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goliard การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • The word " goliard " outlived the original meaning.
  • In particular, the Goliards were noted for profane parodies of religious texts.
  • Henry IX traveled through Europe as a goliard.
  • Shaw has been a Yale Baroque Ensemble fellow and a Rice University Goliard fellow.
  • Dafydd may have derived the theme of sexual comedy from the " goliards.
  • Waddell is best known for bringing to light the history of the medieval goliards in this book.
  • Pidgin strays through bar and junkyards, rodeos and carnivals, encountering the remnants of the Goliard tribe.
  • He was by then undertaking a hermeutic research into the work of Goliards and Fran鏾is Villon, whom he deeply admired.
  • As a result of their rebellious writings against the church, the goliards were eventually denied the privileges of the clergy.
  • By the 14th century, the word goliard became synonymous with minstrel, and no longer referred to a particular group of clergy.
  • Expressing their lusty lifestyle, the goliards wrote about the physicality of love, in contrast to the chivalric focus of the troubadours.
  • Most of the poems and songs appear to be the work of Goliards, clergy ( mostly students ) who satirized the Catholic Church.
  • Inspired by the Code of Chivalry, troubadours composed and performed vernacular songs ( in contrast to the older tradition, dating back to the 10th century, of goliards.
  • This troubadour form melded with goliard poetry and was practiced in France and Occitania until the " Carmina Burana " of " c . " 1230.
  • However, the work is indicative of the Goliard movement as a whole, and is often used as an example of the sociopolitical situation in the later half of the twelfth century.
  • The collection was found in 1803 in the Benedictine Carmina Cantabrigiensia ", the " Carmina Burana " is considered to be the most important collection of Goliard and vagabond songs.
  • The dancers rush on in monk's robes, which they promptly shed; Orff's inspiration, in fact, was the rejection of asceticism by wandering students and monks called goliards.
  • In a style reminiscent of the Goliards, its language echoes that of the " Office of the Dead " as well as that of the Lord's Prayer and the Requiem.
  • It was probably during his student years that he composed a number of Latin sequences after the manner of the Goliards, some of which were preserved in the " Carmina Burana " collection.
  • The goliards used sacred sources such as texts from the scholastic philosophy also is frequently featured in their poems, either for satirical purposes, or because these concepts were familiar parts of the writers'working vocabulary.
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