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  1. Othea’s Letter to Hector. Ed. and trans. Renate Blumenfeld-Kosinski and Earl Jeffrey Richards. The Other Voice in Early Modern Europe: The Toronto Series 57 / Medieval and Renaissance Texts Series 521. Toronto: Iter Press / Tempe: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2017. Pp. xii, 182. ISBN 978-0-86698-577-2 (paperback) US$34.95.

  2. Summary: One of the "Library of Medieval Women", this volume contains a translation of the medieval French "Letter of Othea to Hector", together with an introduction, notes and interpretative essays on the subject of its author, the first French woman poet to make her living by the pen, Christine de Pizan.

  3. Letter of Othea to Hector) by Jane Chance first appeared in 1990 with valuable information about Christine de Pizan’s verses. In this new translation, twenty-seven years later, entitled, Othea’s Letter . to Hector, in The Other Voice in Early Modern Europe: The Toronto Series,

  4. In 1400 Christine published L'Épistre de Othéa a Hector (Letter of Othea to Hector). When first published, the book was dedicated to Louis of Orléans, the brother of Charles VI, who was at court seen as potential regent of France.

  5. clje3^oybur5f)ecuift. mcmiv. lordaldenham. president. dukeopdevonshire,k.g. dukeofbuccleuch,k.t. dukeofnorthumberland,k.g. dukeofsutherland,k.g. marquessofbath ...

  6. 31 de jul. de 2007 · xlvii, 128 p. 28 cm

  7. Epistre d’Othéa takes the form of a letter written by Othea (a goddess who symbolizes wisdom and prudence) to the Trojan hero Hector. The letter is divided up into 100 chapters, each consisting of a miniature illustration and a verse text recounting a story from classical mythology, a prose explanation designed to expound the moral ...