Caepulla: Difference between revisions

From The Seven Sages of Rome
(Created page with "{{Inset Story |Has Short Description=A Milanese doctor has a gravely ill son, who craves an onion. His wife persuades the doctor to not allow his son it, and he died. The doctor learns that the onion would have cured his son, kills his wife (the boy's mother) and then himself. Adapted from Wikeley (1983) by Ava Byrne, }}")
 
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|Has Short Description=A Milanese doctor has a gravely ill son, who craves an onion. His wife persuades the doctor to not allow his son it, and he died. The doctor learns that the onion would have cured his son, kills his wife (the boy's mother) and then himself.
|Has Short Description=A Milanese doctor has a gravely ill son, who craves an onion. His wife persuades the doctor to not allow his son it, and he died. The doctor learns that the onion would have cured his son, kills his wife (the boy's mother) and then himself.


Adapted from Wikeley (1983) by Ava Byrne,
Adapted from Wikeley (1983) by Ava Byrne.
|Has Motif=Children; Death; Death of son; Deceitful woman; Grief; Father/son relationships; Illness; Lesson: women’s cleverness and deceit; Medicine; Murder; Suicide
}}
}}

Revision as of 20:21, 10 July 2025

Critical Literature
No critical literature available
Caepulla appears in the following versions and secondary versions
Caepulla is narrated in the following occurrences
No recorded narrations available.
Caepulla appears in the following manuscripts
This inset story appears in no manuscripts of the database
Property "Has Short Description" (as page type) with input value "A Milanese doctor has a gravely ill son, who craves an onion. His wife persuades the doctor to not allow his son it, and he died. The doctor learns that the onion would have cured his son, kills his wife (the boy's mother) and then himself.</br></br>Adapted from Wikeley (1983) by Ava Byrne." contains invalid characters or is incomplete and therefore can cause unexpected results during a query or annotation process.