Aberdeen
Act of Indemnity and Oblivion
Acts of Union
Ad Herennium (Anon.)
Africa
Africans
Oroonoko
Alis and Catrin ferch Ruffydd ab Ieuan
American literary history: Anne Bradstreet
Mary Rowlandson
American revolution
Americas/New World
Aphra Behn’s travels
Rowlandson’s and Behn’s narratives
Amicum, Per (Increase Mather)
Anderson, Benedict
Anglesey
Ann Wen Brynkir
anthropology: memory work
Antigone
antiquarians
female
Welsh
Antze, Paul
Appleby
archive: compilation of texts in Celtic regions
eighteenth-century transcription of women’s works
research
women’s preservation of literary productions
aristocratic culture: civil war period
Arnot, Rachel
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford
Astell, Mary
Aston, family
Athlone
Atlantic studies
Atlantic world
importance of Caribbean
perspective on women’s writing
population movements
significance of Rowlandson’s text
slave trade
tales of Rowlandson and Behn see also Black Atlantic; British Atlantic
Aubrey, John
aural forms
authorship: anonymous
growing significance
sobriquet of Caitlín Dubh
autobiographical memory
autobiography
Aphra Behn’s novella
Katherine Thomas’s book
Lady Anne Clifford’s MS writings
Lucy Hutchinson
Mary Rowlandson’s narrative see also life-writings
Avery, Elizabeth
Baillie, Lady Grisell
Baillie, Joanna
Baker, David
ballads
Scottish tradition
singers
Bandele, ’Biyi
Barbados
bardic poetry
decline and transitional period
gendering of authorship
impact of social changes
professional guild in Wales
role of poetry of loss
Welsh women
women’s relationship to
Bateman, Meg
Bath
Bayly, Lewis, Bishop of Bangor
Beasa nighean Eòghan mhic Fhearchair
bees: metaphor
Behn, Aphra
authorial persona
drama The Widow Ranter
Oroonoko
reputation
Belfast
belonging
Cavendish sisters’ writings
and identities
women’s writings from Celtic regions
Benjamin, Walter
Bennett, Martyn
Bermuda
Berryman, John
Bible: citations in notebooks
citations in Rowlandson’s narrative
Elizabeth I’s copy of Paul’s Epistles
influence on Ann Griffiths’s poetry
landscapes Lucy Hutchinson’s elegies
notes in commonplace books
phrases in acrostic poem
biographies
Black Atlantic
Black, family
body: domestic labour
Imoinda in Oroonoko
in Pulter’s poetry
Bolzoni, Lina
Boston
boys: education
Brackley, Elizabeth (née Cavendish)
drama The Concealed Fancies
pastoral and play
perspective on civil war
Bradstreet, Anne
epitaph on mother
first modern scholarly edition of writings
Four Monarchies
migration experience
monumentalizing of Sidney
poem on loss of her home
poetry on civil war
Brett, Hopestill
Brison, Susan J.
Bristol
Britain: Behn’s political concerns
Bradstreet’s perspective
colonialism in Atlantic world
dimension of Rowlandson’s text
fate of Rowlandson’s The Soveraignty and Goodness of God
women involved with colonialism
women’s publication in civil war years see also English civil war
British Atlantic: Anne Bradstreet’s location
interplay of literacy and orality
intertwining of religion and politics
migration
oral and aural modes of learning
positioning of women writers
British Isles: in context of Atlantic world
English measures to dominate
new nation state
British literary histories: Atlantic context
Brooke, Charlotte
Broomhall, Susan
Brown, Mrs Anna see Gordon, Anna (Mrs Brown)
Brown, Mother Mary Bonaventure
buildings: Cavendish family
Lady Anne Clifford
Bury, Richard Cromleholm
Butler, Elizabeth, Duchess of Ormond
Butler, Judith
Caernarvonshire
Caerwys
Caitlín Dubh
Caldwell, James
Camden, William: Britannia
Campbell, Agnes
captivity narrative: Behn’s novel
