Jeanie Deans

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jeanie_Deans an entity of type: Thing

Jeanie Deans is a fictional character in Sir Walter Scott's novel The Heart of Midlothian first published in 1818. She was one of Scott's most celebrated characters during the 19th century; she was renowned as an example of an honest, upright, sincere, highly religious person. The name "Jeanie Deans" was given to several pubs, ships, railway locomotives, an opera, a play, a poem, a song, a hybrid rose, an antipodean potato, and a geriatric unit in a hospital. They all take their name from Scott's heroine. There was also a so-called Jeanie Deans' Cottage in Edinburgh. It was demolished in 1965. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Jeanie Deans
rdf:langString Jeanie Deans
rdf:langString Jeanie Deans
xsd:integer 34437851
xsd:integer 1088466498
rdf:langString The Laird of Dumbiedykes
rdf:langString Jeanie meets the Duke of Argyle in London
rdf:langString David , Reuben , Euphemia
rdf:langString Davie Deans
rdf:langString Female
rdf:langString Dairy farmer and housewife
rdf:langString Effie Deans
rdf:langString Human
rdf:langString Reuben Butler
rdf:langString Jeanie Deans is a fictional character in Sir Walter Scott's novel The Heart of Midlothian first published in 1818. She was one of Scott's most celebrated characters during the 19th century; she was renowned as an example of an honest, upright, sincere, highly religious person. The name "Jeanie Deans" was given to several pubs, ships, railway locomotives, an opera, a play, a poem, a song, a hybrid rose, an antipodean potato, and a geriatric unit in a hospital. They all take their name from Scott's heroine. There was also a so-called Jeanie Deans' Cottage in Edinburgh. It was demolished in 1965.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 11071

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