Charles W. R. D. Moseley
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‘Whet-stone leasings of old Maundeuile
Reading the Travels in early modern England
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It has often been asserted that as a result of 'new discoveries' the factual credibility of Mandeville's description of the world evaporated towards the end of the sixteenth century . The main contention in this chapter is that this is simplistic. Far more complex combinations of factors were at work, and perceptions of Mandeville. The chapter explores how and in what form did people in sixteenth- and early seventeenth- century England encounter Mandeville's Travels, and, in what way, or ways, might they read it. Although the chapter concentrates on printed texts from English presses, people ought not to forget that texts printed on the Continent did circulate in England, and the Continental input into the English printing tradition of Mandeville is clear. A summary diagram explains the descent from the lost original to very free reworkings, the Continental and Insular versions.

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A knight’s legacy

Mandeville and Mandevillian Lore in Early Modern England

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