The Troy Book

E279206

The Troy Book is a lengthy 15th-century Middle English poem by John Lydgate that retells the story of the Trojan War, drawing on classical and medieval sources.

All labels observed (2)

Label Occurrences
The Troy Book canonical 2
Troy Book 1

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Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Middle English poem
narrative poem
retelling of the Trojan War
associatedWith Lancastrian court culture
author John Lydgate
authorNationality English
basedOn classical sources
medieval sources
story of the Trojan War
circulation read in aristocratic and courtly circles
commissionedBy Henry V of England
commissionedWhen as Prince of Wales
countryOfOrigin England
dateWritten 15th century
featuresCharacter Achilles
Cressida
Hector
Helen of Troy
Paris
Priam
Troilus
form octosyllabic couplets
genre chivalric narrative
historical romance
influencedBy Geoffrey Chaucer
surface form: Geoffrey Chaucer's works
language Middle English
literaryMovement medieval historiographical poetry
literaryPeriod Late Middle Ages
literaryTradition Troy narrative tradition in medieval England
manuscriptTradition multiple surviving manuscripts
meter rhymed couplets
narrativeScope aftermath of the Trojan War
events leading up to the Trojan War
Trojan War
surface form: the Trojan War itself
notableFor fusion of classical material with medieval chivalric ideals
length
moral and didactic commentary
primarySource Guido delle Colonne's Historia destructionis Troiae
relatedWork John Lydgate's Fall of Princes
setting Troy
ancient Mediterranean world
subjectMatter fate and fortune
heroism and chivalry
the fall of cities
theme moral lessons drawn from classical history
transience of worldly glory

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (3)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

John Lydgate notableWork The Troy Book
John Lydgate wroteText The Troy Book
The Destruction of Troy relatedWork The Troy Book
this entity surface form: Troy Book