Cursor Mundi

Cursor Mundi, meaning "runner of the world", is the name of a lengthy (around 30,000 lines) religious history written around 1300 AD. It was extremely popular in its time. The author was an anonymous cleric. The poem, written in early Middle English, retells the history of the world as described in the Christian Bible, with legendary material included. It contains nearly 30,000 lines of eight-syllable couplets. The work is linguistically important as a solid record of the Midlands English dialect of the era, and it is therefore the most-often quoted single work in the Oxford English Dictionary. Cursor Mundi interpolates material from hagiographic sources, including matter from The Golden Legend, various Latin legendary cycles, among others. For example, its description of the origins of the tree of the cross incorporates two different legendary sources.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
power over ethernet
malax
dervla kirwan
kilmacanogue
stephen barrett
hobson jobson
maaninka
c 37
homeowatch
maxmo
marttila
masku
mellil
merijrvi
merikarvia
merimasku
miehikkl
mietoinen
the lennon sisters
loudness (heavy metal)
mouhijrvi
muhos
multia
semisynthetic
korsholm
interculturalism
initial d arcade stage
the bell telephone hour
muad'dib
wilhelm friedrich ernst bach
joanna trollope
august oetker
caroline harvey
new jersey vegetable monster
rustam kasimdzhanov
james kempt
mount arvon
festival of muharram
leonard george
thomas brown (naturalist)
khrabr
orange roughy
club atltico san lorenzo de almagro
alliance of liberals and democrats for europe