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Breton Lai - Arthurian Literature A "lai", also known as a "Breton Lai" or a "narrative lai", is a form of Medieval poetry composed in either Old French or Middle English. Marie's 12 lais, of which Chevrefoil is number 11, are probably the earliest surviving examples of this form.
The Breton Lays | Harvard's Geoffrey Chaucer Website The "Breton lays" are short romances, often (but not always) based on the earlier French lais of Marie de France. Most often they involve love and the supernatural; Chaucer calls his Franklin's Tale a "Breton lay" but it is a very unusual example of the genre.
Breton lai - Academic Dictionaries and Encyclopedias A Breton lai, also known as a narrative lay or simply a lay, is a form of medieval French and English romance literature. Lais are short ( typically 600 – 1000 lines ), rhymed tales of love and chivalry, often involving supernatural and fairy - world Celtic motifs.
Breton lai - Wikipedia A Breton lai, also known as a narrative lay or simply a lay, is a form of medieval French and English romance literature. Lais are short (typically 600–1000 lines), rhymed tales of love and chivalry, often involving supernatural and fairy-world Celtic motifs.
What is a lai? | UCL Mapping the European Breton Lai The Breton lai was a popular and widespread genre of text in the European Middle Ages. Comprising short rhymed stories about fantastical adventures, the supernatural, magic, chivalry, and, above all, love, lais were presented as written versions of the tales of the old Bretons, and were first recorded, in French, in twelfth-century England by a ...
What is a lai? The Franklin explains… - University College London 15 Aug 2013 · Here the Franklin quickly name-checks the essential features he feels one might expect lais to have: they were composed in a mistily obscure far-off past by the ancient Bretons, in the Breton language; they recount stories of adventures; and they are set to music.
Who wrote lais? | UCL Mapping the European Breton Lai Lais frequently declare in their prologues that they are taken from the tales of the ancient Bretons; for example, the prologue to Marie de France’s Equitan, one of the earliest lais to be recorded, begins in the following way:
Sir Launfal - Wikipedia Sir Orfeo follows a company of ladies into the side of a cliff and through the rock until he emerges into an Otherworld, in a Middle English Breton lai, where he rescues his wife who had been abducted, from amongst those who have been beheaded and burnt and suffocated. [23]
Breton lai - 1066 A Breton lai, also known as a narrative lay or simply a lay, is a form of medieval French and English romance literature. Lais are short (typically 600-1000 lines), rhymed tales of love and chivalry, often involving supernatural and fairy-world Celtic motifs.
Breton lay | Medieval Ballad, Chivalric Romance, Verse Narrative ... Breton lay, poetic form so called because Breton professional storytellers supposedly recited similar poems, though none are extant. A short, rhymed romance recounting a love story, it includes supernatural elements, mythology transformed by medieval chivalry, and the Celtic idea of faerie, the land of enchantment.