The Vitae duorum Offarum "The lives of the two Offas" is a literary history written in the mid-thirteenth century, apparently by the St Albans monk Matthew Paris;[1] however, the most recent editor and translator of the work rejects this attribution and argues for an earlier date, in the late twelfth century.[2] The earliest editor, William Wats, argues that the texts are older than Matthew's day but were revised by him; he bases this view on stylistic elements, such as the inclusion in the first Vita of a quotation from Lucan (Pharsalia I. 92–3) which also appears repeatedly in Matthew's Chronica maiora.
^Richard Vaugh, Matthew Paris (Cambridge, 1958), pp. 42-8
^M. Swanton, The Lives of Two Offas (Crediton, 2006), pp. xxx-xxxi
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The VitaeduorumOffarum "The lives of the two Offas" is a literary history written in the mid-thirteenth century, apparently by the St Albans monk Matthew...
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first depiction appears in an English manuscript, Matthew Paris's VitaeduorumOffarum, completed in 1250. By the 13th century, the wheelbarrow proved useful...
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relatively distinctive. What are probably his final sketches are found in VitaeduorumOffarum in BL MS Cotton Nero D I. From 1235, the point at which Wendover...
of the persecuted heroine. The oldest such retelling appears in "VitaeDuorumOffarum", naming the king Offa; the king himself appears to be historical...
was a descendant of Penda. A tradition related by the 13th century VitaeduorumOffarum tells that she was of Frankish origin, and that for her crimes she...
them as kings of the Angles, though according to Matthew Paris (VitaeduorumOffarum) Offa and his line personally ruled over the West Angles, implying...
to the Constance cycle, and it does fit such tales as Emare and VitaeDuorumOffarum as well as it does the Crescentia cycle. Florence of Rome is cited...
of the eighth-century Mercian king Offa in the thirteenth-century VitaeduorumOffarum, which portrays both this Offa and his fifth-century namesake, is...