Canons of Edgar
Appearance
The Canons of Edgar are a set of early eleventh-century ecclesiastical regulations produced in Anglo-Saxon England by Wulfstan, Archbishop of York.[1]
According to Fowler, the Canons of Edgar "was central in Wulfstan's programme of reform; it also demonstrates better than any other of his works the deliberateness with which he familiarized himself with the best canonical writings to provide a basis of accepted authority for [these] reforms."[2]
Manuscripts
[edit]One version of the Canons — labelled version "D" — can be found in an eleventh-century manuscript, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge MS. 201, where it has been copied out by hand on pages 97 to 101.[3]
Editions and translations
[edit]- Thorpe, Benjamin, ed. (1840). "Canons enacted under King Edgar.". Ancient laws and institutes of England. pp. 395–402 – via Biblioteca europea di informazione e cultura.
- Fowler, Roger (1972). Wulfstan's Canons of Edgar. London: Oxford University Press.
- Translation: Andrew Rabin, The Political Writings of Archbishop Wulfstan of York (Manchester, 2015), pp. 85-100
References
[edit]- Fowler, Roger (1972). Wulfstan's Canons of Edgar. London: Oxford University Press.
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- ^ Fowler 1972, p. v.
- ^ Fowler 1972, p. xlvi.
- ^ Fowler 1972, p. xi.