Thomas Chestre
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Thomas_Chestre an entity of type: Thing
Thomas Chestre est un poète anglais de la fin du XIVe siècle et du début du XVe. Il n'est connu que par la mention de son nom qui figure dans la dernière strophe du roman courtois Sir Launfal : Thomas Chestre made thys taleOf the noble knyght Syr Launfale,Good of chyvalrye. D'autres œuvres de cette période lui ont été attribuées, mais sans certitude : Libeaus Desconus et .
rdf:langString
Thomas Chestre was the author of a 14th-century Middle English romance Sir Launfal, a verse romance of 1045 lines based ultimately on Marie de France's Breton lay Lanval. He was possibly also the author of the 2200-line Libeaus Desconus, a story of Sir Gawain's son Gingalain based upon similar traditions to those that inspired Renaut de Beaujeu's late-12th-century or early-13th-century Old French romance Le Bel Inconnu, and also possibly of a Middle English retelling of the mid-13th-century Old French romance Octavian. Geoffrey Chaucer parodied Libeaus Desconus, among other Middle English romances, in his Canterbury Tale of Sir Thopas.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Thomas Chestre
rdf:langString
Thomas Chestre
xsd:integer
1509217
xsd:integer
1120313713
rdf:langString
Thomas Chestre est un poète anglais de la fin du XIVe siècle et du début du XVe. Il n'est connu que par la mention de son nom qui figure dans la dernière strophe du roman courtois Sir Launfal : Thomas Chestre made thys taleOf the noble knyght Syr Launfale,Good of chyvalrye. D'autres œuvres de cette période lui ont été attribuées, mais sans certitude : Libeaus Desconus et .
rdf:langString
Thomas Chestre was the author of a 14th-century Middle English romance Sir Launfal, a verse romance of 1045 lines based ultimately on Marie de France's Breton lay Lanval. He was possibly also the author of the 2200-line Libeaus Desconus, a story of Sir Gawain's son Gingalain based upon similar traditions to those that inspired Renaut de Beaujeu's late-12th-century or early-13th-century Old French romance Le Bel Inconnu, and also possibly of a Middle English retelling of the mid-13th-century Old French romance Octavian. Geoffrey Chaucer parodied Libeaus Desconus, among other Middle English romances, in his Canterbury Tale of Sir Thopas.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
8206