Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Carajicomedia> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 66 of
66
with 100 triples per page.
- Carajicomedia abstract "Carajicomedia (Prick Comedy) is a poetic work of 117 stanzas composed of eight 12-syllable verses. It appeared for the first and only time in print at the end of the Cancionero de obras de burlas provocantes a risa (1519). It is a sexual parody of a little more than a third of Juan de Mena’s very famous but now unfashionable El Laberinto de Fortuna (1444, The Labyrinth of Fortune), an allegorical vision poem written in very Latinate language. The text parodied, however, is actually the first printing of Hernán Núñez's edition of El Laberinto entitled Las Trezientas (1499), because Carajicomedia, not only parodies Mena's poem, but also Núñez's prologue and notes.".
- Carajicomedia wikiPageExternalLink 824..
- Carajicomedia wikiPageID "49059729".
- Carajicomedia wikiPageLength "19359".
- Carajicomedia wikiPageOutDegree "53".
- Carajicomedia wikiPageRevisionID "705167726".
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink 1499.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink 1519.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink 1554.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Auto-da-fé.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Boris_Uspensky.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Cancionero_general.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Category:16th_century_in_Spain.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Category:Castilian_culture.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ferdinand_II_of_Aragon.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Category:Isabella_I_of_Castile.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Category:Pornographic_books.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Charles_V,_Holy_Roman_Emperor.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Classical_planet.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Converso.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Don_Quixote.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Enrique_de_Guzmán,_2nd_Duke_of_Medina_Sidonia.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Felipe_Bigarny.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Ferdinand_II_of_Aragon.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Fernando_de_Rojas.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Francisco_Jiménez_de_Cisneros.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Fray_Juan_de_Hempudia.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Gaétan_Brulotte.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Germaine_of_Foix.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Hernán_Núñez.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Isabella_I_of_Castile.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Joanna_of_Castile.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Juan_de_Mena.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink La_cazzaria.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Laberinto_de_Fortuna.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Lazarillo_de_Tormes.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Don_Quixote_characters.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Lèse-majesté.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Major_depressive_disorder.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Marcelino_Menéndez_y_Pelayo.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Miguel_de_Cervantes.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Pleyto_del_manto.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Propaganda.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Psychosis.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Revolt_of_the_Comuneros.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Schizophrenia.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Seven_virtues.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Speculum_literature.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Yuri_Lotman.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jiménez_de_Cisneros,_Francisco.
- Carajicomedia wikiPageWikiLinkText "Carajicomedia".
- Carajicomedia subject Category:16th_century_in_Spain.
- Carajicomedia subject Category:Castilian_culture.
- Carajicomedia subject Category:Ferdinand_II_of_Aragon.
- Carajicomedia subject Category:Isabella_I_of_Castile.
- Carajicomedia subject Category:Pornographic_books.
- Carajicomedia subject Category:Jiménez_de_Cisneros,_Francisco.
- Carajicomedia hypernym Work.
- Carajicomedia type Book.
- Carajicomedia comment "Carajicomedia (Prick Comedy) is a poetic work of 117 stanzas composed of eight 12-syllable verses. It appeared for the first and only time in print at the end of the Cancionero de obras de burlas provocantes a risa (1519). It is a sexual parody of a little more than a third of Juan de Mena’s very famous but now unfashionable El Laberinto de Fortuna (1444, The Labyrinth of Fortune), an allegorical vision poem written in very Latinate language.".
- Carajicomedia label "Carajicomedia".
- Carajicomedia sameAs Q5748845.
- Carajicomedia sameAs Carajicomedia.
- Carajicomedia sameAs Q5748845.
- Carajicomedia wasDerivedFrom Carajicomedia?oldid=705167726.
- Carajicomedia isPrimaryTopicOf Carajicomedia.