Geoffrey Chaucer, published anonymously, publication year conjectural, Mars and Venus, an amalgamation of the author's The Complaint of Mars and The Complaint of Venus[1]
John Lydgate, published anonymously, publication year conjectural, The Virtue of the Mass, also called the Interpretacio Misse[1]
Other
Stora rimkronikan ("The Great Rhymed Chronicle"), published about this year,
Sweden[2]
Erasmus, De Laudibus Britanniae, a
Latin ode in which the author calls
John Skelton, appointed tutor to Prince Henry of England, "unum Britannicarum literarum lumen ac decus", and congratulates the prince for having so fine a teacher.[3]
Geoffrey Chaucer, published anonymously, publication year conjectural, Mars and Venus, an amalgamation of the author's The Complaint of Mars and The Complaint of Venus[1]
John Lydgate, published anonymously, publication year conjectural, The Virtue of the Mass, also called the Interpretacio Misse[1]
Other
Stora rimkronikan ("The Great Rhymed Chronicle"), published about this year,
Sweden[2]
Erasmus, De Laudibus Britanniae, a
Latin ode in which the author calls
John Skelton, appointed tutor to Prince Henry of England, "unum Britannicarum literarum lumen ac decus", and congratulates the prince for having so fine a teacher.[3]