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Layamon
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Layamon
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
Layamon , fl. c.1200, first prominent Middle English poet. He described himself as a humble priest attached to the church at Ernley (Arley Regis) near Radstone. His Brut is a chronicle in 32,341 short lines on the history of Britain, from the fall of Troy to the arrival of Brutus in Britain and continuing through the death of Cadwaladr. Layamon freely adapted the Brut of Wace and added material from other sources. His Anglo-Saxon narrative meter foreshadows the Middle English metrical system. This chronicle, important in the development of the Arthurian legend , gives one of the finest renderings of King Arthur as a national hero. It also contains the first mention of Lear and Cymbeline .
Bibliography: See his Brut, ed. by G. L. Brook and R. F. Leslie (1963).
Author not available, LAYAMON.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
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Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
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Layamon
Encyclopedia of World Biography
Layamon The English poet Layamon (active ca. 1200), or Law man, is best known for his "Brut," an important ... legend. In the beginning of his long Historia Brutonum, or Brut, Layamon gives a brief introduction to himself and tells of his inspiration ...
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Lawamon
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
or Layamon (flourished 12th century) Middle English poet. A priest who lived in Worcestershire, he is the author of the romance-chronicle ...
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Brut
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Brute , or Brutus , a Trojan, legendary founder of the British race, descendant of Aeneas. His story appears in Nennius and in Geoffrey of Monmouth, and his name gives the titles to long poems by Wace and Layamon.
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ANGLICIZE
Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language
... character is Tennyson's Arthur in Idylls of the King …the most rigorously de-Celticised and Anglicised figure since Layamon's’ ( Tom Shippey, London Review of Books , 26 July 1990). 2. To adopt the English language: ‘Are they allowed ...
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Wace
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
... Historia of Geoffrey of Monmouth. Wace's account is much more personal, vigorous, and dramatic than Geoffrey's. The Brut of Layamon is an English adaptation of Wace's chronicle; both were important in the development of the Arthurian legend . Wace's Roman ...
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