• Hiberno-Latin, also called Hisperic Latin, was a learned style of literary Latin first used and subsequently spread by Irish monks during the period from...
    9 KB (916 words) - 11:50, 4 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Hiberno-Scottish mission
    The Hiberno-Scottish mission was a series of expeditions in the 6th and 7th centuries by Gaelic missionaries originating from Ireland that spread Celtic...
    22 KB (2,630 words) - 21:40, 20 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Hiberno-Roman relations
    Hiberno-Roman relations refers to the relationships (mainly commercial and cultural) which existed between Ireland (Hibernia) and the ancient Roman Empire...
    12 KB (1,546 words) - 13:21, 30 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Dog Latin
    Terry Pratchett Hiberno-Latin, playful learned Latin literature by Irish monks Latino sine Flexione, a constructed language based on Latin, but using only...
    9 KB (1,174 words) - 08:18, 23 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Medieval Latin
    (1300–1358) Henry Suso (c. 1295 – 1366) John Gower (c. 1330 – 1408) Goliards Hiberno-Latin Medieval Roman law Riddle poems Carmina Burana (11th - 12th century)...
    36 KB (4,797 words) - 15:36, 14 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Hibernia
    Hibernia (redirect from Hiberno)
    all ethnic groups. The compound form 'Hiberno-' remains more common, as 'Hiberno-Norse', 'Hiberno-English', 'Hiberno-Scottish', 'Hibernophile', etc. The...
    7 KB (727 words) - 02:58, 25 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Insular art
    also known as Hiberno-Saxon art, was produced in the post-Roman era of Great Britain and Ireland. The term derives from insula, the Latin term for "island";...
    47 KB (6,329 words) - 02:16, 24 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Hiberno-English
    Problems playing this file? See media help. Hiberno-English (/haɪˈbɜːrnoʊ, hɪ-/ hy-BUR-noh, hih-; from Latin: Hibernia "Ireland") or Irish English (IrE)...
    99 KB (8,151 words) - 14:51, 25 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Normans in Ireland
    Hiberno-Normans, or Norman Irish (Irish: Normánach ; Old Irish: Gall, 'foreigners'), refer to Irish families descended from Norman settlers who arrived...
    30 KB (3,787 words) - 07:41, 25 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Columbanus
    Columbanus (category Articles containing Latin-language text)
    reparation for the sins. Columbanus is one of the earliest identifiable Hiberno-Latin writers. Most of what we know about Columbanus is based on Columbanus'...
    44 KB (5,461 words) - 06:10, 1 April 2024
  • Kildonan, on the Isle of Arran. Saint Donnán's feast day is 17 April. The Hiberno-Latin account in the Book of Leinster says: 'Eigg is the name of a spring...
    5 KB (578 words) - 17:20, 17 April 2024
  • Brittonic/Brythonic Hiberno-Latin, used in Ireland and in monasteries founded by Irish monks, with an influence from Irish Gaelic Latin in Scotland, with...
    469 bytes (98 words) - 15:06, 25 September 2023
  • Thumbnail for Norse–Gaels
    Norse–Gaels (redirect from Hiberno-Norse)
    the option favoured by early Scottish sources writing in Latin Downham, Clare (2009). "Hiberno-Norwegians and Anglo-Danes". Mediaeval Scandinavia. 19....
    17 KB (1,794 words) - 07:31, 11 January 2024
  • September 584) Frankish king of Neustria and a Latin poet Saint Columbanus (c. 543–615), Hiberno-Latin poet and writer Taliesin (c. 534 – c. 599), whose...
    5 KB (623 words) - 03:00, 7 March 2024
  • Neo-Latin studies is the study of Latin and its literature from the Italian Renaissance to the present day. Neo-Latin is important for understanding early...
