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- Blunderbore abstract "Blunderbore (also recorded as Blunderboar, Thunderbore, Blunderbus, or Blunderbuss) is a giant of Cornish and English folklore. A number of folk and fairy tales include a giant named Blunderbore, most notably \"Jack the Giant Killer\". The stories usually associate him with the area of Penwith.Cornish folklore remembers Blunderbore as living in Ludgvan Lese (a manor in Ludgvan), where he terrorized travelers heading north to St Ives. In \"Jack the Giant Killer\" he is the second or third giant (along with his brother Rebecks) killed by the hero Jack. Under the influence of that story, the name \"Blunderbore\" is frequently appropriated by other legendary giants; the later fairy tale \"Tom the Tinkeard\", a local Cornish variant of \"Tom Hickathrift\", contains a similar account of the hero's battle with a giant named Blunderbore. Likewise, it is usually given as the name of the ogre in \"Jack and the Beanstalk\".".
- Blunderbore thumbnail Blunderbore.png?width=300.
- Blunderbore wikiPageID "510018".
- Blunderbore wikiPageLength "4729".
- Blunderbore wikiPageOutDegree "35".
- Blunderbore wikiPageRevisionID "614201157".
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Axle.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Category:Arthurian_characters.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Category:British_folklore.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cornish_folklore.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Category:English_folklore.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Category:English_giants.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jack_the_Giant_Killer.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Cornish_mythology.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Diablo_II.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Elm.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink English_folklore.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Fairy_tale.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Giant_(mythology).
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Highway.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Jack_(hero).
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Jack_and_the_Beanstalk.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Jack_the_Giant_Killer.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_Jacobs.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Ludgvan.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Manorialism.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Marazion.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Ox.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Penwith.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink St_Ives,_Cornwall.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Tom_Hickathrift.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Wagon.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink Wales.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLink File:Blunderbore.png.
- Blunderbore wikiPageWikiLinkText "Blunderbore".
- Blunderbore wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Culture_of_Cornwall.
- Blunderbore wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Jack.
- Blunderbore wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Redirect.
- Blunderbore wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Blunderbore subject Category:Arthurian_characters.
- Blunderbore subject Category:British_folklore.
- Blunderbore subject Category:Cornish_folklore.
- Blunderbore subject Category:English_folklore.
- Blunderbore subject Category:English_giants.
- Blunderbore subject Category:Jack_the_Giant_Killer.
- Blunderbore hypernym Giant.
- Blunderbore type Star.
- Blunderbore type Character.
- Blunderbore type Redirect.
- Blunderbore type Tale.
- Blunderbore comment "Blunderbore (also recorded as Blunderboar, Thunderbore, Blunderbus, or Blunderbuss) is a giant of Cornish and English folklore. A number of folk and fairy tales include a giant named Blunderbore, most notably \"Jack the Giant Killer\". The stories usually associate him with the area of Penwith.Cornish folklore remembers Blunderbore as living in Ludgvan Lese (a manor in Ludgvan), where he terrorized travelers heading north to St Ives.".
- Blunderbore label "Blunderbore".
- Blunderbore sameAs Q4930760.
- Blunderbore sameAs m.05h5n48.
- Blunderbore sameAs Q4930760.
- Blunderbore wasDerivedFrom Blunderbore?oldid=614201157.
- Blunderbore depiction Blunderbore.png.
- Blunderbore isPrimaryTopicOf Blunderbore.