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WORK BY EDMUND SPENSER
Colin Clout; The Shepheardes Calendar; Shepheardes Calender; The Shepherd's Calendar; Shepheardes Calendar; The Shepherds's Calendar; The Shepherds' Calendar; The Shepherds Calendar; Shepherds's Calendar; Shepherds' Calendar; Shepherd's Calendar; Shepherds Calendar; The Shepherds's Calender; The Shepherds' Calender; The Shepherd's Calender; The Shepherds Calender; Shepherds's Calender; Shepherds' Calender; Shepherd's Calender; Shepherds Calender; The Shephearde's Calender; The Shepheardes' Calender; The Shepheardes's Calender; Shepheardes's Calender; Shepheardes' Calender; Shephearde's Calender; The Shepheardes; Shepheardes; The Shepherd’s Calendar
  • The first page of the Aprill Eclogue

calender      
n. στιλβωτικός κύλινδρος
Julian calendar         
  • Theophany]] (the baptism of Jesus by [[John the Baptist]]) (6 January), the highest-ranked feast which occurs on the fixed cycle of the [[Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar]]
  • This is a visual example of the official date change from the Julian calendar to the Gregorian.
  • The [[Tusculum portrait]] of [[Julius Caesar]]
CALENDAR INTRODUCED BY JULIUS CAESAR IN 45 BC
Julian Calendar; Year of confusion; Year of Confusion; Julian calender; Julian year (calendar); Julian calendar is this July; Imperial civil calendar; Imperial Civil Calendar; Julian Day calendar; Jullian calendar; Julian reform; Julian Reform; Old Julian calendar
ιουλιανό ημερολόγιο

تعريف

Calendered
·Impf & ·p.p. of Calender.

ويكيبيديا

The Shepheardes Calender

The Shepheardes Calender was Edmund Spenser's first major poetic work, published in 1579. In emulation of Virgil's first work, the Eclogues, Spenser wrote this series of pastorals at the commencement of his career. However, Spenser's models were rather the Renaissance eclogues of Mantuanus. The title, like the entire work, is written using deliberately archaic spellings, in order to suggest a connection to medieval literature, and to Geoffrey Chaucer in particular. The poem introduces Colin Clout, a folk character originated by John Skelton, and depicts his life as a shepherd through the twelve months of the year. The Calender encompasses considerable formal innovations, anticipating the even more virtuosic Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia (The "Old" Arcadia, 1580), the classic pastoral romance by Sir Philip Sidney, with whom Spenser was acquainted. It is also remarkable for the extensive commentary or gloss included with the work in its first publication, ascribed to an "E.K." E.K. is an intelligent, very subtle, sometimes wrong, and often deeply ironic commentator, who is sometimes assumed to be an alias of Spenser himself. The term sarcasm (Sarcasmus) is first recorded in English in Spenser's poem (October).