8809.
Jones (Leslie Ellen) (ed.), Nagy (Joseph Falaky) (ed.): Heroic poets and poetic heroes in Celtic tradition: studies in honor of Patrick K. Ford / Joseph Falaky Nagy and Leslie Ellen Jones, editors.
CSANAY, 3–4. Dublin: Four Courts, 2005. 420 pp.
pp. 395-399: Bibliography of Patrick K. Ford.

Rev. by
Nerys Ann Jones, in Peritia 21 (2010), pp. 351-354.
Erich Poppe, in CMCS 51 (Summer, 2006), pp. 103-106.
Liam Mac Mathuna, in StH 35 (2008-2009), pp. 221-226.
Ford (Patrick K.) (hon.)

Classifications:

8822.
Nagy (Joseph Falaky): Introduction: the singing warrior.

8823.
Ahlqvist (Anders): Is acher in gaíth... úa Lothlind.

8824.
Chadbourne (Kate): The voices of hounds: heroic dogs and men in the Finn ballads and tales.

8825.
Coe (Paula Powers): Manawydan’s set and other iconographic riffs.

8826.
Gray (Elizabeth A.): The warrior, the poet, and the king: ‘the three sins of the warrior’ and the death of Cú Roí.

8827.
Herbert (Máire): Becoming an exile: Colum Cille in Middle-Irish poetry.

8828.
Hillers (Barbara): Poet or magician: Mac Mhuirich Mór in oral tradition.

8829.
Ireland (Colin): The poets Cædmon and Colmán mac Lénéni: the Anglo-Saxon layman and the Irish professional.

8830.
Larson (Heather Feldmeth): The veiled poet: Líadain and Cuirithir and the role of the woman-poet.

8831.
McKenna (Catherine): Vision and revision, iteration and reiteration, in Aislinge Meic Con Glinne.

8832.
Melia (Daniel F.): On the form and function of the ‘Old-Irish verse’ in the Thesaurus Palaeohibernicus: How Patrick Ford opened my eyes to an important aspect of early Irish poetry and some conclusions that I have come to as a result.

8833.
Ó Cathasaigh (Tomás): Cú Chulainn, the poets and Giolla Brighde Mac Con Midhe.
In Heroic poets and poetic heroes in Celtic tradition (2005), pp. 291–302.
Repr. in Coire sois, pp. 259-270.

8834.
Sims-Williams (Patrick): Person-switching in Celtic panegyric: figure or fault?

8835.
Slotkin (Edgar M.): Maelgwn Gwynedd: speculations on a common Celtic legend pattern.

8836.
Watkins (Calvert): The Old Irish word for ‘fleshfork’.
In Heroic poets and poetic heroes in Celtic tradition (2005), pp. 377–378.
OIr. aél.

8837.
Wong (Donna): Poetic justice/comic relief: Aogán Ó Rathaille’s shoes and the mock-warrant.