Bibliography

Wieland, Gernot R., “Anglo-Saxon visions of heaven and hell”, in: Richard Matthew Pollard (ed.), Imagining the medieval afterlife, 114, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020. 79–98.

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Citation details
Article
“Anglo-Saxon visions of heaven and hell”
Work
Richard Matthew Pollard (ed.), Imagining the medieval afterlife (2020)
Pages
79–98
Year
2020
Description
Abstract (cited)

This chapter presents a survey of both Latin and Old English visions of heaven and hell in Anglo-Saxon England from Boniface to Aelfric. The Anglo-Saxons were not content with reading about visions of foreigners, such as the Vita Fursei, the Visio Pauli, or pope Gregory’s Dialogi, but were eager to find native Anglo-Saxons who experienced visions themselves. With the account of the monk of Wenlock, Boniface presents the first native Anglo-Saxon’s vision, but the desire to Anglicise visions becomes most apparent in Bede who first – and incorrectly – transposes the vision of the Irishman Fursey to England, and then narrates the vision of the native Anglo-Saxon Dryhthelm. Aelfric silently corrects this ‘pious fraud’, but by his time Anglo-Saxons such as the monk of Wenlock, Dryhthelm, Guthlac, and Merchdeof had already experienced visions, and England had therefore joined the other nations in meriting this special grace.

Subjects and topics
Headings
Old English literature Anglo-Saxon England
Sources
Texts
History, society and culture
Agents
Anonymous [monk of Wenlock]Anonymous ... monk of Wenlock
Entry reserved for but not yet available from the subject index.

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DryhthelmDryhthelm
Entry reserved for but not yet available from the subject index.

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FursaFursa
(fl. 7th century)
Irish monk and missionary
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GuthlacGuthlac
Entry reserved for but not yet available from the subject index.

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Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
December 2020