    12 KB (1,273 words) - 18:56, 19 January 2024
  • Thumbnail for Macaronic language
    Macaronic language (category Latin language)
    in English/Latin language Contemporary Latin Creole language Dog Latin Faux Cyrillic Hiberno-Latin Loanword Lorem ipsum, scrambled Latin used as a placeholder...
    23 KB (2,613 words) - 10:01, 28 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for English alphabet
    encoding scheme often in Hiberno-English, due to the letter's pronunciation in the Irish language The usual form in Hiberno-English and Australian English...
    32 KB (3,353 words) - 15:23, 24 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Niall Ó Glacáin
    Niall Ó Glacáin (category Articles containing Latin-language text)
    Rome in 1648. In collaboration with them, he wrote eulogistic poems in Latin to Pope Innocent X, titled Regni Hiberniae ad Sanctissimi Innocenti Pont...
    17 KB (1,794 words) - 16:00, 24 April 2024
  • story of a knight's adventures. Carmina Burana Cambridge Songs goliard Hiberno-Latin Gregorian chant Dies Irae Pange Lingua Adam of Saint Victor St Ambrose...
    8 KB (902 words) - 11:36, 18 February 2024
  • 1911. 30 Jan. 2013 Duff, J. Wight and A. M. Duff trans. (1922). Minor Latin Poets. Loeb Classical Library. pp. 782f. Stokes, G.T., "Palladias, bishop...
    10 KB (1,151 words) - 09:27, 19 June 2023
  • Thumbnail for Saint Patrick
    Saint Patrick (category Articles containing Latin-language text)
    Saint Patrick (Latin: Patricius; Irish: Pádraig [ˈpˠɑːɾˠɪɟ] or [ˈpˠaːd̪ˠɾˠəɟ]; Welsh: Padrig) was a fifth-century Romano-British Christian missionary...
    100 KB (11,681 words) - 01:47, 24 April 2024
  • 2002, p. 202 Mario Esposito and Michael M. Gorman (eds.), Studies in Hiberno-Latin literature, Ashgate, 2006, p. 537 Alan Ford and John McCafferty (eds...
    261 KB (13,377 words) - 23:29, 25 April 2024
  • British literature Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources Hermeneutic style Hiberno-Latin Latin literature Literature in the other languages...
    7 KB (728 words) - 14:13, 21 April 2024
  • Dicuil (category 9th-century writers in Latin)
    been suggested that Dicuil may be the same person as the anonymous Hiberno-Latin poet and grammarian known as Hibernicus exul. The astronomical work...
    7 KB (955 words) - 08:14, 16 April 2024
  • none might pass in or out without examination." Meanwhile, in what a Hiberno-Latin history of Donegal Abbey later dubbed one of the first of, "the mad...
    90 KB (12,571 words) - 23:30, 17 April 2024
  • Bieler (20 October 1906 – 2 May 1981) was an Austrian-born scholar of Hiberno-Latin. He immigrated to the United States in 1939 and became a professor at...
    553 bytes (47 words) - 14:53, 19 November 2023
  • English Dream of the Rood, Old English, possible date Hisperica Famina, Hiberno-Latin George Pisida, in Greek Abu 'Afak, from Hijaz, a Jewish poet writing...
    7 KB (762 words) - 01:08, 2 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Languages of Ireland
    but are of historical interest, giving loan words to Irish and Hiberno-English. Late Latin was introduced by the early Christians by c. 500. It remained...
    23 KB (2,248 words) - 20:59, 23 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Irish poetry
    in Irish, though some is in English, Scottish Gaelic and others in Hiberno-Latin. The complex interplay between the two main traditions, and between...
    66 KB (9,110 words) - 21:31, 12 March 2024
  • Dáibhí Ó Cróinín (category Use Hiberno-English from June 2020)
    Cróinín (born 29 August 1954) is an Irish historian and authority on Hiberno-Latin texts, noted for his significant mid-1980s discovery in a manuscript...
    9 KB (616 words) - 21:19, 23 November 2023