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ANCREN RIWLE , a See also: Middle See also: English See also: prose See also: treatise written for a small community of three religious See also: women and their servants at Tarent Kaines (Tarrant See also: Crawford), at the junction of the See also: Stour and the Tarrant, Dorset
.
It was generally supposed to
1 Scanty remains of the See also: ancient See also: town walls, of a gymnasium near the harbour and of the amphitheatre are still extant
.
2 It was connected by a road with the Via See also: Flaminia at Nuceria (Norcera), a distance of 70 M.date from the first quarter of the 13th century, but Professor E
.
Kolbing is inclined to place the Corpus Christi MS. about the middle of the 12th century
.
The See also: house of Tarrant was founded by See also: Ralph de Kahaines, and greatly enriched about 1230 by See also: Richard Poor, See also: bishop successively of See also: Chichester, See also: Salisbury and Durham, who was See also: born at Tarrant and died there in 1237
.
At the See also: time when the Ancren Riwle was addressed to them the anchoresses did not belong to any of the monastic orders, but the monastery was under the Cistercian See also: rule before 1266.3 There are extant seven English See also: MSS. of the See also: work, and one Latin, the Latin version being generally supposed to be a See also: translation
.
The Latin MS., See also: Regula Anachoritarum sive de vita solitaria (Magdalen See also: College, See also: Oxford, No
.
67, fol
.
50) has a prefatory note:—Hic incipit prohemium venerabilis patris magistri Simonis de Gandavo, episcopi Sarum, in librum de vita solitaria, See also: quern scripsit sororibus suis anachoritis apud Tarente
.
But Bishop See also: Simon of See also: Ghent, who died in 1315, could not have written the See also: book, if it See also: dates, at latest, from the early 13th century
.
It has been tentatively attributed to Richard Poor, who was connected with Tarrant, and was actually a benefactor of the monastery
.
But the adoption of Prof
.
Kolbing's early date would almost destroy Poor's claim . The Ancren Riwle is written in a See also: simple, non-rhetorical See also: style
.
The severity of the See also: doctrine of self-renunciation is softened by the affectionate See also: tone in which it is inculcated
.
The book contains rules for the conduct of the anchoresses, and gives liturgical directions for divine service; but the greater See also: part of it is taken up with the purely spiritual See also: side of See also: religion
.
The rules for the restraint of the senses, for confession and penance, are subordinated to the central idea of the supreme importance of purity of See also: heart and the love of Christ
.
The last chapter deals with the domestic affairs and administration of the monastery
.
Incident-ally the writer gives a picture of the See also: manners and ideas of the time, and provides an account of the doctrine then generally accepted in the English See also: church
.
A ncren Riwle was edited for the
See also: Camden Society by the Rev
.
See also: James
See also: Morton in 1843 from the See also: Cotton MS
.
(See also: Nero A xiv.)
.
A.collation of this text with the MS. by E
.
Kolbing is printed in the Jahrbuch fur romanische u. engl
.
See also: Spy. and Lit. xv
.
18o seq
.
(1876)
.
The Ancren Riwle (ed
.
See also: Abbot F
.
A
.
Gasquet, 1905) is available for the ordinary reader in The
See also: King's
See also: Classics
.
There are three English MSS. of Ancren Riwle in the Cottonian collection in the See also: British Museum, numbered Nero A xiv., Titus D xviii., and See also: Cleopatra C vi
.
Nero A xiv. is written in pure See also: south-western dialect
.
Portions of this text are printed in See also: Henry Sweet's First Middle English Primer (Oxford, 2nd ed., 1895), which contains a grammatical introduction
.
MS
.
402 in the libraryof Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, contains the earliest version of Ancren Riwle, entitled Ancren Wisse, and dating (according to E
.
Kolbing in Englische Studien, 1886, vol. ix . 116) from about 1150 . The language shows considerable traces of the Midland dialect . MS . 234 in Caius College, Cambridge, contains a considerable portion of the Ancren Riwle, but does not follow theSee also: order of the other MSS
.
For its exact contents see Kolbing, in Englische Studien, iii
.
535 (1880)
.
A more recently discovered version in Magdalene College, Cambridge, in 1VIS
.
See also: Pepys 2498, is entitled The Recluse, and is abridged and differently arranged
.
It is written in English of the latter See also: half of the 14th century (see A
.
C
.
Paues in Englische Studien, See also: xxx
.
344-346, 1902) . A Latin version (Cotton MS . See also: Vitellius E vii.), and a French copy (ibid
.
F vii.) were seriously damaged in the fire at See also: Ashburnham House, but both MSS. have been recently restored
.
The Latin MS
.
(Codex lxvii.) at Magdalen College, Oxford, is probably a copy of another Latin text, for it contains obvious slips
.
See also R
.
Wulker, " Heber die Sprache der Ancren Riwle and die der Homilie: Hali Meidenhad," in Beitrdge zur Geschichte der deutschen Sprache and Literatur (See also: Halle, 1874, i
.
209), giving an analysis of the differences in dialect between the two See also: works; and Edgar See also: Elliott Bramlette, " The See also: Original Language of the Ancren Riwle," in Anglia, xv
.
478-498, arguing in favour of a • Latin original
.
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