Rauf Coilyear: Difference between revisions
From International Robin Hood Bibliography
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* {{:Tonndorf, Max 1894a}}. | * {{:Tonndorf, Max 1894a}}. | ||
== Studies and criticism == | == Studies and criticism == | ||
* {{: | * {{:Bradbury, Nancy Mason 2011a}} | ||
* {{:Putter, Ad 2012a}} | * {{:Putter, Ad 2012a}} | ||
* {{:Wright, Glenn 2001a}}. | * {{:Wright, Glenn 2001a}}. | ||
== Allusions == | == Allusions == | ||
{{#ask:[[Category:Allusions (Rauf Coilyear)]]|format=embedded|embedformat=h3|columns=1|limit=1000|sort=Utitle}} | {{#ask:[[Category:Allusions (Rauf Coilyear)]]|format=embedded|embedformat=h3|columns=1|limit=1000|sort=Utitle}} |
Revision as of 00:09, 1 April 2019
By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-07-22. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2015-09-05.
Primary sources: literary
Primary editions
- Anonymous. Heir beginnis the taill of Rauf coilȝear how he harbreit King charlis (St Andrews, 1572). Not seen
Facsimile editions
Scholarly and literary editions
- Browne, William Hand, ed. The Taill of Rauf Coilyear: a Scottish Metrical Romance of the Fifteenth Century (Baltimore, 1903)
- Tonndorf, Max, ed. The Taill of Rauf Coilyear (Berlin, 1894).
Studies and criticism
- Bradbury, Nancy Mason. 'Representations of Peasant Speech: Some Literary and Social Contexts for The Taill of Rauf Coilyear', in: Rhiannon Purdie, ed.; Cichon, Michael, ed. Medieval Romance, Medieval Contexts (Studies in Medieval Romance, vol. [15]) ([Woodbridge, Suffolk; Rochester, New York], 2011), pp. 19-34
- Putter, Ad. 'Ralph the Collier', in: Cartlidge, Neil, ed. Heroes and Anti-Heroes in Medieval Romance (Studies in Medieval Romance, vol. [16]) ([Woodbridge, Suffolk; Rochester, New York], 2012), pp. 145-58
- Wright, Glenn. 'Churl's Courtesy: Rauf Coilyear and Its English Analogues', Neophilologus, vol. 85 (2001), pp. 647-662.
Allusions
1590 - Nashe, Thomas - Almond for Parrot
[...] for if a man should imagine of fruite by the rottennesse, of garmentes by the moath frets, of wine by the sowrnesse, I warrant him for euer being good costerd-monger, broker, or vintner whiles he liues. Therefore we must not measure of Martin as he is allied to *'Elderton or tongd like Will Tony, as he was attired like an Ape on ye stage, or sits writing of Pāphlets in some spare outhouse, but as hee is Mar-Prelat of Englād, as he surpasseth King & colier, in crying, So ho ho, brother Bridges.[1]
Records
1316 - Ralph the Collier in Manor of Wakefield
[...] Ralph the Colier [...] 2d. [...] for the same [i.e. not coming to court.][2]
Notes