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English Martial Arts
Terry Brown
ISBN 1-898281-18-1
250mm x 195mm / 10" x 7½"
220 photographs 240 pages
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$ 35.95 |
$ 35.95 |
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| Little is known about the
very early history of English martial arts but it is likely
that methods, techniques and principles were passed on from
one generation to the next for centuries. By the sixteenth
century English martial artists had their own governing
body which controlled its members in much the same way as
do modern-day martial arts organisations. It is apparent
from contemporary evidence that the Company of Maisters
taught and practised a fighting system that ranks as high
in terms of effectiveness and pedigree as any in the world.
In the first part of the book the author
investigates the weapons, history and development of the
English fighting system and looks at some of the attitudes,
beliefs and social pressures that helped mould it. Tales
of skill and courage bring to life the people who played
a part in the development of English martial arts.
Part two deals with various English fighting
techniques which have been drawn from historical books and
manuscripts. In other words, all of the methods and techniques
shown in this book are authentic and have not been created
by the author. The theories that underlie the system are
explained in a chapter on The Principles of True Fighting.
All of the techniques covered are illustrated with photographs
and accompanied by instructions and should lay to rest the
mistaken idea that English martial arts bear any resemblance
to the 'methods' that have often been displayed in film
and television productions. Experienced martial artists,
irrespective of the style they practice, will recognise
that the techniques and methods of this system are based
on principles that are as valid as those that underlie the
system that they practice.
Techniques included in this book are for
bare-fist fighting, broadsword, quarterstaff, bill, sword
and buckler, sword and dagger.
The author, who has been a martial artist
for twenty-eight years, has recently re-formed the Company
of Maisters of Defence, a medieval English martial arts
organization. |
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The English Warrior from earliest times to 1066
Stephen Pollington
ISBN 1-898281-10-6
10" x 7" 255mm x 180mm 38 figures and illustrations
272pp
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| $ 22.95 |
$ 22.95 |
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| This important new work
is not intended to be a bald listing of the battles and
campaigns from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and other sources,
but rather it is an attempt to get below the surface of
Anglo-Saxon warriorhood and to investigate the rites, social
attitudes, mentality and mythology of the warfare of those
times. The book is divided into three main sections which
deal with warriorhood, weaponry and warfare respectively.
The first covers the warriors role in early English society,
his rights and duties, the important rituals of feasting,
gift-giving and duelling, and the local and national military
organizations. The second part discusses the various weapons
and items of military equipment which are known to have
been in use during the period, often with a concise summary
of the generally accepted typology for the many kinds of
military hardware. In the third part, the social and legal
nature of warfare is presented, as well as details of strategy
and tactics, military buildings and earthworks, and the
use of supply trains. Valuable appendices offer original
translations of the three principal Old English military
poems, the battles of Maldon, Finnsburh and Brunanburh.
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Other Titles by
this Author
Ærgeweorc – Old English Verse and Prose (audiotape)
An Introduction to the Old English
Language and its Literature
The English Warrior
First Steps in Old English Rudiments
of Runelore Leechcraft
Wordcraft The
Mead-Hall:
Feasting Tradition in Anglo-Saxon England
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Anglo-Saxon Riddles
Translated by John Porter
A5 ISBN 1-898281-13-0 112pp
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| $ 8.50 |
$ 8.50 |
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| This is a book full of ingenious
characters who speak their names in riddles. Here you will
meet a one-eyed garlic seller, a bookworm, an iceberg, an
oyster, the sun and moon and a host of others from the everyday
life and imagination of the Anglo-Saxons. Their sense of
the awesome power of creation goes hand in hand with a frank
delight in obscenity, a fascination with disguise and with
the mysterious processes by which the natural world is turned
to human use. John Porter's sparkling translations retain
all the vigour and subtly of the original Old English poems,
transporting us back over a thousand years to the roots
of our language and literature. This edition contains all
95 Exeter Book riddles. |
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Anglo-Saxon Runes
John. M. Kemble
A5 ISBN 0-9516209-1-6 80pp
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| $ 12.50 |
$ 12.50 |
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| Kemble's essay On Anglo-Saxon
Runes first appeared in the journal Archaeologia for 1840;
it draws on the work of Wilhelm Grimm, but breaks new ground
for Anglo-Saxon studies in his survey of the Ruthwell Cross
and the Cynewulf poems. It is an expression both of his
own indomitable spirit and of the fascination and mystery
of the Runes themselves, making it an attractive introductions
to the topic. For this edition new notes have been supplied,
which include translations of Latin and Old English material
quoted in the text, to make this key work in the study of
runes more accessible to the general reader. |
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Aspects of Anglo-Saxon Magic
Bill Griffiths
ISBN 1-898281-15-7 250mm x 175mm 10" x 7" 256pp
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| $ 22.95 |
$ 22.95 |
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| Magic is something special,
something unauthorised; an alternative perhaps; even a deliberate
cultivation of dark, evil powers. But for the Anglo-Saxon
age, the neat division between mainstream and occult, rational
and superstitious, Christian and pagan is not always easy
to discern. To maintain its authority (or its monopoly?)
