Medieval Preacher Invoked Chivalric Hero as a Meme in Sermon
UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE, UNITED KINGDOM, JUL 15 – Cambridge researchers resolved a 130-year-old error by identifying 'wolves' instead of 'elves' in the Song of Wade manuscript, shifting its meaning from myth to chivalric romance.
- On July 15, Dr James Wade and Dr Seb Falk of Girton College led the study, revealing the manuscript refers to 'wolves' not 'elves.'
- After careful analysis, Wade and Falk concluded that three spelling errors, including muddled letters `y` and `w`, caused the misunderstanding.
- By the 1300s, MS 255, part of a Peterhouse Cambridge collection of medieval sermons, was referenced by Geoffrey Chaucer.
- As a result, Falk said, `'Changing elves to wolves makes a massive difference,'` clarifying a 130-year-old medieval mystery. The discovery improves understanding of Chaucer’s references.
- Seb Falk noted, 'The sermon itself is really interesting,' highlighting its use of medieval cultural references and the identification of Alexander Neckam as the likely author.
13 Articles
13 Articles
Scholars Solve Mystery of Medieval Manuscript That Baffled Experts for 130 Years
Canterbury Tales, William Caxton edition. Credit: Coldupnorth / CC BY-SA 4.0 A team of scholars has solved a literary riddle that has baffled experts for nearly 130 years, uncovering the true meaning behind a puzzling reference in Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales. The breakthrough comes from a fresh examination of a fragment of an ancient medieval manuscript, once dismissed as too cryptic to decode. The mystery centered on Chaucer’s menti…
Chaucerian mystery solved as scientists decode lost English legend after 800 years
Scholars have been left puzzled for 130 years by a medieval literary mystery - but now, two experts believe they have finally solved it. In the Middle Ages, the Song of Wade was a widely-known folk tale, and was believed to be a "monster-filled epic".But a pair of researchers from Cambridge University believe the tale is actually a chivalric romance.Their work has helped to solve the most famous mystery in the writings of Geoffrey Chaucer, who a…
Lost English legend decoded, solving Chaucerian mystery and revealing a medieval preacher's meme
A medieval literary puzzle which has stumped scholars, including M.R. James for 130 years has finally been solved. Cambridge scholars now believe the Song of Wade, a long-lost treasure of English culture, was a chivalric romance not a monster-filled epic. The discovery solves the most famous mystery in Chaucer's writings and provides rare evidence of a medieval preacher referencing pop culture in a sermon.
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