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Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources
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Based entirely on original research, this is the most comprehensive dictionary of Medieval Latin and the first to focus on British Medieval Latin. Covering the 6th to 16th centuries, containing more than 55,000 entries and more than 435,000 illustrative quotations, the DMLBS is the key lexical reference work for anyone reading Medieval Latin.

Produktbeschreibung
Based entirely on original research, this is the most comprehensive dictionary of Medieval Latin and the first to focus on British Medieval Latin. Covering the 6th to 16th centuries, containing more than 55,000 entries and more than 435,000 illustrative quotations, the DMLBS is the key lexical reference work for anyone reading Medieval Latin.
Autorenporträt
Richard Ashdowne studied Classics and then Linguistics at New College, Oxford. After a brief spell teaching Latin, Greek and linguistics in Oxford, he became an assistant editor of the Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources in 2008 and subsequently its final editor in 2011, seeing the Dictionary through to its completion in 2013. Since 2014 he has returned to teaching Latin, Greek, and linguistics in Oxford. Besides the final fascicules of the DMLBS he is the author of articles and chapters on linguistic and lexicographical topics and, with James Morwood, of Writing Latin (2007). David Howlett graduated in 1966 with high honours in Classics from the University of Montana before coming on a Rhodes Scholarship to Corpus Christi College, Oxford. There he pursued English and Medieval studies before becoming, in 1975, an Assistant Editor of the Supplement to the Oxford English Dictionary at Oxford University Press. From 1979, he was Editor of the Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources, Consultant to the Royal Irish Academy's Dictionary of Medieval Latin from Celtic Sources, and a member of the committee responsible for the Novum Glossarium Mediae Latinitatis at the Institut de France. Ronald Latham was the first Editor of the Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources. Educated at Royal Grammar School Newcastle and having read Literae Humaniores (Classics) at Balliol College, Oxford, he had a long career in the Public Record Office, where he first became involved in the Dictionary project. He began work as DMLBS editor in 1968 and had largely prepared the text of first three fascicules before his retirement at the end of 1977, when he was succeeded by David Howlett. In retirement, he continued to provide invaluable support to the project. In addition to his Dictionary publications, he also published a number of other books including, In Quest of Civilization (1946), and translations for Penguin Classics of Lucretius and Marco Polo. He died in 1992.