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http://dbpedia.org/ontology/abstract Friar Rush (Broder Rusche, Bruder Rausch, Friar Rush (Broder Rusche, Bruder Rausch, Broder Ruus) is the title of a medieval Low German legend, surviving in a 1488 edition in verse form. During the 16th and 17th centuries, numerous High German, Scandinavian (Danish and Swedish), Dutch and English translations and adaptations in Volksbuch or chap book form were printed. The first High German edition dates to 1515, printed in Strassburg.The story along with those of Till Eulenspiegel, Faust and Marcolf was among the most successful popular literature in 16th-century Germany.The various adaptations vary in their style and focus, some intending to set a moral example or criticize excesses in monastic life, others simply intending to amuse the reader. A connection between Friar Rush and Hödekin, a kobold figure of German folklore, was suggested by the Shakespeare scholar George Lyman Kittredge, who noted the connection has been made in Reginald Scott's Discoverie of Witchcraft, 1584. Kittredge (1900) criticizes the then-common identification of Friar Rush with Robin Goodfellow as simplistic. Rush with Robin Goodfellow as simplistic. , Bruder Rausch ist eine niederdeutsche SatiBruder Rausch ist eine niederdeutsche Satire, in der erzählt wird, wie der Teufel als „Bruder Rausch“ Koch in einem Kloster wird, die Mönche verspottet und ihre Unzucht fördert, bis er schließlich gebannt wird. Die Schrift erschien 1488 in niederdeutscher und 1508 in hochdeutscher Sprache. Auch in Skandinavien und England war diese Sage bekannt. Wilhelm Hertz schuf 1882 aus dem Stoff eine Verserzählung. Möglicherweise besteht eine Verbindung zur Gestalt des Hödeken.t eine Verbindung zur Gestalt des Hödeken.
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rdfs:comment Bruder Rausch ist eine niederdeutsche SatiBruder Rausch ist eine niederdeutsche Satire, in der erzählt wird, wie der Teufel als „Bruder Rausch“ Koch in einem Kloster wird, die Mönche verspottet und ihre Unzucht fördert, bis er schließlich gebannt wird. Die Schrift erschien 1488 in niederdeutscher und 1508 in hochdeutscher Sprache. Auch in Skandinavien und England war diese Sage bekannt. Wilhelm Hertz schuf 1882 aus dem Stoff eine Verserzählung. Möglicherweise besteht eine Verbindung zur Gestalt des Hödeken.t eine Verbindung zur Gestalt des Hödeken. , Friar Rush (Broder Rusche, Bruder Rausch, Friar Rush (Broder Rusche, Bruder Rausch, Broder Ruus) is the title of a medieval Low German legend, surviving in a 1488 edition in verse form. During the 16th and 17th centuries, numerous High German, Scandinavian (Danish and Swedish), Dutch and English translations and adaptations in Volksbuch or chap book form were printed. The first High German edition dates to 1515, printed in Strassburg.The story along with those of Till Eulenspiegel, Faust and Marcolf was among the most successful popular literature in 16th-century Germany.The various adaptations vary in their style and focus, some intending to set a moral example or criticize excesses in monastic life, others simply intending to amuse the reader.hers simply intending to amuse the reader.
rdfs:label Bruder Rausch , Friar Rush
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