Gernot Wieland is an emeritus professor at the University of British Columbia, who specializes in the Anglo-Saxon period, specifically glosses in Anglo-Saxon manuscripts, relations between Anglo-Saxon scholars and their continental counterparts, and the Latin literature written by Anglo-Saxons.
Wieland's 1983 The Latin Glosses on Arator and Prudentius[1] established a typology of glosses.[2][3] In 2017 Brepols published a Festschrift in his honor, Teaching and Learning in Medieval Europe.[4]
References
edit- ^ Brown, George Hardin (2003). "The Dynamics of Literacy". In Donald Scragg (ed.). Textual and Material Culture in Anglo-Saxon England: Thomas Northcote Toller and the Toller Memorial Lectures. D. S. Brewer. pp. 183–212.
- ^ Boynton, Susan (2010). "Medieval Musical Education as Seen through Sources Outside the Realm of Music Theory". In Weiss, Susan Forscher; Murray, Russell E. Jr; Cyrus, Cynthia J. (eds.). Music Education in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Indiana UP. pp. 52–62. ISBN 978-0-253-00455-0.
- ^ Love, Rosalind C. (2012). "The Latin Commentaries on Boethius' De Consolatione Philosophiae from the 9th to the 11th Centuries". In Kaylor, Noel Harold; Phillips, Philip Edward (eds.). A Companion to Boethius in the Middle Ages. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-22538-1.
- ^ "Teaching and Learning in Medieval Europe: Essays in Honour of Gernot R. Wieland". Brepols. 2017. Retrieved 21 June 2017.