Rowlandson
Caribbean
colonialism
Carmarthenshire
Carroll, Clare
Carruthers, Mary
Caruth, Cathy
Catholics
Catrin ferch Gruffydd
Catring ferch loan ap Siengcyn
Cavanagh, Dermot
Cavendish, Elizabeth see Brackley, Elizabeth
Cavendish, Jane
drama The Concealed Fancies
pastoral and play
perspective on civil war
poems
Cavendish, Margaret
Cavendish, William
Certeau, Michel de
Charles I, King of Great Britain and Ireland
Charnell-White, Cathryn
Chesapeake Bay
Chevers, Sarah
Child, Francis James
children: ethical and spiritual education
Katherine Thomas’s book
Lucy Hutchinson’s address to
mothers’ legacies
repetition of sermons
women’s oral transmission of history
chorography
Camden’s Britannia
Christian calendar
Christian doctrine: acrostic poem
Elizabeth Melville’s allegory
ethical education
Katherine Thomas’s elegies
Rachel Speght’s memorandum poem
Rowlandson’s devotional memory work
chronicles: Lady Anne Clifford
Cicero, Marcus Tullius
civil war see English civil war
Clarke, Danielle
Clarke, Elizabeth
Cleaver, Robert
Cleveland, John
Clifford, Lady Anne
Clifford, Margaret
Collace, Katherine
collective memory
cultural performances
family history
Gaelic culture
Rowlandson’s Puritanism
colonialism: antiquarians’ organization of knowledge
Caribbean
context of women’s narratives
English in Ireland
issues generated by Oroonoko
modernity
politics of language
commonplace books
Anna Ley’s poem on
differences between printed type and MS notebooks
Katherine Thomas
memorial function
Ursula Wyvill
communications: in new Atlantic world
technologies
Connerton, Paul
Connolly, Ruth
cooking
Coolahan, Marie-Louise
Cornish language
County Clare
County Kildare
County Limerick
Cowper, Sarah
Cressy, David
cultural change: Celtic countries and Wales
cultural geographies: Behn’s Oroonoko
conflict between Massachusetts settlers and Indians
Nottinghamshire
providential life-writings
Rowlandson’s narrative
Scotland, Ireland and Wales see also location; place
cultural heritage: ballads
cultural identity: orality and writing
role of bardic poetry
cultural memory
Anne Bradstreet’s status
bardic poetry
Behn’s and Rowlandson’s narratives
boundaries with personal memory and history
Cavendish family’s work
Celtic countries and Wales
cooking
place of civil war
Scottish Gaelic poetry
women’s oral traditions
women’s productions
cultural nationalism: folk traditions
Irish Gaelic poetry
Cunningham, Bernadette
Davidoff, Leonore
Davidson, Peter
Davies, John
Davies, Margaret
Deal Castle
death: elegy for Catherin Owen
keening and laments
political significance in women’s accounts
Rachel Speght’s memorandum poem
records in Hopestill Brett’s cookery book
writings in Katherine Thomas’s book
De Certeau, Michel see Certeau, Michel de
De Groot, Jerome
Delaval, Elizabeth
Denbighshire
Denham, John
Denton, Anne
Device, Jennet
devotional verse
dialect: Rees Prichard’s religious verses
diaries: Lady Anne Clifford
Mary Rich
Sarah Cowper
Sarah Henry
Diorbhail nic a’ Bhriuthainn
displacement: Behn’s and Rowlandson’s narratives
Dod, John
domestic life: Cavendish sisters’ writings
frame of Bradstreet’s Dialogue
Hester Pulter’s poetry
Lady Anne Clifford’s site of memory
practices and memory work
in Rowlandson’s narrative
women’s oral culture
women’s workplace
domestic service: in history of migration
Magdalen Lloyd
Dooley, Ann
Douglas, Lord Archibald
Dowdall, Elizabeth
dramas: adaptations of Oroonoko
Behn’s The Widow Ranter
Cavendish sisters
Drummond, William
Drury, Anne
Du Bartas, Guillaume de Salluste
Dublin
Du Bois, W. E. B.
