This proves to be a direct contrast to earlier evaluations of the text, such as the introduction to the 1998 reprint of Alistair Campbell's 1949 edition in which Simon Keynes remarks: Felice Lifshitz, in her seminal study of the Encomium comments: ===Manuscripts=== Prior to May 2008 only one copy of the Encomium was believed to exist.
However, a late-14th-century manuscript, the Courtenay Compendium, was discovered in the Devon Record Office, where it had languished since the 1960s.
This proves to be a direct contrast to earlier evaluations of the text, such as the introduction to the 1998 reprint of Alistair Campbell's 1949 edition in which Simon Keynes remarks: Felice Lifshitz, in her seminal study of the Encomium comments: ===Manuscripts=== Prior to May 2008 only one copy of the Encomium was believed to exist.
The Haskins Society Journal Studies in Medieval History Continuum, 2003.
This proves to be a direct contrast to earlier evaluations of the text, such as the introduction to the 1998 reprint of Alistair Campbell's 1949 edition in which Simon Keynes remarks: Felice Lifshitz, in her seminal study of the Encomium comments: ===Manuscripts=== Prior to May 2008 only one copy of the Encomium was believed to exist.
The manuscript was put up for auction in December 2008, and purchased for £600,000 (5.2 million Danish kroner) on behalf of the Royal Library, Denmark.
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