The Mabinogion (Barnes & Noble Digital Library)

The Mabinogion (Barnes & Noble Digital Library)

The Mabinogion (Barnes & Noble Digital Library)

The Mabinogion (Barnes & Noble Digital Library)

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Overview

This edition includes a modern introduction and a list of suggested further reading. The collection of medieval Welsh prose tales known as The Mabinogion tells of heroes on magical quests, knights-in-arms whose adventures take them to the far ends of the earth in pursuit of true love, and powerful women who sometimes betray and sometimes are betrayed.

The Mabinogion provides insight into Celtic mythology, Arthurian romance, and the performance techniques of the traditional storyteller. The Mabinogion is rightly regarded as a classic, translated by now into many languages, and adapted into children's books, opera, plays, and more recently into animation.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781411466067
Publisher: Barnes & Noble
Publication date: 03/13/2012
Series: Barnes & Noble Digital Library
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
Sales rank: 763,979
File size: 550 KB
Age Range: 3 Months to 18 Years

About the Author

Charlotte Guest, neé Bertie, was an extraordinary woman whose life practically spanned the nineteenth century, from 1812 to 1895. She grew up near Stamford, Lincolnshire, and was the daughter of the ninth earl of Lindsey. A gifted linguist, she married the widower Josiah John Guest, twenty-seven years her senior, owner of the Dowlais Iron Company in South Wales (one of the largest ironworks in the world), and Member of Parliament for Merthyr Tydfil. Having settled in her new home, she not only took an active part in running the iron works, but also promoted schools for the education of the working classes in the area, for both male and female pupils. But most importantly, she set about learning Welsh, and in so doing came into contact with Welsh literary figures of the period. Through them she obtained access to texts from the Red Book of Hergest, a medieval Welsh manuscript dated to c.1400, and on New Year’s Day, 1838, she set about translating a collection of tales that came to be known as the Mabinogion. She was fired by her love of the Middle Ages and of Arthurian Romance, but she also had another motive—she wanted to show to the English-speaking world, the “colonizers,” that the “colonized” were civilized and in possession of a noble literary heritage, of “venerable relics of ancient lore” as she claims in her dedication. Once the translation was finished, however, her interest in Welsh literature, too, came to an end. In 1855, three years after the death of her husband, she married her eldest son’s tutor, Charles Schreiber, who was fourteen years her junior. In his company she traveled on the Continent and embarked on a new project, collecting eighteenth-century ceramics, as witnessed today in the prestigious Schreiber Collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. Charlotte Guest died in 1895, eleven years after the death of her second husband, and was buried in Canford, Dorset, where the family owned a large estate.

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