Robbins Library Digital Projects Announcement: We are currently working on a large-scale migration of the Robbins Library Digital Projects to a new platform. This migration affects The Camelot Project, The Robin Hood Project, The Crusades Project, The Cinderella Bibliography, and Visualizing Chaucer.

While these resources will remain accessible during the course of migration, they will be static, with reduced functionality. They will not be updated during this time. We anticipate the migration project to be complete by Summer 2025. 

If you have any questions or concerns, please contact us directly at robbins@ur.rochester.edu. We appreciate your understanding and patience.
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Other Websites with Arthurian Content

Arthuriana: The Journal of Arthurian Studies

An earlier Arthurian newsletter – Quondam et Futurus – was combined with the journal Arthurian Interpretations to become Quondam et Futurus: A Journal of Arthurian Interpretations. Arthuriana has replaced these earlier publications and is now the official journal of the North American Branch of the International Arthurian Society.

The Charrette Project

"The Charrette Project is a complex, scholarly, multi-media electronic archive containing a medieval manuscript tradition – that of Chrétien de Troye's Le Chevalier de la Charrette (Lancelot, ca. 1180). It is developed and maintained by the Department of Romance Languages, Princeton University."

The Cotton Nero A.x Project

A project devoted to the manuscript which contains Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.

The Lancelot-Graal Project

"An international team of Old French specialists, art historians and manuscript specialists are collaborating with technical consultants in information science and telecommunications to create and use a searchable data-base of primary manuscript text and secondary commentary linked to a searchable data-base of images."

The Malory Project

The Malory Project is an electronic edition and commentary of Malory's Morte Darthur (1469-70), with digital facsimiles of the Winchester Manuscript (British Library, Add. MS 59678) and John Rylands Copy of Caxton's first edition.

Representing Sir Gawain and the Green Knight

This site, created by Michael Eden, is intended to serve as a research hub concerned with historic and contemporary creative responses to the late medieval poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. In particular visual representations that have accompanied various translations and other media which take the poem as subject matter, extend its themes and/or assert intertextual links.