Irish Influence on Medieval Welsh Literature
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:25th Nov '10
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
In the Middle Ages Ireland's extensive and now famous literature was unknown outside the Gaelic-speaking world of Ireland, Scotland, and the Isle of Man - with Wales an important exception. Irish emigrants had settled in Wales from the fifth century onwards, Irish scholars worked in Wales in the ninth century, and throughout the Middle Ages there were ecclesiastical, mercantile, and military contacts across the Irish Sea. From this standpoint, it is not surprising that the names of Irish heroes such as Cú Roí, Cú Chulainn, Finn, and Deirdre became known to Welsh poets, and that Irish narratives influenced the authors of the Welsh Mabinogion. Yet the Welsh and Irish languages were not mutually comprehensible, the degree to which the two countries still shared a common Celtic inheritance is contested, and Latin provided a convenient lingua franca. Could some of the similarities between the Irish and Welsh literatures be due to independent influences or even to coincidence? Patrick Sims-Williams provides a new approach to these controversial questions, situating them in the context of the rest of medieval literature and international folklore. The result is the first comprehensive estimation of the extent to which Irish literature influenced medieval Welsh literature. This book will be of interest not only to medievalists but to all those concerned with the problem of how to recognize and evaluate literary influence.
A careful examination of this important subject ... An engagingly written book, the thirty years of scholarship that went into it are evident. * Elisabeth Salter, Times Literary Supplement *
This magisterial scholarly volume is the result of more than thirty years of intensive research by one of our foremost Celtic scholars. * J. Graham Jones, www.gwales.com *
Sims-Williams's close observation of the physical world, his surmises about human nature in matters of narrative perspective, authorial aim, imagination, and critical reading, and his gentle humor get to the heart of literary creation and sound criticism and are continually informing and refreshing aspects of this book. * Elizabeth Moore Willingham, The Sixteenth Century Journal *
ISBN: 9780199588657
Dimensions: 241mm x 164mm x 30mm
Weight: 828g
440 pages