Dudley, Dorothy
Dunnigan, Sarah
Durkacz, V. E.
early modern period: context of women’s writing
Ebersole, Gary
Eberwein, Jane
economics: Anna Hume’s legacy of father’s work
Magdalen Lloyd’s situation
economies: expansion of exchange of commodities
Edinburgh: archives
literary climate
education: boys
Christian doctrine and ethics
cultural hegemony
and domestic labour
girls
guidance in De Institutione Feminae Christianae (Vives) see also learning; pedagogic strategies
elegies: Anne Bradstreet
Caitlín Dubh
Catherin Owen’s voice
Gaelic traditions
Hester Pulter’s poetry
Katherine Thomas
Lucy Hutchinson
Máire ní Reachtagáin
pastoral in Cavendish sisters’ writing
Royalism
Elizabeth I
as Princess Elizabeth
Elliott, Emory
Elstob, Elizabeth
enclosure
England: and bardic cultures
Bradstreet’s Dialogue between Old England and New
colonial interest in Ireland
countryside evoked in Pulter’s poetry
evoked in Rowlandson’s account
ideas in women’s writings on civil war
measures to dominate British Isles
and new nation state
English, Mary
English civil war: Anne Bradstreet’s poetry
Cavendish sisters’ writings
cultural memory
Elizabeth Jekyll’s account of family’s experiences
Hester Pulter’s poems
Lucy Hutchinson’s writings
political views in manuscript compilations
politics of memory
women’s publication during period
women’s writings
English language
ascendancy
Caribbean
eighteenth-century women’s poetry
elegiac poetry
literacy and emergent print culture
Magdalen Lloyd’s use
prose compositions
texts associated with women in Ireland
texts produced in Scotland
texts recounting war experiences
Ulster women
women’s life-writings
women’s poetry in lowland and urban Scotland
writings on Irish culture of mourning
Englishness
Anne Bradstreet
women’s writings in civil war period
englynion (verse form)
Eoghan Mac an Bhaird
epic
Erasmus, Desiderius
bee metaphor
depiction of More’s daughters
Margaret More’s translation
ethics: Anna Ley’s bee image
education
memory training
naming of children
Europe: Bradstreet’s historical perspective
Cavendish sisters’ Pastorall
culture
economic expansion
wars of religion
Eusebius
Evans, Deana Delmar
Evans, Katherine
Evans, Ruth
exile: Cavendish sisters’ writings
Ezell, Margaret
fairy tales
family: Anna Hume’s heritage
bardic tradition
Cavendish sisters’ writings
frame of Bradstreet’s Dialogue
Gaelic culture of remembrance
Hester Pulter’s poetry
Lady Anne Clifford’s documentation
Lucy Hutchinson’s story
Magdalen Lloyd
manuscript compilations
mourning in Hester Pulter’s work
oral preservation of women’s work
professional poetry in Wales
references in Hopestill Brett’s book
role of Katherine Thomas’s book
Fane, Lady Mary
Fane, Rachel
Fanshawe, Ann
Feargal Óg Mac an Bhaird
femininity: ideal Celtic modes
idealization of Countess of Mar
ideology in De Institutione Feminae Christianae
issues raised by Magdalen Lloyd’s story
women in bardic cultures
feminism: personal and political
perspective on Celtic oral cultures
feminist scholarship
archival retrieval
Elizabeth Melville
recuperation of Behn’s reputation
Ferguson, Margaret
Ferguson, Moira
Fernie, Deanna
fiction
Field Day anthology
Finnegan, Ruth
Fleming, Juliet
flower-gathering: metaphor
folklore: Caitlín Dubh
folklorists
folk song
folk traditions: collecting and recording
Isobel Gowdie’s verse
romantic perception
Fox, Adam
France
Francis the ‘Ethiopian’ or ‘Blackymore maide’
Frater, Anne
French language
French Wars of Religion
Fychan, Anne
Gaelic culture
Gaelic languages
professional poets
women’s voices see also Irish Gaelic; Scottish Gaelic
gardens: Lucy Hutchinson’s site of memory
gender: authorship
cultures of memory and textual production
domestic life and practices of memory
and identity
ideologies in oral cultures
inflections in writings on civil war
language and power relations
metaphor of wax tablet
narrative of Celtic oral cultures
power relations in Oroonoko
genealogies: Anne Bradstreet’s British history
Lady Anne Clifford
genres
geographical boundaries
geography: interplay with temporality see also cultural geographies
Germany
Gilroy, Paul
Gordon, Anna (Mrs Brown)
Gowdie, Isobel
graffiti
Gràinne Ní Mhàille
Griffiths, Ann
Groot, Jerome de see De Groot, Jerome
Gruffudd ab Ieuan ap Llywelyn Fychan
Gruffydd ap Hywel o Landdeiniolen
Grymeston, Elizabeth
Guillen, Claudio
Gwynn, Elizabeth
Halbwachs, Maurice
Halkett, Lady Anne
Harley, Brilliana
Hatfield, April Lee
Hawstead Place
Hebrides
Henblas MS
Henderson, Diana E.
