Talk:Ralph de Diceto

Latest comment: 1 day ago by LlywelynII in topic "Further reading"

"Further reading" edit

The current article is just a crib of the EB1911 entry. The DNB bio was entirely unused and the c. 2010 "further reading" section was just uncurrated cruft pretending the page was well sourced.

  • Duggan, C. and A. Duggan. "Ralph de Diceto, Henry II and Becket." In Authority and Power: Studies on Medieval Law and Government presented to W. Ullmann, ed. by B. Tierneyand P. Linehan. Cambridge, 1980. pp. 59–81. With an appendix on decretal letters.
  • Gillingham, John. "Historians without hindsight: Coggeshall, Diceto and Howden on the early years of John's reign." In King John: New interpretations, ed. S.D. Church. Woodbridge: Boydell, 1999. pp. 1–26.
  • Greenway, Diana E. "Succession to Ralph de Diceto, dean of St Paul's." Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 39 (1966): 86–95.
  • Gundermann, Gotthold. "Trogus und Gellius bei Radulfus de Diceto." Leipzig, 1926.
  • Harrison, Julian. "The English reception of Hugh of Saint-Victor's Chronicle." The Electronic British Library Journal (2002).
  • Lane-Poole, Reginald (1888). "Diceto, Ralph de". Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 15. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  • McDonald, Richard Blaise. "Diceto, Ralph (c. 1120s-1202)." In Encyclopedia of medieval literature, ed. by R.T. and L.C. Lambdin. Westport, Conn., 2000.
  • Möhring, Hannes. "Zwei aiyubidische Briefe an Alexander III. und Lucius III. bei Radulf de Diceto zum Kriegsgefangenenproblem." Archiv für Diplomatik 46 (2000): pp. 197–216.
  • Zinn, G.A. "The influence of Hugh of St Victor's Chronicon on the Abbreviationes Chronicorum of Ralph of Diceto." Speculum 52 (1977): 38–61.
  • Villegas Aristizabal, L., "Revisión de las crónicas de Ralph de Diceto y de la Gesta regis Ricardi sobre la participación de la flota angevina durante la Tercera Cruzada en Portugal," Studia Historica- Historia Medieval 27 (2009): 153–170.

Kindly restore these back to the article once they're actually being used to independently verify points from the EB1911 text or, better yet, correct and expand on it. The Spartacus Educational source is well meaning, I suppose, but self published and should be replaced asap. — LlywelynII 17:36, 14 May 2024 (UTC)Reply