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Romance in Anglo-Norman verse by Hugh of Rhuddlan
Ipomedon is a romance composed in Anglo-Norman verse by Hugh of Rhuddlan in the late 12th century at Credenhill near Hereford. In the sequel Protheselaus
Ipomedon
Middle English translation of Hugh of Rhuddlan's Anglo-Norman romance Ipomedon composed in tail-rhyme verse, possibly in the last decade of the fourteenth
Ipomadon
14th-century English chivalric romance
twelfth centuries were absorbed into his epic. The twelfth-century romance Ipomedon, written in Norman French by Hugh of Rhuddlan, is found in a Middle English
Libeaus_Desconus
Cambro-Norman poet
Baderon, a grandson of Gilbert Fitz Richard, was his patron. His works are Ipomedon and Protheselaus, two long metrical romances from the 1180s of over 10
Hugh_of_Rhuddlan
Hugh lived at Credenhill near Hereford, according to his earlier poem Ipomedon. Protheselaus is dedicated to Hugh's patron Gilbert fitzBaderon, lord of
Protheselaus
Gilbert's patronage that the poet Hugh of Rhuddlan wrote his verse romance Ipomedon, which was among the most popular works in its genre in medieval England
Gilbert_fitzBaderon
Middle English romance
head during the final day's fighting. Like the Anglo-Norman romance hero Ipomedon, he fights in differently-coloured arms every day and nobody knows who
Sir_Gowther
French romance composed around 1150
Worde about 1500. From the Roman de Thebes also were possibly derived the Ipomedon and its sequel Protheselaus, two romans d'aventures written about the end
Romance_of_Thebes
around 1185, which is the sequel to Ipomedon. It deals with the wars and subsequent reconciliation between Ipomedon's sons, Daunus, the elder, lord of Apulia
Anglo-Norman_literature
in the three different suits of armor at the tourney resemble those of Ipomedon and Sir Gowther. Laura A. Hibbard, Medieval Romance in England p290 New
Roswall_and_Lillian
Lancelot, le Chevalier de la Charrette Yvain, le Chevalier au Lion c. 1180s Ipomedon by Hugh of Rhuddlan Protheselaus by Hugh of Rhuddlan Der arme Heinrich
12th_century_in_literature
German philologist
The Romance of Sir Beues of Hamtoun (1885) Early English Text Society Ipomedon (1889) Richard Utz, "Medieval Scholarship in Englische Studien. Part I:
Eugen_Kölbing
Copland, Ipomadon, publication year uncertain; derived from the Anglo-Norman Ipomedon (c. 1190) of Hue de Rotelande Thomas Murner, Of the Great Lutheran Fool
1522_in_poetry
IPOMEDON
IPOMEDON
IPOMEDON
IPOMEDON
Girl/Female
Bengali, Hindu, Indian, Traditional
Goddess Laxmi
Boy/Male
Celebrity, Hindu, Indian
Small
Boy/Male
Tamil
Copper red
Boy/Male
Anglo, Australian, British, English
Land Holder
Male
Egyptian
, (?) Greco-Egyptian name.
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
Cornice or Eaves
Boy/Male
British, English, French, German, Latin
Lucky
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from an agent derivative of Middle English frik(i)en ‘to move briskly or nimbly’ (from Old English frician ‘to dance’).Swiss and German : variant of Frick 2.German and Swiss German : habitational name for someone from the Frick valley in Baden.
Girl/Female
Indian, Telugu
Goddess Laxmi
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of English Wigginton.
IPOMEDON
IPOMEDON
IPOMEDON
IPOMEDON
IPOMEDON