Henrietta Maria, Queen
Henry, Philip
Henry, Sarah
Henwood, Dawn
herbs: metaphor
Herefordshire
Hertfordshire: Hester Pulter’s poems
Hinds, Hilary
Hirsch, Marianne
historians: importance of Elizabeth Melville
view of oral culture
history: Anne Bradstreet’s task
legacy of Restoration memorial agendas
Lucy Hutchinson’s narrative
and memory
place of Rowlandson’s narrative
role of Gaelic praise poetry
Rowlandson’s and Behn’s narratives
significance of Alice Thornton’s family
women’s oral transmission
women’s writings during civil war period
Hobby, Elaine
home see domestic life
Hopditch, Beatrice
Hopton, Susannah
household books
housewife
Howard, Sharon
Hume, Alexander
Hume, Anna
Hume, Sir David
Hutchinson, Anne
Hutchinson, John: monument in Owthorpe church
Hutchinson, Lucy
autobiography
burial
commonplace book
imagery of ghosts
Life of her husband
perspective on civil war
‘To My Children’
hymn-singing
illiteracy
imagery: Biblical tropes in Rowlandson’s account see also metaphors
imagined communities
incarceration: Cavendish sisters’ writings
indigenous Americans see Native Americans
Inner Temple
international relations: Bradstreet’s British history
Ireland
ascendancy of English language
bardic tradition
Caitlín Dubh’s elegiac vision
changes affecting personal and cultural memory
culture of mourning
decline of professional poetry
decline of vernacular
encounters between literacy and orality
English domination
oral cultures
orality, literacy and memory
pioneering archival scholars
preservation of cultural past
Protestantism
recording of Gaelic past
recovery of silenced women’s voices
rising of 1641
Ulsterwomen with English and French languages
women’s prose texts in English
Irish Gaelic
alienation after Reformation
cultural nationalism
erosion by English
Mac Bruaideadha family
women’s poetry
Irish national archives
Irish nationalism: mourning and loss
Italian poetic traditions
Italy
Jamaica
James VI, King of Scotland
James II, King of England and Ireland
James, Angharad
Jekyll, Elizabeth
Jenkins, Geraint H.
Jones, Ann Rosalind
Kamensky, Jane
Keenan, Siobhan
keening
Kene, Janet
Kent, Countess of
King Philip’s War
Korda, Natasha
‘Lady of Honour’
Lambek, Michael
laments: Alice Thornton
Scottish Gaelic women see also keening
Lancashire: witch trials
Lancaster, Massachusetts
landscape: chorography
Langham, Lady Elizabeth
language: alienation from literacy in Celtic countries
colonialism
devices to enhance memory
women’s textual productions
languages: competences
scope of study see also vernaculars
Lanyer, Aemilia
Latin: commonplace books
learning
Margaret More’s works
social role in Europe
texts produced in Scotland
law: restrictions on married women
Layfield, Sarah
learning: Anna Ley’s bee image
Lady Anne Clifford’s memory work
learning by rote
Ledbury
legacy: textiles in women’s wills see also mother’s legacy
legal depositions
legal institutions
Leigh, Dorothy
letters
Anglo-Irish women
Anne Sadleir’s compilations
Brilliana Harley
composed in English
composed in Irish Gaelic
Magdalen Lloyd
women in Scotland
women in Wales
Ley, Anna
Lhuyd, Edward
life-writings
Alice Thornton
Anglo-Irish women
captivity narratives and slave narratives
Lady Anne Clifford
Lucy Hutchinson
manuscript compilations
migrant women in Ireland
providential
women in Scotland see also autobiography
Lilley, Kate
Lisle, Alice
listening: women’s oral traditions
literacy: alienation of Celtic languages
cultural hegemony
relations with orality
required for prose composition
urban centres in Scotland
women with least access to
literary culture: early modern Europe
effect of civil wars
Scottish
literary histories see also American literary history; British literary histories
literary production: Celtic languages and Welsh
Livingstone, John
Llancaiach
Lloyd, Magdalen
Lloyd, Nesta
Lloyd-Morgan, Ceridwen
Llwyd, Angharad
Llwyd, Dafydd: elegy for wife
Llwyd, Gaynor
location
interrelations with memory and politics
politics in civil war period see also cultural geographies; place
London
Behn’s reputation
