primary sources
- Br Library MS. Harley 3244, fo. 54v Cotton Nero A.x., art. 3
- Br Museum 1975, 0401.1: www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx [accessed 10.4.2019]
- Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales: en.Wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellesmere_Chaucer https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Miller%27s_Talechaucer.fas.harvard.edu/pages/general-prologue-(MiddleEnglishText)2000.sites.fas.harvard.edu/-chaucer/teachslf/kt-par4.htm.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c8/Canterbury_Tales__The_Miller_-_f._34v_detail
- Church bells: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_bell
- May traditions: www.gainsboroughstandard.co.uk/
- Natl Libr Wales: www.library.wales/discovery/digital-MS Cotton Caligula A.ix (C), fos 233ra–246ra): http://www.southampton.ac.uk/~wpwt/trans/owl/owltrans.htm.
- Paris, Bibliothèque nationale, MS français 616 (see The Hunting Book of Gaston Phébus, reproduced 1998 (London).
- Salisbury-king-horn, https:/edu/teams/text/salisbury-king-horn
- http://www.southampton.ac.uk/~wpwt/trans/owl/owltrans.htm; Br Libr MS Cotton Caligula A.ix (C), fos 233ra–246ra)
- Spencer Online: https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/spenseronline/
- Wild Hog of the Woods: https://mainlynorfolk.info/lloyd/songs/boldsirrylas.html.
- Y Bardd a’r Brawd Llwyd: http://www.dafyddapgwilym
bibliography
- Anwyl, E., 1909. Poetry of the Gogynfeirdd (Denbigh). https://archive.org/details/poetryofgogynfei00jone.
- Arnold, J. H., & Goodson, C., 2012, ‘Resounding community: the history and meaning of medieval church bells’, Viator, 43.1, pp. 99–130. doi: 10.1484/J.VIATOR.1.102544
- Banks, M. M. (ed.), 1939. British Calendar Customs: Scotland, Vol 2 (Folk-Lore Soc, London & Glasgow).
- Barber, R., & Barker, J., 2013. Tournaments: jousts, chivalry and pageantry in the Middle Ages (Woodbridge).
- Barker, J., 1986. The Tournament in England (Woodbridge).
- Barron, W. R. J. (trans. & ed.), 1998. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, revised edn (Manchester).
- Bathe, G., 2012. ‘The Savernake horn’, Wiltshire Archaeol & Nat Hist Mag, 105, pp. 168–81.
- Bennett, J. A. W., & Smithers, G. V. (eds), 1968. Early Middle English Verse and Prose (Oxford).
- Benson, L. D. (ed.), 2009. The Riverside Chaucer, 3rd edn (Oxford). https//global.oup.com/academic/product/the-riveside-chaucer.
- Cavill, P., 2018. A New Dictionary of English Field-Names (Nottingham).
- Child, Francis James, 1882–98. The Child Ballads: the English and Scottish popular ballads, edited from the collection of Francis James Child. ed. H. C. Sargent & G. L. Kittredge 1904 (Boston, Mass).
- Cohen, I. Bernard, 1990. Benjamin Franklin’s Science (Cambridge, Mass.).
- Conran, A., with Caerwyn Williams, J.E., trans., 1967. The Penguin Book of Welsh Verse (Harmondsworth).
- Danielsson, B. (ed.), 1977. William Twiti, The Art of Hunting, 1327 (Stockholm).
- De Maria, R., Chang, H., & Zacher, S (eds), 2013. A Companion to British Literature, Vol. 2: Early Modern literature, 1450–1660 (Chichester).
- Dent, J. M., & Dutton, E. P., 1978. William Langland’s The Vision of Piers Plowman (London). URL http://www.hti.umich.edu/c/cme/.
- Dickinson. J. C., & Ricketts, P. T., 1969. ‘The Anglo- Norman Chronicle of Wigmore Abby’, Trans Woolhope Naturalists’ Field Club, 39, 3, pp. 313–446.
- Dillon, M., 1948/1994. Early Irish Literature (Chicago, Illinois; repr. Blackrock, Co. Dublin 1994).
- Harding, M., 1998. A Little Book of Misericords (London).
- Henken, E. R., 1987. Traditions of the Welsh Saints (Woodbridge).
- Hone, N. J., 1906. The Manor and Manorial Records (London).
- Hooke, D., 2007. ‘Wilderness and waste – “The Weird and the Wonderful”: views of the Midland region’, in Post-Medieval Landscapes, ed. P. S. Barnwell & M. Palmer (Macclesfield), pp. 137–50.