the Church drew a formal line and outlawed a range of dubious
practices (like divination, spells, folk healing) while
at the same time conducting very similar rituals itself,
and may even have adapted legends of elves to serve in a
Christian explanation of disease as a battle between good
and evil, between Church and demons; in other cases powerful
ancestors came to serve as saints. In pursuit of a better
understanding of Anglo-Saxon magic, a wide range of topics
and texts are examined in this book, challenging (constructively,
it is hoped) our stereotyped images of the past and its
beliefs. Texts are printed in their original language (e.g.
Old English, Icelandic, Latin) with New English translations.
Contents include:- twenty charms; the English, Icelandic
and Norwegian rune poems; texts on dreams, weather signs,
unlucky days, the solar system; and much more. |
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The Battle of Maldon
Text and Translation
Translated and edited by Bill Griffiths
A5 ISBN 0-9516209-0-8 96pp
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| $ 12.50 |
$ 12.50 |
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| The Battle of Maldon was
fought between the men of Essex and the Vikings in AD 991.
The action was captured in an Anglo-Saxon poem whose vividness
and heroic spirit has fascinated readers and scholars for
generations. The Battle of Maldon includes the source text;
edited text; parallel literal translation; verse translation;
notes on pronunciation; review of 103 books and articles.
This new edition (the fourth) includes notes on Old English
verse.
Note: The Battle of Maldon and Beowulf
have been produced with edited Old English texts and parallel
literal modern English translations which are intended to
be of help to those learning Old English. |
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Beowulf: Text and Translation
Translated by John Porter
A5 ISBN 0-9516209-2-4 192pp
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| $ 12.50 |
$ 12.50 |
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| The verse in which the story
unfolds is, by common consent, the finest writing surviving
in Old English, a text that all students of the language
and many general readers will want to tackle in the original
form. To aid understanding of the Old English, a literal
word-by-word translation is printed opposite the edited
text and provides a practical key to this Anglo-Saxon masterpiece. |
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Dark Age Naval Power
A re-assessment of Frankish and Anglo-Saxon seafaring activity
John Haywood
10" x 7" 255mm x 180mm 224 pages
ISBN 189828122X
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| $ 22.95 |
$ 22.95 |
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| In the first edition of
this work, published in 1991, John Haywood argued that the
capabilities of the pre-Viking Germanic seafarers had been
greatly underestimated. Since that time, his reassessment
of Frankish and Anglo-Saxon shipbuilding and seafaring has
been widely praised and accepted.
'The
book remains a historical study of the first order. It is
required reading for our seminar on medieval seafaring at
Texas A & M University and is essential reading for
anyone interested in the subject.'
F. H. Van Doorninck, The American Neptune (1994)
'The
author has done a fine job, and his clear and strongly put
theories will hopefully further the discussion of this important
part of European history.'
Arne Emil Christensen, The International Journal of Nautical
Archaeology (1992)
'Writing
a comprehensive history of the clandestine activities of
preliterate Dark Age societies is an ambitious task and
this book is a remarkable achievement.'
Gillian Hutchinson, Mariner’s Mirror (1993)
In this second edition,
some sections of the book have been revised and updated
to include information gained from excavations and sea trials
with sailing replicas of early ships. The new evidence lends
weight to the author's argument that early Germanic shipbuilding
and seafaring skills were far more advanced than previously
thought. It also supports the view that Viking ships and
seaborne activities were not as revolutionary as is commonly
believed. |
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English Heroic Legends
Kathleen Herbert
A5 ISBN 1-898281-25-4 292pp
(This title was previously published as Spellcraft: Old
English Heroic Legends)
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| $ 22.95 |
$ 22.95 |
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| The author has taken the
skeletons of ancient Germanic legends about great kings,
queens and heroes, and put flesh on them. Kathleen Herbert's
encyclopaedic knowledge of the period is reflected in the
wealth of detail she brings to these tales of adventure,
passion, bloodshed and magic. The book is in two parts.
First are the stories that originate deep in the past, yet
because they have not been hackneyed, they are still strange
and enchanting. After that there is a selection of the source
material, with information about where it can be found and
some discussion about how it can be used. The purpose of
the work is to bring pleasure to those studying Old English
literature and, more importantly, to bring to the attention
of a wider public the wealth of material that has yet to
be tapped by modern writers, composers and artists. Kathleen
Herbert is the author of a trilogy, set in sixth century
Britain, that includes a winner of the Georgette Heyer prize
for an outstanding historical novel. |
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Old English Poems, Prose &
Lessons
Anglo-Saxon Language
read by Stephen Pollington
These two CDs can be used with First Steps in Old English
or just listened to for the pleasure of hearing Old English
spoken well.