events recorded in Mary Rich’s diary
in Hester Pulter’s poems
Magdalen Lloyd
loss see mourning and loss
Lougheed, Pamela
love poems: women in bardic cultures
lower classes: Cavendish sisters’ Pastorall
lullabies
Lyttleton, Elizabeth
McAreavey, Naomi
Mac Bruaideadha, family
MacDonald, Donald (of Clanranald)
MacDonnell, Iníon Dubh
Mack, Peter
Mackay, Barbara
McLeod, Mary see Màin nighean Alasdair Ruaidh, Màiri
Macmillan, James
MacPherson, Elizabeth see Beasa nighean Eòghain mhic Fhearchair
Maine
Màiri nighean Alasdair Ruaidh (aka Mary McLeod)
Máire ní Reachtagáin
Maitland, Lord
male poets: bardic cultures
male writers: elegy composed for Catherin Owen
influence of women’s oral performances
mediation of women’s voices
Maley, Willy
Mangan, James Clarence
Mansell, Bussy
Manuel, Mary
manuscript circulation
manuscript compilation
example of Anne Sadleir
familial documents
Irish miscellanies
notebooks and commonplace books
women’s poetry from oral cultures
maritime societies
marketplace: women’s oral cultures
marriage
Marvell, Andrew
Mary, Queen of Scots
Massachusetts
Anne Bradstreet
Bay Company
Mary Rowlandson
Mather, Cotton
Mather, Increase see Amicum, Per
Maurice, Sir William
May Day traditions
Mechain, Gwerful
meditations see prayers and meditations
Melville, Lady Elizabeth
Melville, Pauline: The Ventriloquist’s Tale
memoirs: Lady Anne Clifford
memoranda: commonplace book
poems
memorandum books
memorialization: Behn’s Oroonoko
Jane Cavendish’s poems
Katherine Thomas’s book
Lucy Hutchinson’s writings
texts in context of war
tribute to Mrs Wallington
memory: Behn’s Oroonoko
Bradstreet’s poem on loss of her home
creative composition and reconstruction
early modern women’s understanding
Gaelic culture
and gender
Hester Pulter’s poetry
and history
Lady Anne Clifford’s activities
late twentieth-century conceptions
and learning
location and politics
Lucy Hutchinson’s writings
metaphors
migrants
mourning
range of documents
recollection and location
relationship to place
role of oral forms
role in reading
Rowlandson’s account
Rowlandson’s and Behn’s narratives
and spiritual discipline
training of girls and young women
as witnessing
women’s organization see also Renaissance memory practices
memory work: women’s oral traditions
women’s writing
metaphors: Cavendish sisters’ Pastorall
Hester Pulter’s poems
intellectual process
Jane Cavendish’s poems
memory
Middle East: Bradstreet’s historical perspective
Mignolo, Walter
migrants: Magdalen Lloyd
women in Ireland
migration
Bradstreet
British Atlantic
domestic service
Rowlandson
to Massachusetts
mnemonic techniques
inhabitants of Surinam
Renaissance
women’s oral performance
Mnemosyne
mobility
marriage
modernity: alienation of Celtic languages and Welsh
cultural memory and continuity
Gilroy’s work on Black Atlantic
literacy
resistance or subversion
monarchy: Bradstreet’s Four Monarchies
Montgomery, Susan
monuments
Lady Anne Clifford’s work
women’s material legacies see also textual monuments
moral conduct: De Institutione Feminae Christianae
More, John
More, Margaret: writings
More, Margaret, Elizabeth and Cecilia: Erasmus’s depiction
little writing as legacy
More, Thomas
Morgannwg, Lewys
Moss, Ann
mother’s legacy
Catherin Owen
Katherine Thomas
Moulsworth, Martha
mourning and loss
Alice Thornton
Caitlín Dubh’s elegy
caoineadh (lament)
Elizabeth Dowdall
Hester Pulter’s poems
Irish Gaelic culture
Irish nationalism
Jane Cavendish’s poems
Lucy Hutchinson’s writings
Màiri nighean Alasdair Ruaidh
Rowlandson’s text
Thomas’s poetry
women’s writings in civil war period see also elegies; keening
Munster
Muses
music: Angharad James’s poetry
myth: role of Gaelic praise poetry
naming: of children
Welsh patronymic practices
national identities
civil war
Romantic nostalgia for oral traditions
significance of print
symbolic figurations
nationalism see cultural nationalism; Irish nationalism
National Library of Wales
national memory: and personal memory in Scottish histories
Romantic re-invention of oral traditions
Native Americans
captivity narrative
