-
Triermain Castle was a
castle near Brampton, ****bria, England.
Triermain, ****bria (Trewermain,
Treverman c 1200): 'homestead at the stone' (Welsh tre(f)...
- The
Bridal of
Triermain is a
narrative poem in
three cantos by
Walter Scott,
published anonymously in 1813. It is
written in a
flexible metre of four...
- Campaign, with
profits donated to
Portuguese war sufferers); The
Bridal of
Triermain (published
anonymously in 1813); The
Field of
Waterloo (1815); and Harold...
-
Roland I de Vaux, Lord of
Triermain and Tercrosset, (died on or
after 1212) was a
prominent 12th-century
English noble. Vaux was the
illegitimate son...
-
Bridal of
Triermain in 1812. In this,
Castle Rock
appears as the
setting for the
Enchanted Castle from
which the hero, Sir
Roland de Vaux of
Triermain, must...
- ****bria (Talentir 1200–25): 'brow/end of the land' (Welsh tal y tir)
Triermain, ****bria (Trewermain,
Treverman c 1200): 'homestead at the stone' (Welsh...
- Vaux, also
known as
Randolph or
Ranulf de Vallibus, (died 1199) Lord of
Triermain and
later Lord of Gilsland, was a
prominent 12th-century
English noble...
-
Arthur and
mother of
Gyneth in Sir
Walter Scott's work The
Bridal of
Triermain (1813) Gwendolen,
loathly lady in
Reginald Heber's
Fragments of The Masque...
- Mountain), a rock
formation of the
Table Mountain m****if
Castle Rock of
Triermain, a crag on Watson's Dodd in the
English Lake District, U.K.
Castle Rock...
- 18th-century play Tom Thumb. In
Walter Scott's 18th-century poem The
Bridal of
Triermain, Gyneth, Arthur's
daughter from his
romance with a half-djinn
queen Guendolen...