Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Protheselaus> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 32 of
32
with 100 triples per page.
- Protheselaus abstract "Protheselaus is a verse romance composed in Anglo-Norman by Hue de Rotelande at the end of the 12th century. Hue lived at Credenhill near Hereford, according to his earlier poem Ipomedon. Protheselaus is dedicated to Hue's patron Gilbert fitzBaderon, lord of Monmouth. Gilbert died in or just before 1191: that date is a terminus ante quem for the completion of Protheselaus.It is a sequel to Ipomedon in the same sense in which sequels were composed to the chansons de geste: Protheselaus is introduced as the son of Ipomedon, he has adventures that are similar to his father's, and faces similar problems. He is deprived of his inheritance. He is in love with Medea and believes (wrongly, it appears) that she hates him. With the help of Dardanus and Melander he attempts to conciliate her and travels through distant lands to prove his knightly prowess, then returns and enters her service in disguise. He travels to Burgundy, defends Ismeine, is made prisoner by the \"Maiden of the Isle\" (Pucele de l'Isle), finally escapes, recovers his inheritance and marries Medea.Although Protheselaus is a continuation of the story of Ipomedon it has a different atmosphere In Ipomedonte auctor. In place of the satire, burlesque and occasional eroticism of Ipomedon the characters in Protheselaus -- especially the hero himself and his friends Dardanus and Melander -- are virtuous, selfless, and motivated by concern for the wellbeing of others. By contrast with Ipomedon, Protheselaus attracted relatively few readers in later times and was not translated into other languages.".
- Protheselaus wikiPageID "13837227".
- Protheselaus wikiPageLength "2775".
- Protheselaus wikiPageOutDegree "15".
- Protheselaus wikiPageRevisionID "680692292".
- Protheselaus wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-Norman_Text_Society.
- Protheselaus wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-Normans.
- Protheselaus wikiPageWikiLink Category:Anglo-Norman_literature.
- Protheselaus wikiPageWikiLink Chanson_de_geste.
- Protheselaus wikiPageWikiLink Chivalric_romance.
- Protheselaus wikiPageWikiLink Credenhill.
- Protheselaus wikiPageWikiLink Dominica_Legge.
- Protheselaus wikiPageWikiLink Gilbert_fitzBaderon.
- Protheselaus wikiPageWikiLink Hereford.
- Protheselaus wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Burgundy.
- Protheselaus wikiPageWikiLink Hue_de_Rotelande.
- Protheselaus wikiPageWikiLink Ipomedon.
- Protheselaus wikiPageWikiLink Monmouth.
- Protheselaus wikiPageWikiLink Terminus_post_quem.
- Protheselaus wikiPageWikiLinkText "Protheselaus".
- Protheselaus wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Protheselaus subject Category:Anglo-Norman_literature.
- Protheselaus hypernym Romance.
- Protheselaus type Work.
- Protheselaus comment "Protheselaus is a verse romance composed in Anglo-Norman by Hue de Rotelande at the end of the 12th century. Hue lived at Credenhill near Hereford, according to his earlier poem Ipomedon. Protheselaus is dedicated to Hue's patron Gilbert fitzBaderon, lord of Monmouth.".
- Protheselaus label "Protheselaus".
- Protheselaus sameAs Q7251803.
- Protheselaus sameAs Protheselaus.
- Protheselaus sameAs m.0j7mjls.
- Protheselaus sameAs Q7251803.
- Protheselaus wasDerivedFrom Protheselaus?oldid=680692292.
- Protheselaus isPrimaryTopicOf Protheselaus.