Rowlandson’s account
struggle with New England settlers
New England
Anne Bradstreet
Puritan pioneers
Rowlandson’s narrative
struggle between Native Americans and settlers
newsbooks
New World see Americas/New World
Nora, Pierre
Lieux de mémoire project
Norbrook, David
Nottinghamshire: Cavendish sisters
Lucy Hutchinson
novel: Behn’s Oroononko
Scotland
O Baoill, Colm
O’Briain, family
O Briain, Donnchadh, fourth Earl of Thomond
O Briain, Fionnghuala
O Bruadair, Dáibhidh
O’Doherty, Rosa
O’Hara, family
old wives’ tales
O’Neill, Owen Roe
O’Neill, Turlough Luineach
oral history
orality: distinction with writing
and literacy
Nora’s division with literacy
oral traditions
domestic life
feminist perspective of Celtic regions
gossip
influence on Romantic period
memorial and mnemonic practices
poetic practices
preservation in Ireland
Scottish Gaelic
survival of women’s contributions
telling of traumatic everyday experiences
transferral into written record
women’s collection and preservation
women’s poetry and songs
women’s role
Owen, Catherin
Owen, George
Owen, Richard
Owen, Sudna
Owthorpe, Nottinghamshire
Oxford
Palmer, Patricia
Panama
Parliamentarians
pastoral: Cavendish sisters’ Pastorall
Hester Pulter’s poetry
Patrick, Symon
patronage: bardic poetry
Caitlín Dubh
Catherin Owen
Countess of Mar
Lady Anne Clifford’s projects
pedagogic strategies
bardic tradition in Wales
catechistical forms
commonplace books
Peirce, Elizabeth
Pembrokeshire
penillion
Pennell, Sara
performance: bardic poetry
Cavendish sisters’ Pastorall
women in oral cultures
personal memory
changes experienced by British regions
cultural memory and history
Magdalen Lloyd’s letters
oral traditions in domestic life
role of Gaelic praise poetry
and Scottish national memory
women’s writings in civil war period
personal stories: intertwined with political events
women’s witnessing
women’s writings on civil war
Pestana, Carla Gardina
Peter, Hugh
petitions
Petrarchan verse
Philips, Katherine
Piers, William
place
Cavendish sisters’ writings
Lady Anne Clifford’s memory work
Lucy Hutchinson’s narrative
memory see also cultural geographies; location
Plato
poetry
acrostics
Anne Bradstreet
celebration of Lady Grisell Baillie
composed by women in vernaculars
englynion form
Hester Pulter
Irish Gaelic tradition
Jane Cavendish
Katherine Philips
Katherine Thomas’s book
memoranda
oral practices
Scottish Gaelic culture
significance of authorship
use of bee metaphor
women in Scotland
women’s performance in classical traditions
women in Wales see also bardic poetry; verse
poets: preservation of literary past
politics: Anne Sadleir’s memory work
Behn’s concerns
boundaries
Cavendish sisters’ writings
context of Bradstreet’s work
English assimilation of regions
Hester Pulter’s poems
Highlands clan culture
interplay with location and memory
Irish allegories
keening
Lady Anne Clifford’s diary
Lady Grisell Baillie
Lucy Hutchinson’s writings
manuscript compilations
and personal loss or trauma
sites of memory in Wales and Celtic countries
women’s poetry in Ireland
women’s poetry in Scotland
women’s publication in times of instability
women’s writings on civil war
Powell, Nia
power relations: language
voices heard in Oroonoko
Powys
praise poems: bardic cultures
prayers and meditations
charm of Jennet Device
Katherine Thomas’s book
Mary Rich’s diary
Prichard, Mary
Prichard, Rees
print: Behn’s commercial marketplace
editions of Ann Griffiths’s poems
effect on oral traditions
emergent culture
interactions with oral and aural forms
publication of Bradstreet’s work
publication of Rowlandson’s text
significance to national identifications
propaganda: Cavendish sisters’ Pastorall
English voices in Ireland
Rowlandson’s text
property: restrictions on married women
prose
inaccessibility to women
only surviving Irish Gaelic text
women in Scotland
Protestantism: Anglo-Irish
literary culture
modernity
opposition to visual images
Protestants: Anne Bradstreet
depositions in wake of Irish rising
Elizabeth Dowdall
Elizabeth Jekyll
women in Lowland Scotland
