ROMANCE PHILOLOGY 229 



At the College de France, Spanish literature is repre- 

 sented by A. MOREL-FATIO ("L'Espagne au XVI e et au 

 XVII e siecle," 1878; "Calderon," 1882; "Etudes sur 

 1'Espagne," 1888-1904; "Catalogue des manuscrits 

 espagnols et des manuscrits portugais," 1892; "Le 

 Theatre espagnol," with L. Rouanet, 1900; "Ambrosio 

 de Salazar," 1901; "El Libro de Alixandre," 1906; 

 "Historiographie de Charles-Quint," 1913; editor of 

 "Bulletin hispanique ") ; Renaissance and modern French 

 literature, by A. LEFRANC ("Les Navigations de Panta- 

 gruel," 1905; "Calvin, 1'Institution chretienne," 1911; 

 "Rabelais, (Euvres completes," 1912-13; "A. Chenier, 

 CEuvres inedites," 1914); mediaeval French literature, by 

 J. BEDIER ("Les Fabliaux," 1893; "Le Roman de 

 Tristan et Iseult traduit et restaure," 1900; "Etudes 

 critiques," 1903; "Les Legendes epiques," 1908-13). 

 The Neo-Latinist can here follow also with profit the 

 Latin instruction of L. HA VET ("La Prose metrique de 

 Symmaque et les origines du Cursus," 1892; "Phaedri 

 Fabulae," 1895; "Manuel de critique verbale," 1911), 

 and the Celtic courses of J. LOT (best known to Romance 

 scholars for his translation of the " Mabinogion, " 1899 

 and 1913, and for his "Contributions a 1'etude des 

 romans de la Table ronde," 1912). 



Advanced studies may be pursued at the Ecole des 

 Hautes Etudes under the direction of some of the men 

 above mentioned (Thomas, Morel-Fatio, Jeanroy, 

 Roques, Havet, Lot), of J. GILLIERON ("Le Patois de la 

 commune de Vionnaz," 1880; "Atlas linguistique de la 

 France," with E. Edmont, 1902-13; "Etudes de geo- 

 graphic linguistique," with M. Roques, 1912), for dialect- 

 ology; of H. GAIDOZ in Celtic ("Etudes de mythologie 

 gauloise," 1886; works on folk-lore and mythology); and 

 of J. MAROUZEAU, in Latin ("La Phrase a verbe 'etre' 

 en latin," 1910). At the ficole des Chartes there are 



