Dolly Winthrop

E305315

Dolly Winthrop is a kind-hearted, practical village woman in George Eliot’s novel "Silas Marner," known for her moral wisdom and compassionate support of the reclusive weaver.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Dolly Winthrop canonical 2

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (43)

Predicate Object
instanceOf female character
fictional character
literary character
appearsIn Silas Marner
associatedWithTheme charity
community
redemption
rural life
characterTrait compassionate
kind-hearted
morally wise
pious
practical
createdBy George Eliot
embodies Christian charity
village common sense
familyName Winthrop family
surface form: Winthrop
firstPublicationDate 1861
firstPublicationIn Silas Marner
surface form: Silas Marner: The Weaver of Raveloe
genreOfWork novel
givenName Dolly
hasChild Aaron Winthrop
helpsRaise Eppie
languageOfWork English
literaryPeriod Victorian literature
moralPosition represents communal morality in Raveloe
narrativeFunction bridge between Silas and the village community
nationality English
occupation housewife
offers moral counsel to Silas Marner
practical help to Silas Marner
providesSupportTo Silas Marner
relationshipTypeWithAaronWinthrop mother
relationshipTypeWithEppie motherly figure
relationshipTypeWithSilasMarner friend
relationshipWith Aaron Winthrop
Eppie
Silas Marner
religiousView simple village Christianity
residence Raveloe
roleInWork moral guide
supporting character
settingOfWork 19th-century rural England

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

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

Silas Marner hasCharacter Dolly Winthrop
Raveloe inhabitant Dolly Winthrop