Corpus of Electronic Texts Edition: G307001

Cú Bán an t-Shleibhe

Author: Unknown

Background details and bibliographic information

File Description

Daniel O'Foharta

Electronic edition compiled by Benjamin Hazard

Funded by University College, Cork and
The HEA via the LDT Project.

2. Second draft, corrected.

Extent of text: 3250 words

Publication

CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts: a project of the Department of History, University College, Cork
College Road, Cork, Ireland—http://www.ucc.ie/celt

(2005) (2010) (2016)

Distributed by CELT online at University College, Cork, Ireland.
Text ID Number: G307001

Availability [RESTRICTED]

Available with prior consent of the CELT programme for purposes of academic research and teaching only.

Sources

    Literature
  1. Daniel O'Fotharta, Siamsa an gheimhridh; no cois an teallaigh in iargconnachta (Baile Átha Cliath [Dublin] 1892).
    Digital images of the text
  1. Volume 1 of the Zeitschrift für celtische Philologie is available in pdf. format on http://www.archive.org.
    The edition used in the digital edition
  1. Daniel O'Foharta, Cú Bán an t-Shleibhe in Zeitschrift für Celtische Philologie. Volume 1, Halle/Saale, Max Niemeyer (1897) page 146–152; 492

Encoding

Project Description

CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts

Sampling Declaration

The present electronic text covers Daniel O'Foharta's edition on pp. 146–152 and an addendum by O'Fotharta from ZCP 1, p. 492. The English translation is available in a separate file, T307001.

Editorial Declaration

Correction

Text has been proof-read twice.

Normalization

The electronic text represents the edited text.

Quotation

Direct speech is marked q.

Hyphenation

CELT practice.

Segmentation

div0=the whole text. Paragraphs are marked and numbered p n=""; page-breaks are marked p n="".

Interpretation

Names are not tagged, nor are terms for cultural and social roles.

Profile Description

Created: Written down during field work (c.1896)

Use of language

Language: [GA] Text is in late nineteenth-century Irish.
Language: [EN] Opening remarks by Kuno Meyer are in English.

Revision History