vernacular ‘epic’?
- 9. Was Classical imitation necessary for the writing of large-scale Irish sagas? Reflections on Táin Bó Cúailnge and the ‘watchman device’ 163
- 10. ‘Wrenching the club from the hand of Hercules’: Classical models for medieval Irish compilatio 196
- BIBLIOGRAPHY 208
- INDEX 230
- STUDIES IN CELTIC HISTORY 245
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS vii
- LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS viii
- 1 IRISH NARRATIVE LITERATURE AND THE CLASSICAL TRADITION, 900–1300 1
-
Part I The Irish Classical sagas
- 2. Imtheachta Aeniasa and its place in medieval Irish textual history 23
- 3 HISTORY AND HISTORIA: USES OF THE TROY STORY IN MEDIEVAL IRELAND AND WALES 40
- 4 THE USES OF EXAGGERATION IN MERUGUD UILIXIS MEIC LEIRTIS AND IN FINGAL CHLAINNE TANNTAIL 58
- 5 THE MEDIEVAL IRISH WANDERING OF ULYSSES BETWEEN LITERACY AND ORALITY 83
-
Part II The dynamics of Classical allusion
- 6. Demonology, allegory and translation: the Furies and the Morrígan 99
- 7 RECONSTRUCTING THE MEDIEVAL IRISH BOOKSHELF: A CASE STUDY OF FINGAL RÓNÁIN AND THE HORSE-EARED KINGS 123
- 8 ‘THE METAPHORICAL HECTOR’: THE LITERARY PORTRAYAL OF MURCHAD MAC BRÍAIN 140
-
Part III Classical models for vernacular ‘epic’?
- 9. Was Classical imitation necessary for the writing of large-scale Irish sagas? Reflections on Táin Bó Cúailnge and the ‘watchman device’ 163
- 10. ‘Wrenching the club from the hand of Hercules’: Classical models for medieval Irish compilatio 196
- BIBLIOGRAPHY 208
- INDEX 230
- STUDIES IN CELTIC HISTORY 245