Kings & Dates - CD 1
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1 Capture of the Five Boroughs
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2 Alfred on Athelney - ASC 878
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3 Cynewulf and Cyneheard - ASC 755
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4 The Danes' Harrying - ASC 997
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5 The Arrival of the English - Bede
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6 Battle of Brunanburh Crime & Punishment
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7 Extracts from the Laws of King Ine
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8 The Ordeal Health & Wellbeing
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9 Leechdoms - medical texts
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10 Charm Against a Dwarf
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11 Charm Against a Wen
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12 Charm Against Waterelf Sickness
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13 Nine Herbs Charm
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14 Journey Charm
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15 Wið Ymbe - for a swarm of bees
Verse
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16 Wulf & Eadwacer
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17 Funeral of Scyld Scefing - Beowulf
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18 The Wanderer
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19 Deor
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20 Beowulf's Greeting - Beowulf
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21 Durham General - CD 2
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22-38 Reading Exercises
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39-41 Pronunciation Guide
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42-46 Conversational Old English
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US Funds |
| $ 24.95 |
$ 24.95 |
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Other Titles by
this Author
Ærgeweorc – Old English Verse and Prose (audiotape)
An Introduction to the Old
English Language and its Literature
The English Warrior
First Steps in Old English Rudiments
of Runelore Leechcraft
Wordcraft The
Mead-Hall:
Feasting Tradition in Anglo-Saxon England
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First Steps in Old English
An easy to follow language course for the beginner
Stephen Pollington
ISBN 1-898281-19-X
250mm x 175mm / 10" x 7" 224 pages
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| Canadian Funds |
US Funds |
| $ 27.95 |
$ 27.95 |
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| A complete, well presented
and easy to use Old English language course that contains
all the exercises and texts needed to learn Old English.
This course has been designed to be of help to a wide range
of students, from those who are teaching themselves at home,
to undergraduates who are learning Old English as part of
their English degree course. The author is aware that some
individuals have little aptitude for learning languages
and that many have difficulty with grammar. To help overcome
these problems he has adopted a step by step approach that
enables students of differing abilities to advance at their
own pace. The course includes many exercises designed to
aid the learning process.
A correspondence course is also available.
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Other Titles by
this Author
Ærgeweorc – Old English Verse and Prose (audiotape)
An Introduction to the Old
English Language and its Literature
The English Warrior
First Steps in Old English Rudiments
of Runelore Leechcraft
Wordcraft The
Mead-Hall:
Feasting Tradition in Anglo-Saxon England
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First Steps in Old English Correspondence Course
An easy to follow language course for the beginner.
Stephen Pollington
INTRODUCTION
Welcome to this three stage correspondence
course in Old English! This course covers the essentials
of Old English grammar (the syntax and the accidence - the
changes words undergo and the ways in which they combine
to make sense) in a progressive manner. To work through
this course, you should have the First
Steps in Old English textbook to hand, since we shall
refer to it throughout the exercises presented here. This
course is aimed at the reader who wishes to have more experience
of the basic mechanics of the language, of parsing and of
translating the kinds of texts presented in the back of
First Steps. This complement to the beginner’s coursebook
is intended to expand the reader’s contact with the
language and to offer some further material for working
through. |
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US Funds |
| $ 69.00 |
$ 69.00 |
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| The course is in three Parts.
Part I is the ‘foundation level’ which corresponds
to sections 1 to 7 of the coursebook. Here we cover the
four main cases and their commonest uses; the present tense
of the verb; the adjective and its agreement with the noun(s)
it describes.
Part II covers the material dealt with
in Sections 8 to 18 of First Steps in Old English, with
some more refinements in the uses of the cases; the strong
and weak verbs and their past tenses; weak nouns; preterite-present
verbs; the weak form of the adjective, its comparative and
superlative.
Part III consists of extracts from OE texts
parsed and deconstructed like those in First Steps in Old
English Part 3, only this time you do more of the work!
In order to maintain the timely progress
of course work and keep the learning pace fresh this correspondence
course is handled via email, not regular letter mail. Enquiries
may be directed to the tutor at stevepollington@blueyonder.co.uk
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Other Titles by
this Author An
Introduction to the Old English Language and its Literature
The English Warrior
First Steps in Old English
Rudiments of Runelore
Leechcraft Wordcraft
The Mead-Hall:
Feasting Tradition in Anglo-Saxon England
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