enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: goth blue books free shipping

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Gothic bluebooks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gothic_bluebooks

    Gothic bluebooks were usually either thirty-six or seventy-two pages long, selling for either sixpence or a shilling respectively. [2] It is from their price that they derived the nicknames, "Shilling Shockers" and "Sixpenny Shockers". While full-length gothic novels written by authors like Horace Walpole, Matthew Lewis, and Ann Radcliffe were ...

  3. Ann Lemoine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann_Lemoine

    Ann Lemoine (born Ann Swires, fl. 1786 – 1820) was a British chapbook bookseller and publisher who specialized in Gothic Blue Books. She innovated the marketing and distribution of short Gothic tales. Her works were found in prominent circulating libraries. On 8 January 1786, [1] she married Henry Lemoine at St Luke Old Street.

  4. The Romance of the Forest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Romance_of_the_Forest

    A decade later, Clara Reeve wrote The Old English Baron, the first "Gothic" novel to be penned by a woman, and in 1783 Sophia Lee produced The Recess, a story set in the time of Queen Elizabeth I. [10] These works prefigured much of the material and themes that Radcliffe would synthesise in her novels, most particularly ideas of the ...

  5. Codex Argenteus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codex_Argenteus

    The Codex Argenteus (Latin for "Silver Book/Codex") is a 6th-century illuminated manuscript, originally containing part of the 4th-century translation of the Christian Bible into the Gothic language. Traditionally ascribed to the Arian bishop Wulfila, it is now established that the Gothic translation was performed by several scholars, possibly ...

  6. Ann Radcliffe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann_Radcliffe

    Ann Radcliffe. Ann Radcliffe (née Ward; 9 July 1764 – 7 February 1823) was an English novelist, a pioneer of Gothic fiction, and a minor poet. Her technique of explaining apparently supernatural elements in her novels has been credited with gaining respectability for Gothic fiction in the 1790s. [1] Radcliffe was the most popular writer of ...

  7. Gothic Bible - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gothic_Bible

    Arianism. The Gothic Bible or Wulfila Bible is the Christian Bible in the Gothic language spoken by the Eastern Germanic (Gothic) tribes in the Early Middle Ages. [1] The translation was allegedly made by the Arian bishop and missionary Wulfila in the fourth century. In the late 2010s, scholarly opinion, based on analyzing the linguistic ...

  8. Hours of Mary of Burgundy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hours_of_Mary_of_Burgundy

    Folio 15v: Christ on the Mount of Olives. The book was for centuries known as the "Vienna Hours of Charles the Bold", [4] [5] and thought to have been intended to mark the death of Charles the Bold, ruler of the Burgundian Netherlands, at the Battle of Nancy on 5 January 1477, and thus as a book of mourning, intended for either his widow, Margaret of York, or his daughter, Mary.

  9. Matthew Gregory Lewis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_Gregory_Lewis

    The Monk. Matthew Gregory Lewis (9 July 1775 – 14 or 16 May 1818) [1] was an English novelist and dramatist, whose writings are often classified as "Gothic horror". He was frequently referred to as " Monk " Lewis, because of the success of his 1796 Gothic novel The Monk. He also worked as a diplomat, politician and an estate owner in Jamaica.

  1. Ads

    related to: goth blue books free shipping