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John T. Koch

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John T. Koch
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Biographie
Formation
Activités
Autres informations
A travaillé pour
Membre de
Learned Society of Wales (en) ()Voir et modifier les données sur Wikidata
Distinctions
Bourse Guggenheim ()
Fellow of the Learned Society of Wales (d) ()Voir et modifier les données sur Wikidata

John Koch, diplômé de l’université Harvard, est professeur de langue et littérature celtiques à l’université du pays de Galles et directeur du Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies.

Publications

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  • An Atlas for Celtic Studies: Archaeology and Names in Ancient Europe and Early Medieval Ireland, Britain, and Brittany, Oxford, Oxbow, 2007.
  • Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia, 5 vols., Santa Barbara–Oxford, ABC-Clio, 2006, pp. xxviii + 2128. ISBN (imprimé) 1–85109–440–7, (e-book) 1–85109–445–8
  • « Why Was Welsh Literature First Written Down? », dans Medieval Celtic Literature and Society, sous la dir. de H. Fulton, Dublin, Four Courts Press, 2005, 15–31. (ISBN 1 85182 928 8)
  • « De sancto Iudicaelo rege Historia and Its Implications for the Welsh Taliesin », dans Heroic Poets and Poetic Heroes in Celtic Tradition: A Festschrift for Patrick K. Ford, sous la dir. de Joseph Falaky Nagy et Leslie Ellen Jones, coll. « CSANA Yearbook 3–4 », Dublin, Four Courts Press, 2005.
  • « Celts, Britons, and Gaels – Names, Peoples, and Identities », Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, new series 9 (2003)
  • « Some Thoughts on Ethnic Identity, Cultural Pluralism, and the Future of Celtic Studies », dans Retrospect and Prospect in Celtic Studies: Proc. 11th International Congress of Celtic Studies 25–31 July 1999, sous la dir. de M. Herbert et K. Murray, Dublin, Four Courts Press, 2003. (ISBN 1 85182 770 6)
  • « Marwnad Cunedda a Diwedd y Brydain Rufeinig » [‘The elegy of Cunedda’ and the end of Roman Britain], dans Yr Hen Iaith: Studies in Early Welsh Language before 1500, sous la dir. de Paul Russell, Aberystwyth, Celtic Studies Publications, 2003. (ISBN 1 891271 10 5)
  • « The Early Chronology for St Patrick (c.351–c.428): Some New Ideas and Possibilities », dans Celtic Hagiography and Saints’ Cults, sous la dir. de Jane Cartwright, Cardiff, University of Wales Press, 2003.
  • « Celtoscepticism: Some Intellectual Sources and Ideological Implications », Indo-European Studies Bulletin, 2001, vol. 9, n⁰ 2.
  • The Inscriptions of Early Medieval Brittany - Les inscriptions de la Bretagne du Haut Moyen Âge (Aberystwyth, 2000)
  • On the Origins of the Old Irish Terms Goídil and Goídelc, in Origins and Revivals: Proceedings of the First Australian Conference of Celtic Studies, eds. G. Evans, B. K. Martin and J. W. Wooding, Sydney Series in Celtic Studies 3 (Sydney: Centre for Celtic Studies, University of Sydney, 2000). (ISBN 1 86487 380 9), 3–16.
  • Ovania and /wu-/, /wo-/ < Celtic /wo-/, /we-/ (,/wi-/) in Pictish, in Kings, Clerics and Chronicles in Scotland, 500–1297: Essays in honour of Marjorie Ogilvie Anderson on the occasion of her ninetieth birthday, ed. Simon Taylor (Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2000)
  • Fled Bricrenn in its Broader Celtic Context, in Fled Bricrenn: Reassessments, ed. Pádraig ÓRiain, Irish Texts Society Subsidiary Series 10 (Dublin, 2000)
  • The Place of Y Gododdin in the History of Scotland, in Celtic Connections: Proceedings of the Tenth International Congress of Celtic Studies, Vol. 1. *Language, Literature, History, Culture, ed. R.Black, W. Gillies, R. Ó Maolalaigh (East Linton: Tuckwell Press, 1999)
  • A Swallowed Onomastic Tale in Cath Maige Mucrama?, in Ildánach Ildírech: A Festschrift for Proinsias MacCana (1999), pp. 63–80.
  • The Gododdin of Aneirin: Texts and Context from Dark-Age North Britain (Historical Introduction, Reconstructed Text, Translation, Notes) (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1997) curity and the Figure of Taliesin’, Medievalia, XIX (1996 [for 1993])
  • Some Thoughts on the Gaulish Inscription from Larzac, in Die grösseren altkeltischen Sprachdenkmäler, Akten des Kolloquiums Innsbruck 29 April–, eds. W. Meid, P. Anreiter (Innsbruck, 1996)
