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         British Literature Arthurian:     more books (66)
  1. New Directions in Arthurian Studies
  2. The Quest for the Grail: Arthurian Legend in British Art 1840-1920 by Christine Poulson, 1999-07
  3. The Arthurian Handbook (Second Edition) by Norris J. Lacy, 1997-10-01
  4. Dutch Romances: II. Ferguut (Arthurian Archives)
  5. Camelot in the Nineteenth Century: Arthurian Characters in the Poems of Tennyson, Arnold, Morris, and Swinburne (Contributions to the Study of World Literature) by Laura Cooner Lambdin, Robert Thomas Lambdin, 2000-07-30
  6. Arthurian Writers: A Biographical Encyclopedia
  7. The Arthurian Annals: The Tradition in English from 1250 to 2000 (2 Volume Set) by Daniel P. Nastali, Phillip C. Boardman, 2004-12-09
  8. A Companion to Malory (Arthurian Studies)
  9. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and the Idea of Righteousness (Dublin Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Literature) by Gerald Morgna, 1992-03
  10. Culture and the King: The Social Implications of the Arthurian Legend (S U N Y Series in Medieval Studies) by Martin B. Shichtman, 1994-07
  11. The Company of Camelot: Arthurian Characters in Romance and Fantasy (Contributions to the Study of Science Fiction and Fantasy) by Charlotte Spivack, Roberta Lynne Staples, 1994-12-30
  12. The New Arthurian Encyclopedia: Updated Paperback Edition (Garland Reference Library of the Humanities, Vol. 931) by Norris J. Lacy, 1995-12-01
  13. The Alliterative Morte ArthureA Reassessment of the Poem (Arthurian Studies)
  14. Arthur in Medieval Welsh Literature (Writers of Wales) by O. J. Padel, 2000-12-13

21. 19th-century Brit Lit Resources
19thcentury british literature Resources arthurian images occur in a numberof works of literature and visual art, including these
http://www.stcloudstate.edu/~scogdill/britlitresources.html
19th-century British Literature Resources
This is a very arbitrary and whimsical list of sites I have bookmarked for the use of students in my classes, so it does not pretend to be systematic, thorough, or comprehensive. If you don't know how to begin finding sites, though, here are some possibilities.
Humanities-oriented Webliographies.
VoS English Literature: Victorian , theVictorian page for Alan Liu's brilliant Voice of the Shuttle. Check also his Romantics page
Period-related Sites
The Victorian Web Overview , George Landow's site at Brown. This is something one would read rather than a list of links to other sites. Welcome to the 19CWWW , a site for the study of 19th-century women writers. Most of the writers looked at are American, though not all, and often they are unusual and interesting writers to look at. The Victorian Women Writers Project , a site devoted to women writers of Great Britain in the 19th century. See also the Modernism Timeline, 1890-1940
Author-related Sites
rather arbitrarily arranged
Jane Austen
Jane Austen Info Page , with links to several other sites, including a hypertext of Pride and Prejudice Sketch of Jane Austen
William Blake
William Blake 's pictorial and poetic works, including excellent graphics for a number of things like

22. The Legend Of King Arthur--Literature/World History Lesson Plan (grades 9-12)--D
Context The worst scoundrel in the arthurian legend is Mordred. Americanliterature, british literature, world and ancient literature, the Bible).
http://school.discovery.com/lessonplans/programs/arthur/
postionList = "compscreen,hedthick,admedia,tower,nuiad,interstitial"; OAS_RICH("interstitial"); OAS_RICH("admedia");
Grades K-5
Grades 6-8 Grades 9-12
Astronomy/Space
... Health History
Ancient History
U.S. History World History Life Science Animals Ecology Human Body The Microscopic World ... Weather
9-12 > Literature Grade level: 9-12 Subject: Literature Duration: Two class periods
Objectives
Materials Procedures Adaptations ... Credit
Objectives
Use our free online Teaching Tools to create custom worksheets, puzzles and quizzes on this topic!
Students will understand the following:
Many writers have told the tale of King Arthur and the people around him, including Guinevere, Lancelot, Merlin, and Mordred. The legends are part of our heritage. Materials
For this lesson, you will need: Spoon River Anthology, Access to reference materials that explain why the Kennedy era was referred to as Camelot Procedures After basic instruction on the tales surrounding the legendary medieval British monarch named King Arthur, invite your students to try their own hands at writing literature. Tell students that you will lead them through the steps necessary for each of them to create a dramatic monologue supposedly composed at some point by one of the following characters: Arthur, Guinevere, Lancelot, Merlin, or Mordred. (You can hold off on using and defining the term dramatic monologue until later in this activity.)

