ABBREVIATIONS 



The following titles are cited by the name or abbreviation which occurs 

 first in the line : 



Bonhoff, Aldhclm von Malmcshury. 



Brandl, Geschichte der Altenglischen Literatur. (Paul's Grundriss der 



Germanischen Philologie, 2d ed.) 

 Bright, Chapters of Early English Church History. Oxford, 1898. 

 Brooke, History of Early English Literature. 

 Chadwick, The Heroic Age. 

 Chambers, Beozmilf, ed. Wyatt and Chambers. 

 Dottin, The Gaelic Literature of Ireland, tr. Dunn. Washington, 1906. 



(Privately printed.) 

 Eckenstein, Woman tinder Monasticism. 

 Eddi (Eddius Stephanus), Vita Wilfridi Episcopi. (Historians of the 



Church of York, Vol. i.) 

 Ehwald, ed., Aldhelmi Opera. (Mon. Germ. Hist.) 

 Freeman, History of the Norman Conquest, Vol. i. 

 Giles, ed., Sancti Aldhelmi Opera. 

 Green, Making of England. 



Haddan and Stubbs, Councils and Ecclesiastical Documents. 

 Hahn, Bonifaa und Lul. 

 Healy, Insula Sanctorum ct Doctorum, or, Ireland's Ancient Schools and 



Scholars, 5th ed. 

 Hyde, Literary History of Ireland. 

 Joyce, Social History of Ancient Ireland. 

 Lappenberg, History of England under the Anglo-Saxon Kings, tr. Thorpe, 



new ed. 

 Lingard, History and Aniiquiiies of the Anglo-Sa.von Church. London, 



1858. 

 Manitius, in Sitzungsberichtc der Phil.-Hist. Classe der Kais. Akad. der 



Wissenschaften, Vol. 112. Vienna, 1886. 

 Montalembert, Monks of the West. 

 Murray, Handbook for Yorkshire. London, 1874. 

 Norway, Higlizvays and Byivays in Yorkshire. 

 Oman, England before the Norman Conquest. 

 Phillips, Illustrations of the Geology of Yorkshire, Part I, 2d ed. 

 Plummer, ed., Bccdce Opera Historica. 

 Ramsay, Foundations of England. 



Reeves, ed.. Life of St. Columba, written by Adamnan. Edinburgh, 1874. 

 Ten Brink, Beoivulf. 

 White, A Month in Yorkshire. 

 William of Malmesbury, Gesta Po7itificum, Vol. 5. 



Eccl. Hist. = Bede, Ecclesiastical History of the English People. 

 Sax. Chr. = (Anglo-) Saxon Chronicle. 



The Latinizing d, in proper names like Wilfrid, is consistently restored 

 to th, representing the Old English original, even in direct quotations. 



