A guide to more than 80 verse romances from between c.1225 and c.1500. Provides details on date and place of composition (where known), verse form, authorship and sources, extant manuscripts and early modern prints, a full list of modern editions, and a plot summary.
A highly detailed survey and valuation of all the land held by the King and his chief tenants, along with all the resources that went with the land in late 11th century England.
From the Fordham University Center for Medieval Studies, this web site compiles and categorizes primary and secondary sources. Some sections may be outdated, but the categorization is solid and once a text is digitized you can probably find it online somewhere.
Manuscripts are in Latin unless otherwise stated. Many of the manuscripts are described in N.R. Ker, Medieval Manuscripts in British Libraries, (5 volumes, 1969-2002): Vol. 3 for Brotherton Collection and non-Brotherton Collection manuscripts and Vol. 4 for Ripon Cathedral manuscripts. Half of the bound volumes contain illumination or similar decoration. The illuminated manuscripts can be searched with images
The aim of the Medieval English Towns site is to provide historical information about cities and towns in England during the Middle Ages, with particular but not exclusive emphasis on medieval boroughs of East Anglia and on social, political and constitut
Combines an electronic version of the Middle English Dictionary, a HyperBibliography of Middle English prose and verse, based on the MED bibliographies, and a Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse, as well as links to an associated network of electronic resources.
The Online Medieval and Classical Library The Online Medieval and Classical Library (OMACL) is a collection of some of the most important literary works of classical and medieval civilization.
The goal of the TEAMS Middle English text series is to make available to teachers and students texts which occupy an important place in the literary and cultural canon but which have not been readily available in student editions.
A Thesaurus of Old English is conceptually arranged, and presents the vocabulary of Anglo-Saxon England within ordered categories. This allows the user to approach the materials of the Thesaurus by subject rather than through an alphabetic index.