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- Q5305327 subject Q10878383.
- Q5305327 subject Q8102502.
- Q5305327 subject Q8104139.
- Q5305327 subject Q8519224.
- Q5305327 subject Q8705318.
- Q5305327 abstract "The Dragon of Wantley is a legend of a dragon-slaying by a knight on Wharncliffe Crags in South Yorkshire, recounted in a comic broadside ballad of 1685, later included in Thomas Percy's 1767 Reliques of Ancient Poetry, and enjoying widespread popularity in the 18th and 19th centuries, although less well-known today. The ballad tells how the Falstaffian knight, Moore of Moore Hall obtains a bespoke suit of spiked Sheffield armour and delivers a fatal kick to the dragon's "arse-gut," its only vulnerable spot - as the dragon explains with its dying breath. The topography of the ballad is accurate in its detail as regards Wharncliffe Crags and environs, but the story, and its burlesque humour, has been enjoyed in places far from the landscape from which it appears to derive and has been used to make a number of points unrelated to it. More Hall is a 15th-century (or earlier) residence immediately below the gritstone edge of Wharncliffe Crags -- Wharncliffe being formerly known in the local vernacular as Wantley -- The dragon was reputed to reside in a den, and to fly across the valley to Allman (Dragon's) Well on the Waldershelf ridge above Deepcar.".
- Q5305327 thumbnail Wharncliffe_Dragon.JPG?width=300.
- Q5305327 wikiPageExternalLink dragon-of-wantley.php..
- Q5305327 wikiPageExternalLink history-of-sheffield-church-burgesses-trust.htm..
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q1029894.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q104190.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q10878383.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q1281119.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q1344.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q1472110.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q1606590.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q2142806.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q2376922.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q263.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q480487.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q540426.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q712930.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q7492762.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q7772831.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q8102502.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q8104139.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q8519224.
- Q5305327 wikiPageWikiLink Q8705318.
- Q5305327 comment "The Dragon of Wantley is a legend of a dragon-slaying by a knight on Wharncliffe Crags in South Yorkshire, recounted in a comic broadside ballad of 1685, later included in Thomas Percy's 1767 Reliques of Ancient Poetry, and enjoying widespread popularity in the 18th and 19th centuries, although less well-known today.".
- Q5305327 label "Dragon of Wantley".
- Q5305327 depiction Wharncliffe_Dragon.JPG.