Mediaeval Barrow ‘Scots in the Durham Liber Vitae’ in: Rollason, David, et al., Eds. , Durham Liber Vitae and its Context, Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer (2004) [isbn; 1843830604]. Bartrum, Peter C. ‘Cognomens in Wales in the fifteenth century’. National Library of Wales Journal, 30:2 (1997), 133-6. Note: covers: 1400 – 1500 Bartrum, Peter C. ‘Personal names in Wales in the fifteenth century’. National Library of Wales Journal, 22:4 (1981-2), 133-6. Clark, Cecily ‘Battle c.1110: an anthropologist looks at an Anglo-Norman new town’, Proceedings of the Battle conference on Anglo-Norman Studies, 2, 1980 for 1979, 21-41, 168-72 _____ ‘The Liber Vitae of Thorney Abbey and its “Catchment Area”‘ Nomina 9 (1985), 53—72 _____ ‘Onomastics’, Cambridge History of the English Language, vol. 2: 1066-1476, edited by Norman Blake (1992), pages 542-606 _____ ‘Socio-economic status and individual identity: essential factors in the analysis of Middle English personal-naming’ in Words, Names and History Notes: also reprinted in: Naming, Society and Regional Identity edited by D.A. Postles. Leopard’s Head press, 2002 _____ ‘Willemus rex? Vel alius Willelmus?’ Nomina 11, (1987) pp 7-33 Notes: Reprinted in Words, Names and History _____ Words, Names and History, Selected Writings of Cecily Clark; edited by P.Jackson (Cambridge, 1985) Notes: The collected writings of the renowned onomast. Reviewed in Nomina 19 (1996) Dodgson, John McNeal ‘Some Domesday Personal-Names, mainly Post-Conquest’ Nomina 9 (1985), 41—52 Ekwall, E. Early London personal names (Skrifterutgivna av Kungl. Humanistiska Vetenskapssamfundet i Lund, 43). Lund, 1947. Notes: covers 1050 – 1300 Fellows-Jensen, Gillian ‘On the identification of Domesday tenants in Lincolnshire’ Nomina 9 (1985), 31—40 Fellows-Jensen, Gillian ‘The names of the Lincolnshire tenants of the Bishop of Lincoln c 1225’ in Otium et Negotium : Studies in Onamatology and Library Science presented to Olof von Feilitzen edited by Folke Sandgren pp86-95 Norsedt and Söner 1973 Forsnner,T. Continental-Germanic Personal-Names in England in Old and Middle English Times Uppsala, 1916 Franklin, Peter ‘ Normans, Saints and politics : forename-choice among fourteenth-century Gloucestershire peasants’ Local Population Studies 36 (1986), 19-26 Notes: Reprinted in ‘Studies on the Personal Name in Later Medieval England and Wales’ Haas, Louis ‘Social connections between parents and godparents in late Medieval Yorkshire’ Medieval Prosopography 10:1 (Spring 1989), 1-21 Notes: Reprinted in ‘Studies on the Personal Name in Later Medieval England and Wales’ pp159-175 Insley, John ‘Recent trends in the research into English bynames and surnames : some critical remarks’ Studia Neophilologica 65 (1993), 57-71 Insley, John ‘Some aspects of regional variation in Early Middle English personal nomenclature’ in: Studies in Honour of Kenneth Cameron, edited by Thorlac Turville-Petre and Margaret Gelling, pp183-199 (1987) Notes: Reprinted in ‘Studies on the Personal Name in Later Medieval England and Wales’ pp191-209 Insley, John ‘The names of the tenants of the Bishop of Ely in 1251: a conflict of onomastic systems’ Ortnamnssällskapets i Uppsala Årsskrift (1985), 58-78 McClure, Peter ‘The interpretation of hypocoristic forms of Middle English baptismal names’ Nomina, 21 (1998), 101-31 Notes: covers 1250 – 1360 _____ ‘The kinship of Jack: I, pet-forms of Middle English personal names with the suffixes –kin, -ke, -man and -cot ‘ Nomina, 26 (2003), 93-117 Notes: argues that these are a group of Flemish and Franco-Flemish hypocoristic suffixes introduced post-Conquest _____ ‘The kinship of Jack: II, pet-forms of Middle English personal names with the suffixes –cok, and -cus’ Nomina, 28 (2005), 5-42 Moore, John ‘Anglo-Norman names recorded in the Durham Liber Vitae ‘ in: Rollason, David, et al., Eds. , Durham Liber Vitae and its Context, Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer (2004) [isbn; 