Category
page 1Middle English literature

Julian of Norwich
English theologian and anchoress
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Pandarus
thumb|Pandarus, centre, with Cressida, illustration to Troilus and Cressida by Thomas Kirk.
Pandarus or Pandar (Ancient Greek: Πάνδαρος Pándaros), son of Lycaon, is a skilled Lycian archer who lived in the Troad city of Zeleia. In the Iliad, he is allied with Troy and appears in stories about the Trojan War. He is infamous for breaking the truce between the Trojans and the Achaeans in Homer's Iliad, Book 4.
Margery Kempe
British Christian mystic and author
Floris and Blancheflour
romantic story from the Middle Ages (aristocratic version)

Forme of Cury
14th century English guide to cooking
The Cloud of Unknowing
late 14th-century English mystical work

Everyman
15th-century morality play.
Wycliffe's Bible
group of Bible translations into Middle English, circa 1382–95; chief inspiration of the Lollard movement
Richard Rolle
English hermit and religious writer (c.1300–1349)
Cotton library
manuscript collection

Peterborough Chronicle
12th century manuscript with a history of England

Ancrene Wisse
monastic rule for female anchoresses written in the early 13th century
Middle English literature
literature of the Middle English language

St Erkenwald
alliterative poem of the fourteenth century about Erkenwald, bishop of London

York Mystery Plays
mystery play series from the 14th to the 16th centuries
The Nun's Priest's Tale
1389 poem by Geoffrey Chaucer

Revelations of Divine Love
medieval book of Christian mystical devotions by Julian of Norwich