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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Greysteil
rdf:type
yago:EpicPoem106379721 yago:Writing106362953 yago:Communication100033020 yago:LiteraryComposition106364329 yago:Abstraction100002137 yago:WikicatEpicPoems dbo:Poem yago:WikicatScottishPoems yago:Poem106377442 yago:WrittenCommunication106349220 yago:Wikicat16th-centuryPoems
rdfs:label
Greysteil
rdfs:comment
Greysteil ("Graysteel") is a medieval poem popular in 16th century Scotland. Set to music, it was performed for James IV of Scotland and James V of Scotland. The poem was also called Syr Egeir and Syr Gryme, Eger and Grime being the names of the two knights who fight Greysteil and whose contrasted virtues are the poem's real subject.
dcterms:subject
dbc:Romance_(genre) dbc:16th_century_in_Scotland dbc:Middle_Scots_poems dbc:Scottish_music dbc:16th-century_poems dbc:Arthurian_legend dbc:Scottish_poems dbc:Scots_language
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1083276982
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dbo:abstract
Greysteil ("Graysteel") is a medieval poem popular in 16th century Scotland. Set to music, it was performed for James IV of Scotland and James V of Scotland. The poem was also called Syr Egeir and Syr Gryme, Eger and Grime being the names of the two knights who fight Greysteil and whose contrasted virtues are the poem's real subject. The name of the protagonist, a strong and agile knight, opulent, tainted with the black-arts, and vanquished by a magic sword provided by a powerful woman, was adopted as a nickname for two 16th-century courtiers, Archibald Douglas of Kilspindie who was said to have been dominated by his wife Isobel Hoppar, and William Ruthven, 1st Earl of Gowrie, and Alexander Montgomery, 6th Earl of Eglinton in the 17th-century, and was a given name of the 20th-century 2nd Earl of Gowrie.
gold:hypernym
dbr:Poem
prov:wasDerivedFrom
wikipedia-en:Greysteil?oldid=1083276982&ns=0
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wikipedia-en:Greysteil