1843830604]. Morris, David ‘The rise of Christian names in the thirteenth century: a case study of the English nobility’ Nomina, 28 (2005) 43-54 Niles, P. ‘Baptism and the naming of children in late medieval England’. Medieval Prosopography, 3:1 (1982), 95-107. Notes: Reprinted in ‘Studies on the Personal Name in Later Medieval England and Wales’ pp147-157 covers 1250 – 1500 Piper,A.J. ‘The Names of the Durham Monks’ in: Rollason, David, et al., Eds. , Durham Liber Vitae and its Context, Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer (2004) [isbn; 1843830604]. Postles, David ‘At Sørensen’s request : the formation and development of patronyms and metronyms in late medieval Leicestershire and Rutland’. Nomina 17 (1994), 55-70 Notes: covers 1318 – 1525 _____ ‘The baptismal name in thirteenth-century England: processes and patterns’, Medieval Prosopography 13 (1992), 1-52 _____ ‘The changing pattern of male forenames in medieval Leicestershire and Rutland to c.1350’ Local Population Studies 51 (1993), 54-61. Notes: covers 1114 – 1350 _____ ‘Cultures of peasant naming in twelfth-century England’ Medieval Prosopography 18 (1997), 25-54. Notes: covers 1100-1200 _____ ‘Noms de personnes en langue française dans l’Angleterre du moyen âge’, Le Moyen Age CI (1995), 7-21 ____ ‘Notions of the family, lordship and the evolution of naming processes in medieval English rural society : a regional example’ Continuity and Change 10 (1995), 169-98. Notes: covers 1066 – 1365 _____ ‘Personal naming patterns of peasants and burgesses in late medieval England’ Medieval Prosopography 12:1 (1991), 29-56 Notes: covers 1050 – 1500 _____ Studies on the personal name in later medieval England and Wales ed. David Postles and Joel Rosenthal (Series: Studies in medieval culture : 44) Medieval Institute Publications, 2006 (Isbn 1-5804402-6-6) Contents: – Names and naming patterns in medieval England : an introduction / Joel T. Rosenthal – English personal names ca. 650-1300 : some prosopographical bearings / Cecily Clark – Identity and identification : some recent research into the English medieval “forename” / Dave Postles – Women’s names in post-conquest England : observations and speculations / Cecily Clark – The popularity of late medieval personal names as reflected in English ordination lists, 1350-1540 / Virginia Davis – Spiritual kinship and the baptismal name in traditional European society / Michael Bennett – Baptism and the naming of children in late Medieval England / Philip Niles – Social connections between parent and godparents in late Medieval Yorkshire / Louis Haas – Normans, saints and politics: forename choice among fourteenth-century Gloucestershire peasants / Peter Franklin – Some aspects of regional variation in early middle English personal nomenclature / John Insley – Comparing historic name communities in Wales : some approaches and considerations/ Heather Jones – Resistant, diffused, or peripheral? : northern personal names to ca. 1250 / Dave Postles – The domesday jurors / Chris Lewis – Names and ethnicity in Anglo-Norman England / Stephanie Mooers Christelow Redmonds, George ‘The history of Joseph’ Ancestors 23 _____ ‘The name game’ Ancestors 20 Notes: a consideration of the information first names suggest about “family circumstance, relationships and geographical roots _____ ‘Ranking order: popular male names 1377-1381’ Ancestors 24 (April 2004) Notes: considers the wide regional variation in name popularity in the late 14th century Rollason, Lynda ‘The late medieval non-monastic entries in the Durham Liber Vitae’ in: Rollason, David, et al., Eds. , Durham Liber Vitae and its Context, Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer (2004) [isbn;1843830604]. Stell, P.M. ‘Forenames in thirteenth- and fourteenth-century Yorkshire : a study based on a biographical database generated by computer’. Medieval Prosopography, 20 (1999), 95-128. Turville-Petre, Joan. ‘Patronymics in the late thirteenth century’. Nomina, 21 (1998), 5-13.