Difference between revisions of "Ivanhoe"

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See the entries on the following works:
 
See the entries on the following works:
  
''[[Deborah]]'' ()
+
''[[Deborah]]'' (Mosenthal, 1849)
  
 
''[[Ivanhoe, or The Jewess of York]]'' (Scott/Moncrieff)
 
''[[Ivanhoe, or The Jewess of York]]'' (Scott/Moncrieff)
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''[[Ivanhoe, or The Knight Templar]]'' (Scott/Farley)
 
''[[Ivanhoe, or The Knight Templar]]'' (Scott/Farley)
  
''[[Leah]]''
+
''[[Leah]]'' ()
  
 
===Film adaptations===
 
===Film adaptations===

Revision as of 06:40, 3 February 2020

Ivanhoe is the name of an influential historical novel by Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832)[1].

The original novel

First published in three volumes by Archibald Constable in Edinburgh in late 1819, though dated 1820. It was subtitled "A Romance" and the work proved to be one of the best known and most influential of Scott's novels.

Translations and Adaptations

Besides a translations of the novel itself into a wide range of languages, numerous dramatized versions of the novel, as well as plays and films based on themes from it, have been written and performed over the years.

Among them:

Stage adaptations

See the entries on the following works:

Deborah (Mosenthal, 1849)

Ivanhoe, or The Jewess of York (Scott/Moncrieff)

Ivanhoe, or The Knight Templar (Scott/Farley)

Leah ()

Film adaptations

Ivanhoe (1913),

Ivanhoe (Herbert Brenon, 1913)

Sources

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivanhoe

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Scott

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