Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Chapel_perilous> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 37 of
37
with 100 triples per page.
- Chapel_perilous abstract "The term Chapel Perilous first appeared in Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur (1485) as the setting for an adventure in which sorceress Hellawes unsuccessfully attempts to seduce Sir Lancelot. T. S. Eliot used it symbolically in "The Waste Land" (1922). Dorothy Hewett took The Chapel Perilous as the title for her autobiographical play, in which she uses "the framework of the Arthurian legend, Sir Lancelot, to create a theatrical quest of romantic and epic proportions".".
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageID "22987058".
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageLength "3141".
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageOutDegree "17".
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageRevisionID "608828664".
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink Antero_Alli.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink Category:Arthurian_literature.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink Category:Occult.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink Cosmic_Trigger.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink Cosmic_Trigger_I:_The_Final_Secret_of_the_Illuminati.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink Crying_of_Lot_49.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink Dorothy_Hewett.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink Eight-circuit_model_of_consciousness.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink From_Ritual_to_Romance.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink Jessie_Weston.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink Lancelot.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink Le_Morte_dArthur.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink Occult.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Anton_Wilson.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink Sir_Thomas_Malory.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink T._S._Eliot.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink The_Crying_of_Lot_49.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink The_Waste_Land.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Malory.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLink Timothy_Leary.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageWikiLinkText "Chapel perilous".
- Chapel_perilous hasPhotoCollection Chapel_perilous.
- Chapel_perilous wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Chapel_perilous subject Category:Arthurian_literature.
- Chapel_perilous subject Category:Occult.
- Chapel_perilous comment "The term Chapel Perilous first appeared in Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur (1485) as the setting for an adventure in which sorceress Hellawes unsuccessfully attempts to seduce Sir Lancelot. T. S. Eliot used it symbolically in "The Waste Land" (1922). Dorothy Hewett took The Chapel Perilous as the title for her autobiographical play, in which she uses "the framework of the Arthurian legend, Sir Lancelot, to create a theatrical quest of romantic and epic proportions".".
- Chapel_perilous label "Chapel perilous".
- Chapel_perilous sameAs m.064mms4.
- Chapel_perilous sameAs Q5073124.
- Chapel_perilous sameAs Q5073124.
- Chapel_perilous wasDerivedFrom Chapel_perilous?oldid=608828664.
- Chapel_perilous isPrimaryTopicOf Chapel_perilous.