23. ClassZone: Language Of Literature 1997
A wideranging database of arthurian texts, images, bibliographies, and basicinformation Milestones in british literature Jane Austen Jane Austen
http://www.classzone.com/lol97/grade12.html
Use the links below to select a title from a specific grade and unit. The titles in the menu correspond to individual sections in McDougal Littell's Language of Literature series. By selecting a title, you will jump to a set of links chosen by our editors. These links were selected because they provide additional content or information that may be useful when discussing a particular selection or topic.
Select a grade:
American Literature British Literature
British Literature, Unit One
Beowulf
"The Electronic
Beowulf "
An article by Professor Kevin S. Kiernanone of the developers of the Electronic Beowulf Project providing insight into the rationale and progress of the project
Electronic
Beowulf
Information about an effort to prepare digital facsimiles of the Beowulf manuscript and related documents. Includes links to sample images.
Resources for Studying
Beowulf
Provides several useful directions for extending the study of Beowulf , including a bibliography and a translation
the Iliad: Ancient Greece
Perseus Encyclopedia: Homer

A useful discussion of the authorship and composition of the Homeric epics, with a bibliography and links to ancient texts dealing with Homer's life and works. Provided by the Perseus Project at Tufts University.

24. Faculty Directory College Of Liberal Arts
Specialization, Eighteenth and nineteenth-century british literature, Most recently, she has contributed chapters to On arthurian Women (ed.
http://www.cla.purdue.edu/academic/engl/graduate/faculty.asp

25. British Literature Books And Articles - Research British
british literature Scholarly books and articles on british literature at Questia Stories of british Kings and the arthurian of the English tribes on
http://www.questia.com/library/literature/literature-of-specific-countries/briti

26. Alfred Lord Tennyson British Poet Laureate Morte D Arthur
Camelot in the Nineteenth Century arthurian Characters in the Poems of Tennyson,Arnold, Morris, british literature british Poetry Famous Poets
http://www.questia.com/library/literature/literature-of-specific-countries/briti

27. Britannia: King Arthur
british History, Monarchs, King Arthur. arthurian literature Reviewed foryoung people Welsh arthurian Lit. - by Peter Williams, Ph.D.
http://www.britannia.com/history/h12.html

British History

Monarchs

King Arthur

Church History
... History
His name is synonymous with wisdom and fairness. The names of his wife, magician and knights are household words. His sword symbolizes righteous power. His capitol city is an icon for earthly perfection, but with all this name recognition, we still aren't sure that he ever actually lived.
King Arthur Content Highlights:
Arthurian Sources
- Index of original sources
Early British Kingdoms
- Britain in Arthur's time
What Historians Say
- Beliefs about Arthur
Cadbury Castle
- Was this Camelot? Geoffrey Ashe - An interview The Ballad of Elaine - by Sydney Fowler Wright Arthurian Literature - Reviewed for young people Welsh Arthurian Lit. - by Peter Williams, Ph.D. Abbots of Glastobury Abbey - A complete listing Magical Glastonbury - by Geoffrey Ashe Special Nature of Glastonbury - by John Michell Ambrosius Aurelianus - Some say he's Arthur Joseph of Arimathea - Biblical character in England? Merlin - King Arthur's magician Nimue - The Lady of the Lake Vortigern - Sponsor of the Saxons Uther Pendragon - Arthur's legendary father Ygerna - Arthur's mother Dark Age Timeline - 5th-7th C. chronology

