-
Graelent is an Old
French Breton lai,
named after its protagonist. It is one of the so-called
anonymous lais . The plot is
similar to that of
Marie de...
-
Gradlon to the
Breton lai of
Graelent, as far back as Kerdanet's
edition of
Albert Le Grand's Vies des Saints. The
knight Graelent,
reduced to
poverty after...
- year
during the
Black Night, a
detail he may have
borrowed from Lai de
Graelent,
probably written in the late 12th century. Also, the last
verses of the...
-
narrative verse.
Lanval is
related to two
other anonymous lais:
Graelent and Guingamor. With
Graelent it
shares a plot
structure involving a fair
lover whose...
-
appearances are as
Graelent,
Guingamor and Guigemar, the
titular character of
three 12th-century
Breton lai "fairy lais" (lais féeriques):
Graelent, Guingamor...
-
retold in Sir Landevale,
augmented with
material from an Old
French lai
Graelent and a lost
romance that
possibly featured a
giant named Sir Valentyne....
- Graelend, and Guingamor, with
Graelent and
Guingamor (both anonymous)
drawing on Lanval, but
Guingamor also
drawing on
Graelent. Moreover,
although the narratives...
- De la Gardie, 4-7, pp. 37–48.
Margaret E. Grimes, The Lays of Desiré,
Graelent and Melion:
Edition of the
Texts with an
Introduction (New York: Institute...
-
Peete (April 1915), "The
Celtic Elements in the Lays of 'Lanval' and '
Graelent'",
Modern Philology, 12 (10): 621 (p 37), note 3, doi:10.1086/386982, JSTOR 432976...
- Cross, Tom
Peete (1915). "The
Celtic Elements in the Lays of 'Lanval' and '
Graelent'".
Modern Philology. 12 (10): 585–644. doi:10.1086/386982. JSTOR 432976...