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INDO-EUROPEAN COLLECTIONS Firth, Raymond ... - Kinship Studies

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Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK; Rochester, NY: Boydell Press; San Marino, R.S.M.: Center<br />

for Interdisciplinary Research on Social Stress.<br />

Cronan, Dennis. HAVE<br />

2004. Poetic Words, Conservatism and the Dating of Old English Poetry. Anglo-Saxon<br />

England 33: 23-50. [Pp. 4, 14-18, 26-27: OEng suhterga ‘brother’s son’.]<br />

Drout, Michael D. C.<br />

1997. Imitating Fathers: Tradition, Inheritance and the Reproduction of Culture in<br />

Anglo-Saxon England. Ph.D. dissertation. Loyola University, Chicago.<br />

Ehrismann, G. HAVE<br />

1890. Ags. twégen, bégen und einige germanische Verwandschaftsbegriffe. Germania<br />

35: 168-169. [Dual kin terms.]<br />

Fischer, Andreas. HAVE<br />

2002. Notes on <strong>Kinship</strong> Terminology in the History of English. In Of Dyuersitie and<br />

Chaunge of Langage: Essays Presented to Manfred Görlach on the Occasion of his 65th<br />

Birthday, edited by Katja Lenz and Ruth Möhlig. Pp. 115-128. Heidelberg: Carl Winter.<br />

Glosecki, Stephen O.<br />

1996. The Kin Bonds of Camelot. Medieval Perspectives 11: 46-47.<br />

Helmig, Thomas. HAVE<br />

1992. Anglo-Saxon Kin-Class Structure. Mankind 33 (2): 155-162.<br />

Hodgkin, R. H.<br />

1935. A History of the Anglo-Saxons. London: Oxford University Press. [Supports the<br />

theory of Anglo-Saxon cognatism.]<br />

Kemble, John M.<br />

1849. The Saxons in England, a History of the English Commonwealth Till the Period of<br />

the Norman Conquest. London: Longmans. [Supports the theory of Anglo-Saxon<br />

patrilinearity.]<br />

Klaeber, Fr.<br />

1922. Beowulf and The Fight at Finnsburg. Boston: D. C. Heath. [P. 84: on OEng and<br />

OHG dyadic kin terms.]<br />

Lancaster, Lorraine. HAVE<br />

1957. <strong>Kinship</strong> in Anglo-Saxon Society. British Journal of Sociology 9 (3): 230-250; (4):<br />

359-377.<br />

Logarbo, Mona L.<br />

1986. The Body and Soul as Kinsmen: An Explanation of the Theology og the Anglo-<br />

Saxon Body-Soul Theme in Terms of an Underlying Anglo-Saxon Spirituality of <strong>Kinship</strong>.<br />

Ph.D. dissertation. Fordham University, New York, NY: Department of English.<br />

Loyn, H. R.<br />

1974. <strong>Kinship</strong> in Anglo-Saxon England. Anglo-Saxon England 3: 197-209.<br />

Lynch, Joseph H. HAVE<br />

1985. Hugh I of Cluny’s Sponsorship of Henry IV: Its Context and Consequences.<br />

Speculum 60 (4): 800-826. [Includes discussions of fictive kinship.]

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