28. The Age Of Cavalry And Arthurian Literature
Gradually, the british found it increasingly difficult to hold out Consequently,it is not coincidental that the arthurian literature that we are most
http://www.georgetown.edu/users/kammerb/cavalry.htm
The Age of Cavalry and Arthurian Literature
Warfare during the fifth and sixth centuries, the most likely time of the historical King Arthur, was primitive and brutal. Evidence for such a harsh form of warfare can be found in the medieval texts of Gildas Nennius knight as a soldier who was relatively well equipped in regard to weapons and armor and was trained to fight on horseback, forming a military class distinction denoting professional elite troops (10). These knights dominated the social and political aspects of life, and more importantly for our discussion, warfare. Chretien de Troyes , in his late twelfth century work " The Knight of the Cart, " provides a clear picture of the knight, illustrating the importance of knights not only on the battlefield, but also in Arthurian literature: "When he was armed, he remounted at once and took up the shield and the long, straight, and colorfully painted lance; at his side he hung the sharp, bright sword." The passage above by Chretien does two things. Written probably in 1160-80, the passage first introduces the knight into Arthurian literature, and secondly, gives us a glimpse at the business end of a knight, namely his weapons. The two principle weapons of the knight, as shown by the passage, are the lance and the sword. The lance was usually made of ash wood, about fourteen feet in length, and carried vertically until lowered for the charge, where it could be wielded overarm or thrown. It depended on the combined momentum of the horse and the knight to achieve its desired effect. However, lances were easily broken, and after the initial impact, were practically useless (Prestwich 26). Lances are best remembered for jousting, and Chretien contains several examples of their use, as does

29. Bio Info.
arthurian literature, Irish literature, Survey of british literature, WritingAbout Also over 30 articles on arthurian and pastoral literature,
http://www.wsu.edu/~hydev/myinfo.htm
Virginia Hyde Education: Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, Madison
B. A., Arizona State University ( Summa cum laude Position: Professor of English Husband: David C. Barnes (since 1987) The "wallpaper" on my homepage is from the cover of my book The Risen Adam AWARDS Most Supportive Faculty Member
, EGO, WSU English Department (1995); Best Graduate Seminar , EGO, English Department (1996); Outstanding Teaching and Scholarship , WSU Honors Program (1984); Excellence in Teaching , WSU Honors Program (1986). I received a commendation from the Lawrence Society at its Eighth International Conference, held in Naples, Italy (2001). I hold the ASU President's Medallion of Merit and have received awards from the AAUW and IOOF as well as research and travel grants. I held the Vilas Fellowship of the University of Wisconsin and Phi Kappa Phi's National Sparks Fellowship and National Gibbs Fellowship. PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS : I am President of the Lawrence Society of North America, a scholarly organization allied to the Modern Language Association of America. Some other professional organizations (besides MLA): American Conference for Irish Studies, Arthurian Society, Browning Society, AAUP, and WSU Association for Faculty Women.

30. King Arthur - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
The Bretons and other british emigrees had supported William the Conqueror atthe battle of Hastings providing arthurian literature in the Middle Ages.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthurian_legend
King Arthur
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
(Redirected from Arthurian legend
For the 1691 opera by Dryden and Purcell, see King Arthur (opera) For the 2004 movie, see King Arthur (movie)
King Arthur is an important figure in the mythology of Great Britain , where he appears as the ideal of kingship in both war and peace. He is the central character in the cycle of legends known as the Matter of Britain . There is disagreement about whether Arthur, or a model for him, ever actually existed: in the earliest mentions and Welsh texts he is never given the title "King." Early texts refer to him as dux bellorum ("war leader") and High Medieval Welsh texts often call him amerauder emperor Victorian image of King Arthur in plate armour with visor raised and with jousting shield
Contents
edit
The Arthur of history
Main article: Historical basis for King Arthur
The possible historicity of the King Arthur of legend has long been debated by scholars. One school of thought believes Arthur to have lived sometime in the late 5th century to early 6th century , to have been of Romano-British origin, and to have fought against the

31. British Literature - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
The Jersey poet Wace is considered the founder of Jersey literature and contributedto the development of the arthurian legend in british literature.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_literature
British literature
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
British literature is literature from the United Kingdom , the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands . The largest part of this literature is written in the English language , but there are also separate literatures in the Welsh language Scottish Gaelic Scots and other languages. Northern Ireland is the only part of Ireland still part of the United Kingdom and it possesses literature in English, Ulster Scots and Irish . Irish writers have also played an important part in the development of English-language literature.
Contents
edit
Old Celtic literature
Literature in the Celtic languages of the islands is the oldest surviving vernacular literature in Europe . The Welsh literary tradition stretches from the 6th century to the 21st century . The oldest Welsh literature does not belong to the territory we know as Wales today, but rather to northern England and southern Scotland. But though it is dated to be from the 6th, 7th, and 8th centuries, it has survived only in 13th and 14th century manuscript copies.

