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Updated:Apr 23, 2026
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Vernacular liturgical dramas in Normandy: The Jeu d'Adam and related plays (c. 1150–1250)

Vernacular liturgical dramas in Normandy: The Jeu d'Adam and related plays (c. 1150–1250)

  1. Latin liturgical plays set the model

    Labels: Latin plays, Easter liturgy
  2. Jeu d’Adam composed in Anglo-Norman French

    Labels: Le Jeu, Anglo-Norman French
  3. Latin stage directions map a built performance space

    Labels: Stage directions, Paradise set
  4. Henry II’s Anglo-Norman court era begins

    Labels: Henry II, Anglo-Norman court
  5. Tours MS 927 compiled as a dramatic anthology

    Labels: Tours MS, manuscript anthology
  6. Office of the Resurrection copied in the same codex

    Labels: Office of, MS 927
  7. Paper manuscript points to wider copying practices

    Labels: Paper manuscript, MS 927
  8. Ordo prophetarum-style ending links Old and New Testaments

    Labels: Ordo prophetarum, Prophets sequence
  9. Manuscript’s later ownership and movement are documented

    Labels: Provenance notes, MS 927
  10. French Revolution era transfers bring MS 927 to Tours library

    Labels: French Revolution, Tours library
  11. Scholarly editing intensifies with new critical editions

    Labels: Critical editions, Le Jeu
  12. MS Tours 927 becomes a focused object of provenance study

    Labels: Codicology, MS 927