Diniz
Diniz Port. Dinis , 1261-1325, king of Portugal (1279-1325), son and successor of Alfonso III. Like his grandfather, Alfonso X of Castile, whose legal works he had translated into Portuguese, Diniz was a poet and a patron of literature. He founded (1290) at Lisbon the university that was later moved to Coimbra . He also stimulated commerce and industry and encouraged agriculture, giving special favors to nobles who would pursue farming. He is therefore sometimes called o Lavrador [the farmer]. Diniz laid down laws to restrict further acquisitions of land by the church, confiscated the lands of the Templars, and generally worked to increase the royal holdings. The reign was relatively peaceful, though at its beginning the king's brother led several unsuccessful revolts, which involved Diniz in a desultory war with Castile. The last years of his reign were darkened by revolts of his son, later Alfonso IV. All these conflicts were settled by the intervention of Diniz's wife Isabella, better known as St. Elizabeth of Portugal. Diniz is also known in English as Denis or Dionysius.
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Guillaume de Lorris and Jean de Meun: Narcissus and Pygmalion.(Critical Essay)
Magazine article from: The Romanic Review; 11/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...Near the beginning of the poem Guillaume de Lorris recounts Ovid's story of...order to make him more like Guillaume de Lorris' Narcissus. When Amant enters...Narcissus that is operative in Guillaume de Lorris's text at this point is collapsed...
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An allegorical mirror: the pool of Narcissus in Guillaume de Lorris' Romance of the Rose.
Magazine article from: The Romanic Review; 11/1/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...optical nerve and brain: Hunain's description of the eye's structure provides an important detail for our understanding of Guillaume's fountain, for it indicates that the crystals beneath the water, with their ability to receive color from the sun's...
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Pseudo-autobiography in the Fourteenth Century: Juan Ruiz Guillaume de Machaut, Jean Froissart and Geoffrey Chaucer.(Review)
Magazine article from: Medium Aevum; 3/22/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...narrator of Le Roman de la Rose, when `Guillaume de Lorris' is specifically, and wrongly, named...cited is that following the end of the `Guillaume de Lorris' section and the naming of Guillaume and Jean de Meun as authors by Amor in...
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Ardis Butterfield. Poetry and Music in Medieval France from Jean Renart to Guillaume Machaut.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: The Romanic Review; 1/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...Renart's Roman de la Rose ou de Guillaume de Dole from the early decades...focus on the Roman de la Rose of Guillaume de Lorris revised by Jean de Meun. Moreover...between Adam de la Halle and Guillaume de Machaut occur within a narrative...
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Reading the 'Rose:' literacy and the presentation of the 'Roman de la Rose' in medieval manuscripts.
Magazine article from: The Romanic Review; 1/1/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...the death of the first author, Guillaume de Lorris. Jean de Meun, speaking through...quotation of the last six verses of Guillaume's poem (vv. 10525-10530...10565-10566). Jean and Guillaume are also made to take their place...
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Le Roman de la Rose.
Magazine article from: Medium Aevum; 9/22/1993; 611 words
; Guillaume de Lorris et Jean de Meun, Le Roman de la Rose, edition d'apres les manuscrits...and is one of the only two manuscripts to give just the poem of Guillaume de Lorris, followed by a brief anonymous conclusion. For the continuation...
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The Romance of the Rose and its Medieval Readers: Interpretation, Reception, Manuscript Transmission.
Magazine article from: Medium Aevum; 9/22/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...Langlois's hypothesis that Guillaume de Lorris's Roman was popular before...than a summary conclusion to Guillaume's plot. Similarly, the way...literary imitation of the Roman in Guillaume de Deguileville's Pelerinage...
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Akbari, Suzanne Conklin, Seeing Through the Veil: Optical Theory and Medieval Allegory.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Parergon; 1/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...of four medieval authors. In Guillaume de Lorris's Roman de la rose, Akbari...structure is compelling evidence that Guillaume's Roman de la rose is complete...contrast, Jean de Meun subsumes Guillaume's poem to his own ends, by...
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Fortune's Faces: The 'Roman de la Rose' and the Poetics of Contingency.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: The Modern Language Review; 7/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...names the two poets and foretells Guillaume's death and Jean's birth...of the poem, cannot be either Guillaume or Jean. Yet if one consults...he speaks is none other than Guillaume de Lorris, identified explicitly as such...
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Internal Differences and Meanings in the Roman de la Rose.(Review)
Magazine article from: Medium Aevum; 9/22/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...grounds. Kelly sees Jean's Rose as a recasting of Guillaume de Lorris's dream through the refracting mirrors of Ovid and Boethius, thereby undercutting Guillaume's courtly idealism. The result can be seen as a...
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Guillaume de Lorris
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Guillaume de Lorris The French poet Guillaume de Lorris (ca. 1210-ca. 1237) was the author of the first...place in the Romance of the Rose in which the name of Guillaume de Lorris appears is in the continuation of Jean de Meun, which...
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Lorris, Guillaume de
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Lorris, Guillaume de, see Roman de la Rose .
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Jean de Meun
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...born in Meun-sur-Loire, the general region of Guillaume de Lorris, to whose Romance of the Rose he added 17,722...medieval scientist-philosopher. In contrast with Guillaume de Lorris, Jean is bourgeois, extremely learned, realistic...
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French Literature and Language
Encyclopedia entry from: Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World
...in the case of the immensely influential Roman de la rose (c. 1225 – 1275; Romance of the rose) of Guillaume de Lorris (fl. early thirteenth century) and Jean de Meun (d. 1305), an often salacious misogyny. This text, and...
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Le Roman de la Rose
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...lines in eight-syllable couplets. It is in two parts. The first (4,058 lines) was written (c.1237) by Guillaume de Lorris and was left unfinished. It is an elaborate allegory on the psychology of love, often subtle and charming. The...
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