- The
Complaynt of
Scotland is a
Scottish book
printed in 1549 as
propaganda during the war of the
Rough Wooing against the
Kingdom of England, and is an...
- The
Complaint (or
Complaynt) of
Roderick (or Roderyck) Mors (c. 1542), by
Henry Brinklow, is a well-known
example of 'complaint literature' of the mid-Tudor...
- English-language folk song. Its
first known appearance is in Wedderburn's
Complaynt of
Scotland (1549)
under the name "The Frog cam to the Myl dur", though...
-
available in Scotland.
Scotland countered the
English propaganda with the
Complaynt of Scotland,
probably printed in
France in 1549.
Another work, Ane Resonyng...
-
ballad dates to at
least as
early as 1549 (the
publication date of The
Complaynt of
Scotland that
mentions "The Tayl of the Ȝong Tamlene" ('The Tale of...
-
rearrangements by
different musicians in the
following years. In the 1548 work The
Complaynt of Scotland, the
anonymous author mentions "P****etyme with gude companye...
- as
early as the 1430s, but the
earliest record we have of it is in The
Complaynt of Scotland,
printed around 1549. One of the
first printed books in Middle...
-
earliest known references (in
Middle Scots) to the
ballads appeared in The
Complaynt of
Scotland (1549). Sir
Walter Scott wrote about border ballads in Minstrelsy...
- Lost, &
Where Did It Go?.
Granta Publications. Leyden, John (1801). The
Complaynt of Scotland:
Written in 1548. A Constable. pp. 318–319. Simpson, Jacqueline...
-
Robert Henryson,
William Dunbar,
Gavin Douglas and
David Lyndsay. The
Complaynt of
Scotland was an
early printed work in Scots. The
Eneados is a Middle...