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Joergensen H and Blackburne C (1941). Glossarium Europae Avium
Johansson Maria (1996). Falkenering i Sverige under Ingre järnålder
Johnsguard P (1983). Cranes of the world
Johnson D (1987). An unusual amphisbaena in Galway city In: Figures from the Past. Studies on Figurative Art in Christian Ireland in Honour of Helen M. Roe, ed. by Etienne Rynne. Glendale Press, Dun Laoghaire, pp. 233-241.
Johnston Beatrice (1979). The dogs of yesterday History Today, 29:113-118.
Johnston D (2002). The earliest known compiled list of North American Birds (1582) Archives of Natural History(29):265-275.
Jolly Karen (1993). Father God and Mother Earth: Nature-Mysticism in the Anglo-Saxon world In: The medieval world of nature. A book of essays, ed. by Joyce E. Salisbury, New York/London, pp. 221-252.
Jonassen Frederick (1991). The Stag Hunt in "The Merry Wives of Windsor" Bestia, 3:87-101.
Jones Adrienne (1975). Die Bienensymbolik in der Staatslehre des frühen und hohen Mittelalters
Jones George (1979). Oswald von Wolkenstein's Animals and Animal Symbolism Modern Language Notes, 94(3):524-540.
Jones Lynn and Maguire Henry (2002). A description of the jousts of Manuel I. Komnenos Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, 26:104-148.
Jones M.H (2007). Cats and cat-skinning in late medieval art and life In: Fauna and Flora in the middle ages. Studies of the Medieval Environment and its Impact on the Human Mind. Papers Delivered at the International Medieval Congress, Leeds, in 2000, 2001 and 2002, ed. by S. Hartmann, Frankfurt a.M., pp. 97-112.
Jones Malcolm (2000). Popinjay, jolly May! Parrot-badges and the Iconography of May in Britain, France and the Netherlands In: Gevonden voorwerpen / Lost and Found. Opstellen over middeleeuwse archeologie voor H. J. E. Van Beuningen, ed. by D. Dickens et al., Rotterdam, pp. 214-229.
Jones Malcolm (1991). Folklore motifs in late medieval art, III: erotic animal imagery Folklore, 102(2):192-219.
Jones M and Tracy Ch (1991). A medieval choirstall desk-end at Haddon Hall: the fox-bishop and the geese-hangmen Journal of the British Archaeological Association, 144:107-115.
Jones Malcolm (2007). Saints and other horse-mutilators, or why all Englishmen have tails In: Fauna and Flora in the Middle Ages : studies of the medieval environment and its impact on the human mind. Papers delivered at the International Medieval Congress, Leeds, in 2000, 2001 and 2002, ed. by Sieglinde Hartmann. Peter Lang, Frankfurt am Main, pp. 155-170.
Jones Timothy and Sprunger David (2002). Marvels, Monsters, And Miracles: Studies in the Medieval and Early Modern Imaginations Kalamazoo, Medieval Institute, Western Michigan University. Studies in Medieval Culture. XLII.
Jones Valerie (1999). The phoenix and the resurrection In: The Mark of the Beast. The Medieval Bestiary in Art, Life and Literature, ed. by D. Hassig. Garland, New York/London, pp. 99-115.
Jones-Davies Marie-Thérèse (1990). Le monde animal au temps de la Renaissance
Jongen Ludo and Meeuwese Martine (2005). Jacob van Maerlant. Over vogels. Amersfoort - Brugge, Bekking & Blitz. Miniaturen Reeks. 6.
Jongh E (2000). Drakendoder en zielenweger Kunstschrift, 44(6):28-33.
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