Parricida: Difference between revisions
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{{Inset Story | {{Inset Story | ||
|Has Critical Literature=Nishimura (2001); Brunner (1933) | |Has Critical Literature=Nishimura (2001); Brunner (1933) | ||
|Has | |Has Motif=Murder; Disposal of corpse; Deception; Deceitful son; Age versus youth; (Threat of) bodily mutilation; Riches; Illness; Medicine; Father/son relationships; Familial relationships; Boar; Patricide; Food and drink | ||
|Has Summary='''Parricide''' | |Has Summary='''Parricide''' | ||
Revision as of 19:13, 4 March 2025
Parricide
A noble knight has a single son and heir who does nothing but drink, carouse, and spend his money irresponsibly. At last, when he has spent all his allowance, he began to consider how he might kill his father and inherit all his wealth. He feigns illness, and tells his father that he sickens for want of the meat of a wild boar. Worried, his father decides to go hunt a boar in order to cure his son, and enters the nearby woods. There he is ambushed by his son and twelve of his son's companions, who kill him and chop his body into tiny pieces. The son then returns home to his sickbed, where is lies - seemingly ill and griefstricken - when news of his father's death is brought to him.
(Note: the end of of the story is incomplete in-text, and followed by c. 114 missing lines)
Note
Critical Literature
Parricida appears in the following versions and secondary versions
| Has Language Of Version | Has Branch Of Tradition | Is Adapted From |
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Parricida is narrated in the following occurrences
| Narrator | Pages |
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| Empress | Cambridge University Library MS Ff. 2, 38 |
Parricida appears in the following manuscripts
| Has Language | Has Siglum Of The Version Of The Seven Sages | Has Language Group Within Version |
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