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"Eliduc" is a Breton lai by the medieval poet Marie de France. The twelfth and last poem in the collection known as The Lais of Marie de France, it appears
Eliduc
1974 book by John Fowles
five novellas and short stories with interlacing themes: The Ebony Tower, Eliduc, Poor Koko, The Enigma and The Cloud. Henry Breasley is an elderly painter
The_Ebony_Tower
German fairy tale
doi:10.1515/FABL.2008.021. S2CID 161823801. Nutt, Alfred. "The Lai of Eliduc and the Märchen of Little Snow-White". In: Folk-Lore Volume 3. London: David
Snow_White
Medieval European literary conception of love
the church and to the individual Christian soul". Marie de France's lai "Eliduc" toys with the idea that human romantic love is a symbol for God's love
Courtly_love
Series of Breton lais by the poet Marie de France
Lanval Les Deux Amants ('The Two Lovers') Yonec Laüstic ('The Nightingale') Milun Chaitivel ('The Unhappy One') Chevrefoil ('The Honeysuckle') Eliduc
Lais_of_Marie_de_France
Medieval French poet
remember them. Her lais range in length from 118 (Chevrefoil) to 1,184 lines (Eliduc), frequently describe courtly love entangled in love triangles involving
Marie_de_France
Flemish or French trouvère
Beatrice, treats of a similar situation to that outlined in the lay of Eliduc by Marie de France. See the Œuvres de Gautier d'Arras, ed. E Løseth (2 vols
Gautier_d'Arras
German fairy tale
motif of the animal reviving its mate with a plant can be found in the poem Eliduc by Marie de France. Hans-Jörg Uther noted literary predecessors in the Indian
The_Three_Snake-Leaves
Narrative poem by Marie de France
Whitfield, Pare. “Power Plays: Relationships in Marie De France’s Lanval and Eliduc.” Medieval Perspectives, vol. 14, Jan. 1999, pp. 242–254. Sharon Kinoshita
Lanval
Scottish fairy tale
Celtic folklorist Alfred Nutt called Jacobs's attention to the Breton lai of Eliduc. According to Alan Bruford, Donald A. MacDonald and Christine Shojaei Kawan
Gold-Tree_and_Silver-Tree
Narrative lay by Marie de France
importance of fidelity. If this is true, "Chevrefoil" may be paired with "Eliduc," the final poem in the collection. One of the most discussed features of
Chevrefoil
Deux Amants) Tveggia elskanda strengleikr (source unknown) Marie's lai Eliduc is not found in Scandinavian manuscripts but the motif of a character learning
Strengleikar
English journalist and poet (1823–1859)
Surrey of typhoid fever, on 30 July 1859. Roscoe published two tragedies, Eliduc (1846) and Violenzia (1851, anon.), and much verse. As a journalist he had
William_Caldwell_Roscoe
Fairy-tale motif
{{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) Nutt, Alfred. "The Lai of Eliduc and the Märchen of Little Snow-White". In: Folk-Lore Volume 3. London: David
Calumniated_Wife
"trickster" and perhaps "minstrel". Like Marie de France's Chaitivel or Eliduc, the lai of "Lecheor" has a primary title given by the author and a secondary
Lecheor
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Girl/Female
Hebrew American English
Gift from God.
Boy/Male
American, British, Celtic, English, Gaelic, Irish
From the Judge's Meadow; Proud
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
The Highest Light; God's Light; Flame of the Supreme
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Malayalam, Tamil
Well Being; Harmonious; Healing and Spiritual Frame of Mind
Boy/Male
Tamil
Eternal, Unsurpassed
Girl/Female
Tamil
Wavy, Night
Boy/Male
Australian
Sweet Kind
Boy/Male
Assamese, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sanskrit, Tamil, Telugu
Desire; Wish
Surname or Lastname
English and Scottish
English and Scottish : patronymic from the personal name Drew.Danish, Dutch, and German : from a vernacular form of the personal name Andreas.
Boy/Male
Indian, Tamil, Telugu
Lord Muruga; Happy; Joy; Beauty
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