  • When a Seanchaidhe is not a Seanchaidhe and a Paddy is not a Paddy [essay on Erskine Nicol’s painting The Seanchaidhe], in America’s Eye: Essay’s on the Irish Paintings in the Collection of Brian Burns, ed. A. Dalsimer and V. Kreilkamp (Boston, 1996)
  • The Celtic Lands in Medieval Arthurian Literature: A Guide to Recent Research, ed. N. Lacy (New York, 1996)
  • Further Thoughts on Indo-European gwhin Celtic, in Hispano-Gallo-Brittonica: Essays in honour of D. E. Evans on his sixty-fifth birthday, eds. J. F. Eska, R. Geraint Gruffydd, Nicolas Jacobs (Cardiff and Dublin, 1995)
  • The Conversion of Ireland and the Emergence of the Old Irish Language, AD 367–637, Emania, XIII (1995), 39–50
  • Windows on the Iron Age, 1964–1994, in Ulidia: Proceedings of the First International Conference on the Ulster Cycle of Tales, eds. J. P. Mallory and G. Stockmon (Belfast, 1994)
  • Thoughts on the Ur-Gododin: Rethinking Aneirin and Mynydawc Mwynvawr, Language Sciences, XV.2 (1993)
  • Gallo-Brittonic Tasc(i)ouanos "Badger-slayer" and the Reflex of Indo-European *gwh, Journal of Celtic Linguistics, I (1992)
  • Gallo-Brittonic vs. Insular Celtic: The Inter-rela tion ships of the Celtic Languages Reconsidered, in Bretagne et pays celtiques – langues, histoire, civilisation: Mélanges offerts à la mémoire de Léon Fleuriot, eds. Gw. Le Menn, J.-Y. Le Moing (Saint-Brieuc and Rennes, 1992)
  • Further to tongu do dia toinges mo thuath [“I swear to the god to whom my tribe swears”], &c., Études celtiques, XXIX (1992) 249–61
  • On the Prehistory of Brittonic Syntax, in Studies in Brythonic Word Order, eds. J. Fife and E. Poppe, Current Issues in Linguistic Theory lxxxiii (Amsterdam, 1991)
  • Ériu, Alba, Letha: When Was a Language Ancestral to Gaelic First Spoken in Ireland?, Emania, IX (1991 [‘Focus on the Origins of the Irish’])
  • Gleanings from the Gododdin and Other Early Welsh Texts, Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies, XXXVIII (1991)
  • Thoughts On Celtic Philology and Philologists, Comparative Literature Studies, XXVII.1 (1990)
  • Cothairche, Esposito’s Theory, and Neo-Celtic Lenition [re. the historical St. Patrick], in Britain 400–600: Language and History, eds. A. Bammesberger, A. Wollmann (Heidelberg, 1990)
  • Brân, Brennos: An Instance of Early Gallo-Brittonic History and Mythology, Cambridge Medieval Celtic Studies, XX (winter 1990)
  • Some Etymologies Reflecting on the Mythology in the Mabinogi, Proceedings of the Harvard Celtic Colloquium, IX (1990)
  • Neo-Brittonic Spirants from Old Celtic Gemi nates, Ériu, XL (1989)
  • The Cynfeirdd Poetry and the Language of the Sixth Century, in Early Welsh Poetry: Studies in the Book of Aneirin, ed. Brynley F. Roberts (Aberystwyth; National Library of Wales, 1988)
  • Prosody and the Old Celtic Verbal Complex, Ériu, XXXVIII (1987)
  • ‘llawr en assed"the Laureate Hero in the War-chariot (C[anu] A[neirin] 932): Some Recol lec tions of the Iron Age in the Gododdin’, Études celtiques, XXIV (1987)
  • A Welsh Window on the Iron Age: Manawydan, Mandubracios, Cambridge Medieval Celtic Studies, XIV (Winter, 1987)
  • New Thoughts on Albion, Ierne, and the “Pretanic Isles”: Part I [on the oldest names for Britain and Ireland],Proceedings of the Harvard Celtic Colloquium, VI/VII (1986–87)
  • When Was Welsh Literature First Written Down?, Studia Celtica XX/XXI (1985–86)
  • Emphasis and Movement in Gaulish, BBCS xxxii (1985)
  • gwydanhor, gwydyanhawr, clywanhor, Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies, XXXI (1984)
  • The Sentence in Gaulish, Proceedings of the Harvard Celtic Colloquium, III (1983)
  • Mor Terwyn, Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies, XXX/3–4 (1983)
  • The Loss of Final Syllables and Loss of Declen sion in Brittonic, Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies, XXX/3–4 (1983)
  • Gaulish eti-c, eqqi-c< Indo-European *esti-kwe?, Proceedings of the Harvard Celtic Colloquium, II (1982)
  • The Loss of Final Syllables and Loss of Declension in Brittonic, Proceedings of the Harvard Celtic Colloquium, I (1981)
  • The Stone of the Weni-kones [= maen gwynngwn (CA 83)], Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies, XXXIX.1 (1980)

Articles connexes

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