Providence, Rhode Island
Psalms
public events: Lady Anne Clifford’s diary
writings about
publicly-oriented work
Anne Sadleir
Elizabeth Melville
writings on civil war
Pulter, Hester
perspective on civil war
Puritanism: aesthetic of the Muse
influences on Rowlandson
literary forms
Lucy Hutchinson’s memory work
New England pioneers
parliamentarian cause
Purkiss, Diane
racialism: British colonialism
Rainbowe, Bishop Edward: tribute to Lady Anne Clifford
Ralegh, Sir Walter
Rankin, Deana
reading
recipes
Reformation
Reid-Baxter, Jamie
religion: context of Anne Bradstreet’s work
historical importance of Elizabeth Melville
letters in Anne Sadleir’s compilations
in manuscript compilations
Mary Rich’s diary
poems in Welsh
politics in Scotland
women’s writings on civil war
rememory/retrieval
Renaissance
Renaissance memory practices
example of Lady Anne Clifford
theory and studies
Renaissance studies
reparation
republicanism
Restoration
rhetoric
rhyme: training of memory
Rich, Adrienne
Richards, Mair
Rich, Mary
Rivero, Albert
Roach, Joseph
Roberts, Michael
Robson, Mark
Rogers, John (Dublin)
Rogers, John (Massachusetts)
romance narrative
Romantic period: influence of oral traditions
Ross, Sarah
Ross, Scotland
Rowlandson, Mary
life after return from captivity
migration experience
The Sovereignty and Goodness of God
Royalism
Jane Cavendish’s poems
literary tropes
London as site of memory
textual culture
women writers
Rupert, Prince
rural culture: perspective of Magdelen Lloyd
Scotland, Ireland and Wales
Russell, Elizabeth
Sadleir, Anne
St. Asaph
Salem
samplers
Samuel, Raphael: Theatres of Memory
scholarship: archival work see also feminist scholarship
Schwyzer, Philip
Scotland
ballad tradition
bardic tradition
changes affecting personal and cultural memory
cultural geography
decline of bardic poetry
decline of vernacular
effect of English domination
English assimilation of
Gaelic clan culture
literacy and orality
literary culture
oral traditions
pioneering archival scholars
poetic traditions of Highlands and Islands
preservation of cultural past
Romantic celebration of heroic past
threat of war with English
women’s oral culture
women as symbolic in bardic tradition
Scots dialect
women’s poetry
Scott, David
Scott, Jonathan
Scottish Covenanters
Scottish Gaelic
alienation after Reformation
erosion by English
poetic culture of Highlands
women’s poetry
Scottish Reformation
scripture quiz
secular poetry: Wales
self-reflection: Katherine Thomas
sermons
sewing
sexual politics: Cavendish sisters’ play
in Hester Pulter’s poetry
Shakespeare, William
Hamlet
Macbeth
Shields, David
Shoreditch
Sidney, Mary
Sidney, Sir Philip
Signs (journal)
Simonides
Sion, Cathring
sites of memory
bardic traditions
bodies of the dead
children and grandchildren
civil war-period writings
commonplace book
domestic practices
Lady Anne Clifford’s home
London in Pulter’s poetry
Owthorpe in Hutchinson’s writings
recollection and location
Romantic fantasies of Wales and Celtic countries
Rowlandson’s journey see also textual sites of memory
Skene, Lilias
Skye
slave narratives
slavery: familial connections
importance of Oroonoko
slaves: Caribbean
England
in Oroonoko
Surinam
Sligo
Smith, Bruce
Smith, Nigel
Smith, Valerie
social memory
Society of Cymmrodorion
songs
Ann Griffiths
composed by women in oral cultures
forms in Rees Prichard’s religious verses
learning and passing on
oral traditions in domestic life
Scottish Gaelic women poets
training of memory
in women’s cultural activity
South Americans
Southerne, Thomas
Southwell, Anne
Spain
speaking: oral traditions
Speght, Rachel
Spenser, Edmund
spiritual autobiographies
spiritual devotion: and domestic labour
Elizabeth Melville’s poetry
Katherine Thomas’s book
mnemonic techniques
Puritan memory work
Rowlandson’s account
spiritual testimonies
Stallybrass, Peter
storehouse: metaphor
stories: composed by women in vernaculars
learning and passing on
oral traditions in domestic life
Stuart, Mary, second Countess of Mar
Sturken, Marita
Sullivan Jr, Garrett A.
