- Sir
Tryamour is a
Middle English romance dated to the late
fourteenth century. The
source is
unknown and, like
almost all of the
Middle English romances...
- a
nearby forest. Two
maidens appear and
bring him to a lady they call
Tryamour,
daughter of the King of
Olyroun and of Fayrye, whom
Launfal finds lying...
-
Knights of the
Round Table The main
villain of the 14th
century poem Sir
Tryamour A
touring member of the
Austrian band
Harakiri for the Sky A Thoroughbred...
-
magically blinded by his
secret true love from Avalon, the
fairy princess Lady
Tryamour (identified by some as the
figure of Morgan).
Guinevere herself wields...
- mistress", who was
later identified by
Thomas Chestre's Sir
Launfal as Dame
Tryamour, the
daughter of the King of the
Celtic Otherworld who
shares many characteristics...
- wife of the king of
Aragon in a 14th-century
English verse romance Sir
Tryamour, is sent into exile,
which is
intended by the evil
steward of her husband's...
- invisibility. The 14th
Century Sir
Launfal is
provided by his
fairy lover Tryamour with an
invisible servant called Gyfre.
Launfal then
defeats the giant...
- more
serious publications,
Pynson printed po****r
romances such as Sir
Tryamour, the
travel memoir Ways to
Jerusalem by Sir John Mandeville, and, in 1509...
- in a
forest far to the west. Sir
Tryamour cuts one down to size in the
Middle English verse romance Sir
Tryamour.
Florent defeats one that is besieging...
-
published in 1516;
first complete version published 1532) Anonymous, Sir
Tryamour,
publication year uncertain;
written in the late 14th
century William Dunbar...