<b>Offers insights into sources and inspirations authorship and authorial style and patterns of separation and convergence across versions of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles.</b><br><br><br>The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is one of the most important documents to survive from early medieval England. Written in Old English it was first created during the reign of King Alfred the Great (871-899). Up to Alfred's reign and then in multiple continuations extending into the twelfth century the Chronicle versions often provide a unique record of events at times reported in the barest style at others with passionate commentary.<br><br>This book is the first to tell the story of how the Chronicles came to be providing a clear but detailed account of the development of its various versions. It starts with an examination of the textual and manuscript evidence then explores the work of the two chroniclers first responsible for the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle's creation in the late ninth century arguing that the first made a set of annals from disparate sources. The author then contends that a later reviser aligned with the Alfredian political programme wrote the annals for Alfred's reign and at the same time also revised earlier entries including the famous story of Cynewulf and Cyneheard. This book also sheds new light on the annals of Æthelred the Unready arguing that Archbishop Wulfstan of York is likely to have authored some of these together with some tenth-century annals. Its final chapter provides the first comprehensive study of all the Chronicles' poetry.
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