32. British Literature: Information From Answers.com
british literature british literature is literature from the United Kingdom ,the Isle to the development of the arthurian legend in british literature.
http://www.answers.com/topic/british-literature
showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping British literature Wikipedia British literature British literature is literature from the United Kingdom , the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands . The largest part of this literature is written in the English language , but there are also separate literatures in the Welsh language Scottish Gaelic Scots and other languages. Northern Ireland is the only part of Ireland still part of the United Kingdom and it possesses literature in English, Ulster Scots and Irish . Irish writers have also played an important part in the development of English-language literature.
Old Celtic literature
Literature in the Celtic languages of the islands is the oldest surviving vernacular literature in Europe. The Welsh literary tradition stretches from the 6th century to the 21st century . The oldest Welsh literature does not belong to the territory we know as Wales today, but rather to northern England and southern Scotland. But though it is dated to be from the 6th, 7th, and 8th centuries, it has survived only in 13th and 14th century manuscript copies.

33. King Arthur: Biography And Much More From Answers.com
A legendary british hero, said to have been king of the Britons in the sixthcentury AD and to have held court arthurian literature in the Middle Ages.
http://www.answers.com/topic/king-arthur
showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Arts Business Entertainment Games ... More... On this page: Personalities Dictionary Mythology Literature WordNet Wikipedia Best of Web Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping King Arthur Personalities Source King Arthur Legend / Royalty
  • Born: c. 6th century A.D. Birthplace: England Died: Possibly 537 A.D. Best Known As: Ruler of Camelot
King Arthur is one of the great mythic figures of English literature. Dozens of legends and romantic images have grown up around him: the knights of the Round Table, Merlin the wizard, and the Holy Grail, to name a few. Historians can't decide whether anyone like Arthur ever existed, though most now accept that the legend is very loosely based on a real historical figure; he may have been a 5th or 6th century ruler name Arturus or Riothamus. FOUR GOOD LINKS Dictionary Ar·thur ¤r thər
n.

34. English 3121 A British Literature I
Visit this site for your oral reports 10 POINTS on the arthurian The Top40’s for the Final Exam british literature of the 16th and 17th centuries
http://www.georgiasouthern.edu/~dougt/3121.htm
English 3121 A British Literature I / Short Term A Newton 2206; M-F 12-1:35 D. H. Thomson. Newton dhthom@georgiasouthern.edu Office Hours: M-F and by appointment Go here for the “Top 40’s” lists: Old English and the Middle Ages (Exam I); Renaissance (Final Exam). Course Description A study and close reading of major British literary works from the Anglo-Saxon period to the end of the seventeenth-century. Required of all English and English Education majors. Required Text: The Norton Anthology of English Literature, Volume I. Daily Readings May 17 Introduction to the course. The Germanic, Roman , and Christian influences on the British literary heritage. Stonehenge How the Irish Saved Civilization Druids Intro. 1-6 Bede The Conversion of the England Caedmon’s Hymn,”“The Dream of the Rood” 23-28 [ "The Dream of the Rood" Beowulf 1-1061; 1251-1798; 2200-to the end. First Europe Tutorial from U Calgary (excellent!) the Grim-Helm knotted buckle garnet clasp Lindisfarne ... gospels ASSIGNMENT DUE: SELECT AND WRITE AT THE TOP OF THE PAGE A PASSAGE FROM EITHER THE “DREAM OF THE ROOD” OR BEOWULF THAT DISPLAYS AN INTERSECTION OR MEETING OF GERMANIC AND CHRISTIAN VALUES.

