01718nam a2200373 a 4500001001200000003000800012006001900020007001500039008004100054010001700095020002200112020002500134020002700159040002100186035002100207043001200228050002400240082001900264100002800283245016500311260012200476300001100598500018700609504005100796533015200847650003600999650003101035650006001066650002901126655002901155710001701184856012601201999001701327ebr10627254CaPaEBRm u cr cn|||||||||061103s2005 enk sb 001 0 eng d z 2006285519 z0719069149 (hbk.) z9780719069147 (hbk.) z9781847794390 (e-book) aCaPaEBRcCaPaEBR a(OCoLC)808598979 ae-uk-en14aPC1057b.L38 2005eb04a450.7109422221 aLawrence, Jason,d1969-10aWho the devil taught thee so much Italian?h[electronic resource] :bItalian language learning and literary imitation in early modern England /cJason Lawrence. aManchester, U.K. ;aNew York :bManchester University Press ;aNew York :bDistributed in the USA by Palgrave,c2005. a224 p. aBased on the author's thesis (D. Phil.--University of Oxford, 2000) presented under the title: The siren songs of Italie : Italian literary forms in Elizabethan and Jacobean England. aIncludes bibliographical references and index. aElectronic reproduction.bPalo Alto, Calif. :cebrary,d2011.nAvailable via World Wide Web.nAccess may be limited to ebrary affiliated libraries. 0aItalian languagey16th century. 0aItalian languagezEngland. 0aItalian languagexStudy and teachingzEnglandxHistory. 0aImitation in literature. 7aElectronic books.2local2 aebrary, Inc.40uhttp://site.ebrary.com/lib/rucke/Doc?id=10627254zAn electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view c50334d50334