-
recorded uses of the word are the
Latin Cucaniensis and the
Middle English Cokaygne, one line of
reasoning has the name
tracing to
Middle French (pays de)...
- ****aigne is
found in 14th
century Ireland as the
eponymous poem The Land of
Cokaygne,
which was a
fictional country located to the west of Spain. The concept...
- Land of ****ayne may
refer to: ****ayne or ****aigne, a
fantastic land of
plenty in po****r
medieval literature Land of ****ayne (poem), part of the 14th-century...
-
monastic orders. The
Kildare poems comprise the
following items: The Land of
Cokaygne: a
satirical piece about a
corrupt community of monks, who lead a life...
- most
successful compositions have been her
orchestral works Alchemy and
Cokaygne and her
choral piece Theophilus Thistle and the Myth of Miss Muffett. Her...
- of
access to the tree of life. The Land of ****aigne (also ****aygne,
Cokaygne), was an
imaginary land of
idleness and luxury,
famous in
medieval stories...
- that it is
important to give the
actual historic details. "The Land of
Cokaygne".
Archived from the
original on 2005-02-07.
Retrieved 2005-01-21. Griffin...
- Dublin: Hodges, Smith, & Company. p. 18. Henry, P. L. (1972). "The Land of
Cokaygne Cultures in
Contact in
Medieval Ireland".
Studia Hibernica (12): 120–141...
-
Ecclesiastical parodies were
favoured for
their societies (such as the
Abbey of
Cokaygne)
which overturned—albeit temporarily—social norms. They were an
early expression...
-
inspiration for the fourteenth-century
scathingly satirical poem Land of
Cokaygne. The name was
recorded as "Abby Slunnagh" in the maps and
notes of the...