35. The University Of Virginia's College At Wise
ENGL 307 arthurian literature (3) The origins of th elegend of King Arthur inbritish and A survey of british literature from Donne through Milton.
http://www.wise.virginia.edu/language_lit/courses_english.html
document.write(""+doClock("W0",", ","M0"," ","D0",", ","Y0")+""); Search People UVa-Wise The Web for Department Home Degree Programs Courses
English ... Careers
Courses in English ENGL 099:Basic Skills (3)
Offered for credit/no credit. Designed for students who need remediation in speaking and writing standard English, this course integrates work in grammar, organization, spelling, and vocabulary enrichment with specific spoken and written assignments ranging from sentence construction to paragraph development and the creation of essays of substantial length. Emphasis is on mechanical correctness and rhetorical development. Classroom work is supplemented and individual problems addressed by laboratory assignment using computer software. ENGL 101-102:Composition (6)
Prerequisite: passing grade on the proficiency examination or successful completion of specified portions of Speech and Writing Laboratory; ENGL 101 is prerequisite to ENGL 102.
Expository writing, ranging from single paragraph to essays of some length and complexity; study of the logical, rhetorical, and linguistic structures of expository prose; the methods and conventions of preparing research papers; and argumentation. Full-time students who have not completed ENGL 101-102 or the equivalent must enroll in the appropriate course in that sequence.

36. Sources For The Study Of The Arthurian Legends
The Return of King Arthur british and American arthurian literature Since1800 title page erroneously reads 1900 . Cambridge DS Brewer, 1983.
http://www.lib.rochester.edu/camelot/acpbibs/genbib.htm
AN ARTHURIANA / CAMELOT PROJECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
Sources for the Study of the Arthurian Legends
by
Alan Lupack
GENERAL SOURCES:
The New Arthurian Encyclopedia . Ed. Norris Lacy et al. New York: Garland, 1991.
Lacy, Norris J. and Geoffrey Ashe. The Arthurian Handbook . New York: Garland, 1988.
Lupack, Alan. The Oxford Guide to Arthurian Literature and Legend . Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.
Medieval Arthurian Literature: A Guide to Recent Research . Ed. Norris J. Lacy. New York: Garland Publishing, 1996.
Guerreau-Jalabert, Anita.
Ruck, E. H. An Index of Themes and Motifs in Twelfth-Century French Arthurian Poetry . Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 1991.
JOURNALS:
Arthurian Literature . (An annual publication from Boydell and Brewer.)
Arthurian Yearbook . (Annual from Garland from 1991 to 1993, now discontinued.)
Avalon to Camelot . (Vols. 1-2 are all that were printed.) Arthuriana (NOTE: An earlier Arthurian newsletter Quondam et Futurus was combined with the journal Arthurian Interpretations to become Quondam et Futurus: A Journal of Arthurian Interpretations Arthuriana has replaced these earlier publications and is now the official journal of the North American Branch of the International Arthurian Society.)

37. BIBLIOGRAPHY Of GAELIC ARTHURIAN LITERATURE
Bibliography of Gaelic arthurian literature from the Camelot Project, University of Artúir, a british prince, appears in an episode connected with the
http://www.lib.rochester.edu/camelot/acpbibs/gowans.htm
AN ARTHURIANA / CAMELOT PROJECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF GAELIC ARTHURIAN LITERATURE
by
Linda Gowans
This bibliography covers works in Gaelic from Ireland and Scotland (plus one from Nova Scotia) about Arthur and Arthurian characters: provenance is indicated by (Ir), (Sc) or (Nv) at the end of the entry. It is not designed to cover material relating to the general discussion of Celtic sources for medieval romance. Only reviews of a substantial length have normally been included. The numerical system has been adopted for ease of cross-referencing and future addition.
CONTENTS
Section 1: Texts and Translations
1.1 Early References to an "Arthur" Lebor Bretnach (the Irish translation of the Historia Brittonum ... 1.6 Miscellaneous
Section 2: Critical Works
2.1 Early References to an "Arthur" Lebor Bretnach (the Irish translation of the Historia Brittonum ... 2.6 Miscellaneous
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Section 1: Texts and Translations
1.1 Early References to an "Arthur"

