ABSTRACT

The South English Legendary is the name given by modern scholars to a collection of saints' lives and associated material which was probably compiled in Worcester in the last quarter of the thirteenth century. It was extremely popular from the beginning, flourished in the fourteenth century, and continued to be copied throughout the medieval period. It is anonymous, and its history illustrates graphically the general truth that medieval English texts ceased to be the property of their author, becoming a common heritage adaptable to the purposes of any literate person. The earliest manuscripts contained about seventy lives, but this count had doubled by the end of the fifteenth century.