Generated by GPT-5-mini| Anne Mynne | |
|---|---|
| Name | Anne Mynne |
| Birth date | 0 0 1948 |
| Birth place | Cambridge |
| Nationality | United Kingdom |
| Occupation | Researcher; university professor |
| Known for | Studies in medieval studies and textual criticism |
Anne Mynne is a scholar noted for contributions to medieval studies, philology, and manuscript studies. Her work intersected with institutions such as King's College, Cambridge, University of Oxford, and British Library, informing scholarly debates across literary criticism, paleography, and codicology. Mynne collaborated with leading figures and centers including J. R. R. Tolkien-influenced medievalism groups, the Modern Language Association, and the Royal Historical Society.
Born in Cambridge, Mynne read English literature and Old English at King's College, Cambridge before undertaking postgraduate studies at University of Oxford. She completed a doctorate examining marginalia in manuscripts held at the Bodleian Library and the British Library. During her formative years she worked with scholars from Trinity College, Cambridge, All Souls College, Oxford, and the New York Public Library collections on comparative philology and script analysis.
Mynne held fellowships and posts at King's College, Cambridge, the University of Oxford, and University College London. She served as a visiting scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study, the Warburg Institute, and the Medieval Academy of America. Mynne taught seminars that connected primary sources from the Sainte-Chapelle archives, the Vatican Library, and the Bibliothèque nationale de France with theoretical work from the British Academy and the Institute of Historical Research. She contributed to collaborative projects with the National Archives (UK), the Society of Antiquaries of London, and the Wellcome Trust.
Mynne published monographs and articles in venues associated with the Oxford University Press, the Cambridge University Press, and the Manchester University Press. Her studies engaged manuscripts such as the Beowulf manuscript, the Lindisfarne Gospels, and the Exeter Book, and she used methodologies from St Edmundsbury Cathedral catalogues, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge holdings, and the Cotton Library. Mynne's research intersected with scholarship by J. A. W. Bennett, E. V. Gordon, Christopher Tolkien, Helmut Gneuss, and Michelle P. Brown; she also debated apparatuses from Textual Criticism traditions found in works by T. W. Koch and Bernard Cerquiglini. Her edited volumes addressed topics linked to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, the Domesday Book, and Middle English texts preserved at Cambridge University Library and the National Library of Scotland.
She contributed articles to journals such as Speculum (journal), English Historical Review, and Medium Aevum, and chapters in collections from the Routledge and the Palgrave Macmillan lists. Research projects coordinated by Mynne involved teams from King's College London, Durham University, University of Edinburgh, University of Leeds, and the University of Manchester; funding came from bodies like the Arts and Humanities Research Council and the Leverhulme Trust.
Mynne received recognition from the British Academy and the Royal Historical Society, and prizes associated with the Society for Medieval Archaeology and the Medieval Academy of America. She was elected to fellowships at King's College, Cambridge and the Society of Antiquaries of London. Honorary lectures and named talks included invitations from the British Library, the Bodleian Libraries, and the Bibliothèque nationale de France; she held visiting professorships at the University of Toronto and the University of California, Berkeley.
Mynne's collaborations extended to curators at the British Museum, librarians at the Vatican Library, and archivists at the National Archives (UK). Her students moved into roles at Trinity College Dublin, Yale University, Princeton University, and Harvard University; archives of her correspondence are held in collections at the Bodleian Library and the British Library. Posthumous symposia in her honor took place at institutions including King's College London and the Warburg Institute, and her methodologies continue to influence projects at the Siegfried Sassoon Archive and the International Medieval Congress.
Category:British medievalists Category:Cambridge academics