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Guillaume de Lorris - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Books by Guillaume de Lorris: The Romance of the Rose, Der Rosenroman, Bd. 3, El libro de la rosa/ The Romaunt of the Rose (Biblioteca Medieval)…, Der Rosenroman, Bd. 1, Der Rosenroman, Bd. 2, Le Roman de la rose, tome 1 (Publié par Félix Lecoy), Le Roman de la rose, tome 2 ... Books by Guillaume de Lorris...
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Search engine that finds the best buys from among 150 million new, used, rare, and out-of-print books for sale, including books by Guillaume De Lorris. ... The Romance of the Rose by Charles Dahlberg, De Lorris Guillaume, Jean De Meun; Softcover, Princeton Univ Pr, ISBN 0691044562 (0-691-04456-2)
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Guillaume de Lorris ... Guillaume de Loris; Guillaume de Lorris; Guillaume de Machaut; Guillem; Guillemin effect; ... Guillaume de Loris; Guillaume de Lorris; Guillaume de Lorris; Guillaume de Lorris; Guillaume de Lorris; Guillaume de Machault; Guillaume de Machault; Guillaume de Machault; Guillaume de Machaut;
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Encyclopedia article about Guillaume de Lorris. Information about Guillaume de Lorris in the Columbia Encyclopedia, Computer Desktop Encyclopedia, computing dictionary. ... Guillaume de Lorris; Guillaume de Machault; Guillaume de Machault; Guillaume de Machault; Guillaume de Machaut; Guillaume de Machaut;
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Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Guillaume de Lorris. Guillaume de Lorris. Information about Guillaume de Lorris in the Hutchinson encyclopedia. ... Guillaume de Lorris (lived c. 1235)
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Guillaume de Lorris began the work probably but left it unfinished after 4,058 lines. The well-known Parisian poet Jean de Meun (who never met Guillaume de Lorris) so appreciated the work that he finished the poem with 17,000 additional lines.
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Library of College Term Papers, Research Papers, Essays and Book Reports ... "This study will analyze the duality of men's attitudes toward women as portrayed by Guillaume de Lorris and Jean de Meun in The Romance of the Rose.
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An examination of the use of allegory in these stories that demonstrate Guillaume de Lorris's and Jean de Meun's views on love and reason, as well as Dante Alighieri's views on the fall of Man.
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