supernatural tales
Surinam
Sussman, Charlotte
Swansea
Taft, Ann
Tait, Clodagh
Talbot, Dame Alison
Talsarn, John Jones of
Taylor, Diana
Taylor, Elizabeth
Temple, Sir William
temporality: interplay with geography
testimonies: Anne Hutchinson in court case
English voices in Ireland see also spiritual testimonies; witnessing
textiles
textualization
textual monuments: Anne Bradstreet
Aphra Behn’s Oroonoko
Lucy Hutchinson’s writings
women’s writings on civil war
textual sites of memory
Theophano, Janet
Thimelby, family
Thomas, Katherine
Thomond, Munster
Thornton, Alice
Tixall, Staffordshire
tombs: Lady Anne Clifford
Tooting, London
Toulouse, Teresa
tragedy: Lucy Hutchinson’s view of history
and political community
translations: Margaret More
Trapnel, Anna
traumatic memory
Alice Thornton
Behn’s Oroonoko
Bradstreet’s poetry on war
Brison’s analysis
Cavendish sisters’ play
Hester Pulter’s poems
poetry of loss in bardic cultures
and political violence
Rowlandson’s narrative
travel
travel writing
Behn’s and Rowlandson’s narratives
Trill, Suzanne
Trinity College, Cambridge
Trumpener, Katie
Tusser, Thomas
Underdown, David
union of the crowns
urban areas: Scotland
Vaughan, Jane
Vaughan, Rowland
vernaculars: decline of Celtic languages
poetry in Celtic regions and Wales
political poetry of Scottish Gaeldom
verse
Ann Griffiths’s songs
charm of Jennet Device
Elizabeth Melville
learning and passing on
non-bardic forms
oral traditions in domestic life
Rees Prichard’s dialect compositions
training of memory see also poetry
Virginia
Vives, Juan Luis: De Institutione Feminae Christianae
Walcott, Derek
Wales
bardic tradition
changes affecting personal and cultural memory
decline of bardic poetry
decline of traditional gentry
decline of vernacular
early modern history in European/Atlantic context
effect of English domination
English assimilation of
orality, literacy and memory
oral traditions
pioneering archival scholars
preservation of cultural past
vernacular poetry
women as symbolic in bardic tradition see also National Library of Wales
Waller, Sir William
Wallington, Mrs (mother of Nehemiah)
Wallington, Nehemiah
Wandesford, Christopher
war memory
politics of civil war
studies
women’s writings see also English civil war
Watson, J. Carmichael
wax tablet: metaphor
Wayne, Valerie
Welsh identity: Magdalen Lloyd
Welsh language
alienation after Reformation
Bishop Bayly’s works
erosion by English
Katherine Philips’s perspective
Magdalen Lloyd
version of Vives’ De Institutione Feminae Christianae
women’s poetry
Wentworth, Thomas, first earl of Strafford
Wexford
Whipp, Elizabeth
Whitney, Isabella
Wiliam, D. W.
Williams, Grace
Williams, Roger
Winthrop, Henry
Wiseman, Susan
witchcraft: Cavendish sisters’ Pastorall
folklore about Caitlín Dubh
records of trials
witnessing
Rowlandson and Behn
women: hidden from historical record
oral traditions in Celtic countries and Wales
oral traditions in domestic life
performances
preservation of literary past
relationship to bardic cultures
songs
understanding of memory
women’s studies
women’s writing:
need for Atlantic perspectives
positioned in British Atlantic world
relationship between literacy and orality
scope of study
in uncertain climate of period
use of memory work
Woodbridge, John
Woolf, Daniel
Woolf, Virginia
wordgames
Wrexham
Wrigglesworth, Anne
writing: and memory
relationship with orality and cultural identity
written archive: oral poetic traditions
Wroth, Lady Mary
Wynn, Sir John
Wyvill, Ursula
Yates, Frances
Yuval-Davis, Nira