- Hooke, D., 2011. ‘Royal forests – hunting and other forest use in medieval England’, in New Perspectives on People and Forests, ed. E. Ritter & D. Dauksta (Dordrecht), pp. 41–59.
- Hooke, D., with Bintley, M. J., 2019. ‘Sound in the landscape, a study of the historical literature. Part 1: the early medieval period – the sixth to eleventh century’, Landscape Hist, 40 (1), pp. 15–34. doi: 10.1080/01433768.2019.1600942
- Hudson, H., 1996. Four Middle English Romances (Kalamazoo, Mich.).
- Hutton, R., 1996. The Stations of the Sun. A history of the ritual year in Britain (Oxford).
- Jones, G., & Jones. T., trans. & ed., 1949. The Mabinogian (London).
- Katritzky, M. A., 2015. Maik Goth, Monsters and the poetic imagination in The Faerie Queene, and Tara Pedersen, Mermaids and the production of knowledge in Early Modern England (Manchester). https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/spenseronline/review/item/46.1.6/
- Lockwood, W. B., 1993. The Oxford Book of British Bird Names, revised edn (Oxford).
- Lowe, B., 1957. ‘Early records of the Morris in England’, J English Folk Dance & Song Soc, 7 89 (2), pp. 61–82.
- McDonagh, B., 2019. ‘Landscape, territory and common rights in medieval East Yorkshire’, Landscape Hist, 40 (2), pp. 7–99.
- Merrifield, R., 1987. The Archaeology of Ritual and Magic (London).
- Mileson, S., 2018. ‘Sound and landscape’, in The Oxford Handbook of Medieval Archaeology, ed. C. Gerrard & A. Gutierrez (Oxford).
- Morris, R, 1989. Churches in the Landscape (London)
- Ó hUiginn. R., 2005: Koch, J. T. (ed.), 2006. ‘Táin Bó Cuailnge’, Celtic Culture: a historical encyclopedia, 2006, ed. J. T. Koch (Santa Barbara, Calif.).
- Pennant, T., 1883. Tours in Wales, ed. J. Rhŷs, 3 vols (Caernarvon).
- Perkins, N., & Wiggins, A., 2012. The Romance of the Middle Ages (Oxford).
- Reader’s Digest: Ashe, R., Briggs, K., Brown, T, et. al., 1973. Folklore Myths and Legends of Britain (London).
- Reader’s Digest 2011. The Most Amazing Places of Folklore and Legend in Britain: where to discover our living heritage and traditions (London).
- Robinson, F. N., 1957. The Works of Geoffrey Chaucer, 2nd edn (Oxford).
- Rooney, A., 1993. Hunting in Middle English Literature (Cambridge).
- Sands, D. B. (ed.) 1966. Middle English Verse Romances (New York).
- Shakespeare, William, The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (1589-1601), ed. B. Hodek 1958 (London).
- Simpson, J., & Roud, S. (eds), 2000. A Dictionary of English Folklore (Oxford).
- Swanton, M. (trans. & ed.), 1996. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (London).
- Taylor, C., 2019. ‘The history and archaeology of temporary medieval camps: a possible example in Wales’, Landscape Hist, 41(2), pp. 41–56. doi: 10.1080/01433768.2020.1676041
- Thorpe, L., 1978. Gerald of Wales. The journey through Wales/The description of Wales (Harmonsworth).
- Thurneysen, R., 1913. ‘Silva vocluti’, Zeitschrift fir Celtische Pholologie, 19, p. 209.
- Trevelyan, M., 1909. Folk-lore and Folk-Stories of Wales (London).
- Wain, J. (ed.), (1986) 1990 edn. The Oxford library of English Poetry, Vols I and II (Oxford).
- Warren, M., 2018. Birds in Medieval English Poetry. Metaphors, realities, transformations (Woodbridge).
- Westwood, J., & Simpson, J., 2005. The Lore of the Land (London).
- Wilhelm, J. J. (ed.), 1994. The Romance of Arthur: an anthology of medieval texts in translation (New York).
- Williams, Gwyn, 1973. Welsh Poems, Sixth Century to 1600 (London).
- Wood, J., 2018. Fantastic Creatures in Mythology and Folklore. From medieval times to the present day (Br Libr, London).
- Yapp, B., 1981. Birds in Medieval Manuscripts, British Library (London)