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Narrative lay by Marie de France
"Yonec" is one of the Lais of Marie de France, written in the twelfth century by the French poet known only as Marie de France. Yonec is a Breton lai,
Yonec
Body of medieval literature
d'Arthur Marie de France 12th Anglo-Norman Lais of Marie de France: Lai de Yonec, Lai de Frêne, Lai de Lanval (...) Nennius 9th Latin Historia Brittonum
Matter_of_Britain
Italian fairy tale
noted it developed a medieval motif, but such tales as Marie de France's Yonec produced a rather different effect, being tales of adultery. A variant on
The_Canary_Prince
Series of Breton lais by the poet Marie de France
Tree') Bisclavret ('The Werewolf') Lanval Les Deux Amants ('The Two Lovers') Yonec Laüstic ('The Nightingale') Milun Chaitivel ('The Unhappy One') Chevrefoil
Lais_of_Marie_de_France
Medieval romance literature
Breton lais as well, particularly the land of "Fayerye". Marie de France's Yonec, for example, describes a woman following a trail of blood left by her lover;
Sir_Launfal
Medieval French poet
imprisonment may take the form of actual incarceration by elderly husbands, as in Yonec, and in Guigemar, where the lady who becomes Guigemar's lover is kept behind
Marie_de_France
Old Icelandic Eddaic poem
perhaps influenced by the Old Norse translation of Marie de France's poem Yonec and the Eddaic Völundarkviða. King Eiríkr of Greece has a beautiful daughter
Gullkársljóð
International cycle of stories about a bird prince
Ages. An example of the motif is found in one of Marie de France's Lais, "Yonec", though the lai develops somewhat differently: instead of a happy ending
The_Bird_Lover
Milun focuses on the birth of an illegitimate child, much like the Lai of Yonec. Bloch points out other elements such as imposition of a father's unhappy
Milun
Norse prose sagas of the romance genre
ljóð (Guigemar) Guruns ljóð (source unknown) Januals ljóð (Lanval) Jonet (Yonec) Laustik (Laüstic) Leikara ljóð (Lecheor) Milun (Milun) Naboreis (Nabaret)
Chivalric_sagas
lais, "Les Deux Amants" as well as in the anonymous "Tyolet". In Marie's "Yonec", Muldumarec accurately predicts the birth of his son just before his death
Doon_(lai)
ljóð (Guigemar) Guruns ljóð (source unknown) Januals ljóð (Lanval) Jonet (Yonec) Laustik (Laüstic) Leikara ljóð (Lecheor) Milun (Milun) Naboreis (Nabaret)
Strengleikar
L'Angelo e il Cavaliere, Castello di Stenico, Trento, Italy Il viaggio di Yonec, Castello di Avio, Trento, Italy L'incantesimo dei quattro narratori, Castello
Studio_Festi
Bisclavret and the anonymous Melion, a knight turns into a werewolf; in Marie's Yonec, a knight turns into a hawk. Tests to prove prowess and win a maiden's hand
Tyolet
14th-century English chivalric romance
twelfth-century Breton lays of Marie de France, in particular "Bisclavret" and "Yonec". R. S. Loomis notes the similarities between the early life of Perceval
Libeaus_Desconus
Italian literary fairy tale
Janssen, Sidney C. (1940). A Comparative Study of Marie de France's Lai Yonec (Thesis). Indiana University, Department of English. pp. 72ff. Klipple,
The Three Sisters (fairy tale)
The_Three_Sisters_(fairy_tale)
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Girl/Female
Indian, Telugu
Prayerful
Girl/Female
British, English
Form of Marion
Boy/Male
Tamil
With strength
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Rotherham in South Yorkshire, named as ‘homestead or village (Old English hÄm) on the river Rother’, a Celtic river name meaning ‘chief river’.
Boy/Male
Indian
One of Diamond
Girl/Female
Tamil
Worship, Praise, Reverence
Girl/Female
Irish
Ancient.
Girl/Female
Celtic English
Lofty. Eager.
Girl/Female
Arabic, Australian, Hebrew, Muslim
Patient; Feminine of Sabri
Girl/Female
German, Teutonic
Woman Warrior; Heroine; Bold Battle
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