Acallam na Senórach ," ed. Whitley Stokes, in Irische Texte , Vol.4, part 1, ed. W. Stokes and E. Windisch. Leipzig: Hirzel, 1900. Artúir, a British prince, appears in an episode connected with the introduction of a new type of horse into Ireland. Another Artúr is one of a list of princes drowned by the lake-monster of Loch Lurgan. (Ir)

38. NYU > English > Graduate Directory
Burakov, Olga, ob258@nyu.edu, Medieval lit., arthurian romances, gender british literature, colonial studies, travel narratives
http://english.fas.nyu.edu/object/graddirectory.html
Back to Previous Page
Graduate Directory
PhD Students
MA Students
Name Of PhD Student's Email Address's Fields/area of Interest Abdur-Rahman, Aliyyah Inaya aia201@nyu.edu African-American Literature Adams, Maeve maeve_adams@yahoo.com Anderson, Lucy Ida201@nyu.edu Anderson, Samuel ska210@nyu.edu History of the novel, postmodernism, Irish lit Boo, Kyung-Sook kqb6602@nyu.edu American Literature, Emergent Literature Booker, Brian bhb202@nyu.edu Contemporary American fiction; David Foster Wallace; the Modernist Bromley, Bruce bdb4945@nyu.edu Virginia Woolf Studies/English Renaissance literature Brooke-Smith, James Burakov, Olga ob258@nyu.edu Medieval lit., Arthurian romances, gender Cleary, Scott smc303@nyu.edu Coccaro, Adam ajc200@nyu.edu Effect of science on Renaissance and Victorian literature Cone-Miller, Emily econemil@hotmail.com 19th and 20th Century British Literature Creaney, Conor cjc263@nyu.edu 19th Century British Literature Curley, Jonathan Rowan jc22@nyu.edu Davis, Elizabeth Edla elizabethedla@cs.com 19th Century American Drake, Jason

39. British Literature -- Facts, Info, And Encyclopedia Article
british literature is (Creative writing of recognized artistic value) literaturefrom to the development of the arthurian legend in british literature.
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/b/br/british_literature.htm
British literature
[Categories: History of United Kingdom literatures, European literature, Literature of the United Kingdom, Literature by country]
British literature is (Creative writing of recognized artistic value) literature from the (A monarchy in northwestern Europe occupying most of the British Isles; divided into England and Scotland and Wales and Northern Ireland) United Kingdom , the (One of the British Isles in the Irish Sea) Isle of Man and the (A group of British islands in the English Channel off the northern coast of France) Channel Islands . The largest part of this literature is written in the (An Indo-European language belonging to the West Germanic branch; the official language of Britain and the United States and most of the Commonwealth countries) English language , but there are also separate literatures in (A Celtic language of Wales) Welsh (The Gaelic language of Scotland) Scottish Gaelic (The dialect of English used in Scotland) Scots and other languages. (A division of the United Kingdom located on the northern part of the island of Ireland) Northern Ireland is the only part of (An island comprising the republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland) Ireland still part of the United Kingdom and it possesses literature in English

40. British Literature - Enpsychlopedia
and contributed to the development of the arthurian legend in british literature . It uses material from the Wikipedia article british literature .
http://psychcentral.com/psypsych/British_literature
home resource directory disorders quizzes ... support forums Advertisement (
British literature
British literature is literature from the United Kingdom , the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands . The largest part of this literature is written in the English language , but there are also separate literatures in the Welsh language Scottish Gaelic Scots and other languages. Northern Ireland is the only part of Ireland still part of the United Kingdom and it possesses literature in English, Ulster Scots and Irish . Irish writers have also played an important part in the development of English-language literature. Contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Old Celtic literature 2 Old English literature 3 Late medieval literature in England 4 Other medieval literatures ... edit
Old Celtic literature
Literature in the Celtic languages of the islands is the oldest surviving vernacular literature in Europe. The Welsh literary tradition stretches from the 6th century to the 21st century . The oldest Welsh literature does not belong to the territory we know as Wales today, but rather to northern England and southern Scotland. But though it is dated to be from the 6th, 7th, and 8th centuries, it has survived only in 13th and 14th century manuscript copies.

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