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Sir Orfeo
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Sir Orfeo : ウィキペディア英語版
Sir Orfeo
(詳細はanonymous Middle English narrative poem, retelling the story of Orpheus as a king rescuing his wife from the fairy king.〔Laura A. Hibbard, ''Medieval Romance in England'' p196 New York Burt Franklin,1963〕
==History and manuscripts==

''Sir Orfeo'' is preserved in three manuscripts: the oldest, Advocates 19.2.1, known as the Auchinleck MS. is dated at about 1330; Harley 3810, is from about the beginning of the fifteenth century; and Ashmole 61, compiled over the course of several years, the portion of the MS. containing ''Sir Orfeo'' dating around 1488. The beginning of the poem describes itself as a Breton lai, and says it is derived from a no longer extant text, the ''Lai d'Orphey''.
The story contains a mixture of the Greek myth of Orpheus with Celtic mythology and folklore concerning fairies, introduced into English via the Old French Breton lais of poets like Marie de France. The ''Wooing of Etain'' bears particular resemblance to the romance and was a probable influence.〔Laura A. Hibbard, ''Medieval Romance in England'' p197-8 New York Burt Franklin,1963〕
The fragmentary Child Ballad 19 "King Orfeo" is closely related to this poem, the surviving text containing only portions of the known story.〔Francis James Child, ''The English and Scottish Popular Ballads'', v 1, p 216, Dover Publications, New York 1965〕

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