Surfing The Net For Shakespeare Translate this page Gay (1685-1732) 89.Orlando Gibbons (1583-1625) 90.Oliver Goldsmith (1730?-1774)91.George Gordon, Lord Byron (1788-1824) 92.John Gower (1330?-1408) 93.James http://www.unicatt.it/library/milano/BancheDati/surf2.htm
Extractions: English Renaissance Literature on the Web a cura di C.M. Bajetta click here for the English version Introduzione Questa pagina - come la sua versione inglese , tuttora in fase di aggiornamento - contiene alcuni links utili a chi voglia conoscere le risorse oggi disponibili su Internet per la letteratura inglese del Rinascimento (e non solo). Naturalmente, la lista non e' esaustiva (si fa conto sull' aiuto degli utenti !!!): si sono segnalati i principali siti per la ricerca bibliografica, i più comuni strumenti di consultazione e alcune pagine tematiche. Per i links con le biblioteche si e' preferito indicare solo i cataloghi on-line più significativi e completi. Da molti di questi siti si puo' comunque iniziare a navigare alla ricerca di altre biblioteche. Di seguito troverete solo esempi dimostrativi delle numerose pagine web dedicate a singoli autori (Shakespeare ha molti più siti di quanto possiate immaginare!). Non e' difficile, comunque (beh, non e' poi cosi' difficile, con un po' di pazienza), reperire Web Pages di questo tipo attraverso motori di ricerca come Alta Vista, Yahoo etc.
Principal Authors In The English Poetry Database 1560? Gould, Robert, d.1709; Gower, John, 1330?1408; Graham, Dougal,1724-1779; Graham, James, 1st Marquis of Montrose, 1612-1650; http://calliope.ucs.indiana.edu/epd/epd-auth.html
British & Irish Authors On The Web Divided by time period.Category Arts Literature Poetry Directories John of Guildford (fl. 1225); Richard Rolle of Hampole (1295?1349); JohnBarbour (1320-95); John Wycliff (1329?-84); John Gower (1330?-1408) http://www.lang.nagoya-u.ac.jp/~matsuoka/UK-authors.html
Extractions: 19th C. British and Irish Authors I should be most grateful if you could let me know any Web sites related to the following authors or other British and Irish authors. Please forward the URL to me This page has been accessed times since the counter was put in on 1 July 1996. Last updated: 16 December 2002. Caedmon (fl. 670) Saint Bede (673?-735) Alcuin (735-804) Cynewulf (fl. 750) King Alfred (849-899) AElfric Grammaticus (955?-1020?) Wulfstan (d. 1023) Geoffrey of Monmouth (1100?-1154) Wace (1100?-74?) Layamon (fl. 1200) John of Guildford (fl. 1225) Richard Rolle of Hampole (1295?-1349)
The Millennium Library: Who's Who - John Gower John Gower. c. 1330 1408. Middle English poet. It is thought that JohnGower was born in Kent, but the details of his early life are uncertain. http://www.millenniumlibrary.co.uk/millib/reference/info/John Gower/2
Extractions: show links: authors texts terms none ... Glossary It is thought that John Gower was born in Kent, but the details of his early life are uncertain. Documentary sources show that he became wealthy, possibly through trade, and that he acquired land and properties. He inherited Kentwell manor at Long Melford in Suffolk, bought land in Kent in 1378, and earned money from rents in Essex. Gower had access to those in power: he attended the court of Richard II and in 1393 he was in the service of Henry, Earl of Derby. From about 1377 he lived in the Priory of St Mary Overy, Southwark, and following his marriage to Agnes Groundolf they lived there together until Gower's death. Gower wrote three major works in English, French, and Latin. His first was 'Le Mirour de l'Omme' or 'Speculum Meditantis' (1376-9), a didactic moral poem in French that examines the seven deadly sins, discusses their effect upon humankind, and proposes a way to achieve redemption. 'Vox Clamantis' (1379-82) is composed in Latin elegiac stanzas; and contrasts sin with virtue in a tone that suggests nostalgia for a bygone age. In Book One of 'Vox Clamantis', written after the Peasant's Revolt of 1381, Gower focuses upon social unrest in England and at one point describes rioters as monsters and wild beasts caught up in a kind of madness. Like Chaucer, Gower was influenced by classical authors and 'Confessio Amantis' (1386-90/93) is clearly indebted to Ovid's 'Metamorphoses'. Although it discusses love, Amans, the poem's hero, is figured as a different kind of lover to those described by Boccaccio; Gower's interest lies in 'courtly love', which is more meditative than physical.
Www.mit.edu/afs/athena/project/oxq/vaxsrc/oxq/authors S%(DEMETRIUS THE CYNIC%)%%1st%Ncent.%N%AD %SSIR John %(DENHAM%)%%1615 1849%1928%SDEAN %(GOULBURN%)%%1818%-1897 %SJohn %(Gower%)%%1330?%-1408 %SSIR ERNEST http://www.mit.edu/afs/athena/project/oxq/vaxsrc/oxq/authors
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