Giants in Those Days: Folklore, Ancient History, and Nationalism"'Traditional' (i.e. medieval) gigantology, both scholarly and - to the extent that it existed - popular, was rooted in biblical and classical texts, and portrayed giants as depraved, evil, and godless: very different from what we see in Rabelais. Dante developed them as denizens of Hell. Giants were primarily antediluvian, and were generally understood as a race distinct from (or debased from) humanity. Key biblical giants included the nephilim (offspring of the 'sons of God and daughters of men' in Genesis 6) and the anakim (indigenous opposition to the settlement of Canaan in Numbers and Deuteronomy). |
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Page 304
... Fanfreluches antidotées , only their beginning was spoiled by the nibbling of rats and moths ; but Al- cofrybas is careful to transcribe the fragmentary letters of the first five verses exactly as he finds them , even though several ...
... Fanfreluches antidotées , only their beginning was spoiled by the nibbling of rats and moths ; but Al- cofrybas is careful to transcribe the fragmentary letters of the first five verses exactly as he finds them , even though several ...
Page 313
... Fanfreluches and their implications . Furthermore , the significance of the Fanfreluches ( and , presumably , of the genealogy ) is undercut by the fact that it is apparently a papist forgery . One of the most damning graphological ...
... Fanfreluches and their implications . Furthermore , the significance of the Fanfreluches ( and , presumably , of the genealogy ) is undercut by the fact that it is apparently a papist forgery . One of the most damning graphological ...
Page 393
... Fanfreluches antidotées ( Gargantua , ed . Calder and Screech , 27n . ) . According to the genealogies of Berosus , the Titans are the uncles of Hercules ' father Osiris ( 1515 fols . 110-14 ′ ) ; he also claims that the Titans known to ...
... Fanfreluches antidotées ( Gargantua , ed . Calder and Screech , 27n . ) . According to the genealogies of Berosus , the Titans are the uncles of Hercules ' father Osiris ( 1515 fols . 110-14 ′ ) ; he also claims that the Titans known to ...
Contents
Annius of Viterbo the Flood | 98 |
4 | 116 |
Rabelaiss Two Gigantologies | 185 |
Copyright | |
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Adam Alcofrybas Alcofrybas's ancient Annian Annius Annius's antediluvian Antiquities appears assertion Augustine authority Bakhtin Berosus Berrong biblical Cain Celtes century Champier chap Chapter Christ Christian Christopher Chroniques Gargantuines Cohen commentary culture Defaux descendants discourse Duval editions effigies Enoch erudite Etruscan etymology evil fact Fanfreluches filii Flood folkloric France François François Rabelais French Gallic Gargan Gargantua Gaul genealogy Genesis Giants gigantology Godfrey of Viterbo Grandes Chroniques Greek Hebrew historiographic human Hurtaly Illustrations interpretation Italian Italy Jean Lemaire Josephus Jourda kings later Latin Lefranc legend Lemaire's literal Lyra medieval mentions miscegenation modern Myth narrative narrator nature Noachian Noah Noah's Notes to Pages Oeuvres Ogyges Old Testament origin Osiris otherworld Pantagruel's genealogy Panurge Panurge's Paris parody Patriotic Sophistry popular postdiluvian prologue quod Rabelais Rabelais's race readers reference Renaissance Roman Samothes says scholars Scripture Seth story tion traditional Trans translation typological Viterbo vols writers