Browse Items (141 total)
- Collection: Medievalism on the Page
‘Road Knights’ by Daniel Rutter Long
Tags: art, artwork, Daniel Rutter Long, Gippsland, knight, Road knights, rural Victoria
Chaucer. [From various sources].
Tags: biography, Dante Alghieri (c.1265-1321), Early Australian Literary Tastes, Edmund Spenser (c.1552-1599), English language, Geoffrey Chaucer (c.1340-1400), Hainault, heresy, John Milton (1608–1674), John of Gaunt (1340–1399), John Wycliffe (d.1384), medieval poet, medieval poetry, poet, poetry, William Shakespeare (1564–1616)
He Still Wears the Ruff and Doublet
Tags: Adam Lindsay Gordon, Alfred Hill (1869-1960), Australian poet, Camden, doublet, Elizabeth II, Hugh Raymond McCrae (1876-1958), international appeal, Kenneth Slessor (1901-1971), line-drawings, medieval clothing, medieval lyricism, New South Wales, Norman Lindsay (1879-1969), O.B.E., pastoral poetry, poetry, royal investiture, ruff, sketches, Sydney
Notes from The Doctor’s Diary: Winter Dressing
Trades and Industrial Hall and Literary Institute Association of Sydney’s Illuminated Address presented to Thomas Bavister, 1906.
Tags: 'Illuminated Address', associations, carpenter, Christmas Bells, commemoration, flannel flowers, flowers, illuminated documents, illumination, Literary Institute, New South Wales, outstanding service, politician, Sydney, Sydney Heads, Thomas Bavister (1850-1923), tools, Trade Union, trade unionist, Trades and Industrial Hall and Literary Institute Association of Sydney, Trades Hall, tradesman, wattle, worker, workers
"Rumpelstiltskin" Pan Pow Productions stage performance at Monash University, 1974
Murder Scene, 'Murder in the Cathedral', Bonython Hall, Adelaide.
Tags: ‘Murder in the Cathedral’, actor, actors, Adelaide, archbishop, Archbishop of Canterbury, Australian Elizabethan Trust, Bonython Hall, Canterbury Cathedral, Cathedral, Hugh de Morville, knight, medieval crime, murder, play, Reginald Fitzurse, Richard le Bret, Robert Speaight, South Australia, T. S. Eliot, Thomas a’Becket, Thomas Becket, verse drama, William de Tracy
Heed Not, Poem by Henry Lawson
Tags: and a symbol for the Australian Nationalism Movement, Australian, Australian Nationalism, Australian Nationalism Movement, Australian poetry, bush, bush poet, classlessness, estates satire, famous poet, garden fair, Henry Lawson, Henry Lawson (1867-1922), knighthood, Monarchy satire, nationalism, nationalist movement, poet, toadies, toadies knighthood