Puer Adoptatus: Difference between revisions

From The Seven Sages of Rome
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{{Inset Story
{{Inset Story
|Has Critical Literature=Hoffman von Fallersleben (1838)
|Has Motif=Adoption; Age versus youth; Children; Death; Debt; Deception; Deceitful son; Pride; Familial relationships; Father/son relationships; Foolish old man; Lesson: greed
|Has Motif=Adoption; Age versus youth; Children; Death; Debt; Deception; Deceitful son; Pride; Familial relationships; Father/son relationships; Foolish old man; Lesson: greed
|Has Summary=An adopted son wants to live frivolously and also inherit from his father, a French gentleman. To achieve this, he incites the murder of his innocent stepmother and then uses seven other to strangle his father.
|Has Summary=An adopted son wants to live frivolously and also inherit from his father, a French gentleman. To achieve this, he incites the murder of his innocent stepmother and then uses seven other to strangle his father.


Adapted from Wikeley (1983) by Ava Byrne.
Adapted from Wikeley (1983) by Ava Byrne.
|Has Note=Analogous to Italian versions, although Heinrich Hoffmann von Fallersleben sees similarities in the middle Dutch drama Esmorzeit.
|Has Note=Analogous to Italian versions, although Heinrich Hoffmann von Fallersleben sees similarities in the middle Dutch drama Esmoreit.
}}
}}

Revision as of 20:53, 10 July 2025

An adopted son wants to live frivolously and also inherit from his father, a French gentleman. To achieve this, he incites the murder of his innocent stepmother and then uses seven other to strangle his father.

Adapted from Wikeley (1983) by Ava Byrne.

Puer Adoptatus is narrated in the following occurrences

Puer Adoptatus appears in the following manuscripts

 Has LanguageHas Siglum Of The Version Of The Seven SagesHas Language Group Within Version