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Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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{{trope}}
{{trope}}{{page should be category}}
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* The [[Hinduism|Hindu]] [[Hindu Mythology|Puranas]] were composed in more-or-less their present form during the centuries before about 1000 CE, although their origins and some portions of the texts go back to at least 300 BCE.
* The [[Hinduism|Hindu]] [[Hindu Mythology|Puranas]] were composed in more-or-less their present form during the centuries before about 1000 CE, although their origins and some portions of the texts go back to at least 300 BCE.


== Tropes from this time period ==
{{tropelist|Tropes from this time period}}

* [[Abhorrent Admirer]]: Seen in the Wife of Bath's Tale in ''[[The Canterbury Tales]]''.
* [[Abhorrent Admirer]]: Seen in the Wife of Bath's Tale in ''[[The Canterbury Tales]]''.
* [[Above the Influence]]: Kamar and Budur in ''The [[Arabian Nights]]''.
* [[Above the Influence]]: Kamar and Budur in ''The [[Arabian Nights]]''.
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* [[The Ageless]]: The [[Norse Mythology|Norse gods]] are unaging, so long as they continue to eat the Apples of Idun.
* [[The Ageless]]: The [[Norse Mythology|Norse gods]] are unaging, so long as they continue to eat the Apples of Idun.
* [[Alas, Poor Yorick]]: St. Catherine of Siena did this, supposedly.
* [[Alas, Poor Yorick]]: St. Catherine of Siena did this, supposedly.
* [[All Witches Have Cats]]: 'A woman with black cat is a witch' dates to this time period.
* [[All Witches Have Cats]]: 'A woman with black cat is a witch' dates to this time period.
* [[Anatomically-Impossible Sex]]: Works by Duke William IX of Aquitaine.
* [[Anatomically-Impossible Sex]]: Works by Duke William IX of Aquitaine.
* [[Arrow Catch]]: Odin in [[Norse Mythology]] and Jiang Wei in ''[[Romance of the Three Kingdoms]]'' can both do this.
* [[Arrow Catch]]: Odin in [[Norse Mythology]] and Jiang Wei in ''[[Romance of the Three Kingdoms]]'' can both do this.
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* [[IKEA Erotica]]: The gods Izanagi and Izanami, in the Japanese creation myth.
* [[IKEA Erotica]]: The gods Izanagi and Izanami, in the Japanese creation myth.
* [[Insubstantial Ingredients]]: The sound of a cat's footfall is one of several impossible ingredients in the unbreakable ribbon [[wikipedia:Gleipnir|Gleipnir]] in [[Norse Mythology]].
* [[Insubstantial Ingredients]]: The sound of a cat's footfall is one of several impossible ingredients in the unbreakable ribbon [[wikipedia:Gleipnir|Gleipnir]] in [[Norse Mythology]].
* [[Is That What They're Calling It Now?]]: ''Decameron'', 14th century CE. [http://dante.ilt.columbia.edu/books/decamer/eng/Day_03/novella_03_10.html Day 3, Story 10]
* [[Is That What They're Calling It Now?]]: ''Decameron'', 14th century CE. [https://web.archive.org/web/20141030101448/http://dante.ilt.columbia.edu/books/decamer/eng/day_03/novella_03_10.html Day 3, Story 10]
* [[King in the Mountain]]: [[King Arthur]] in Cadbury Hill, Frederick Barbarossa in Kyffhäuser, King Wenceslas in Blaník, to only name a few.
* [[King in the Mountain]]: [[King Arthur]] in Cadbury Hill, Frederick Barbarossa in Kyffhäuser, King Wenceslas in Blaník, to only name a few.
* [[Knighting]]: Medieval European practice.
* [[Knighting]]: Medieval European practice.
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* [[Shapeshifter Showdown]]: The [[Celtic Mythology|Welsh myth]] of Cerridwen and Taliesin. The Tale of the Kalandar Prince in The ''[[Arabian Nights]]''.
* [[Shapeshifter Showdown]]: The [[Celtic Mythology|Welsh myth]] of Cerridwen and Taliesin. The Tale of the Kalandar Prince in The ''[[Arabian Nights]]''.
* [[Shapeshifting Squick]]: Foxes in Japanese folklore who seduced men, then turned back into foxes after a one night stand.
* [[Shapeshifting Squick]]: Foxes in Japanese folklore who seduced men, then turned back into foxes after a one night stand.
* [[Short Lived Big Impact]]: ''[[The Canterbury Tales]]'' were never finished yet have influenced all of Western literature.
* [[Short-Lived, Big Impact]]: ''[[The Canterbury Tales]]'' were never finished yet have influenced all of Western literature.
* [[Shut Up, Kirk]]: In the ''[[The Song of Roland|Chanson De Roland]]'', Charlemagne calls on the Pagan leader Baligant to repent and be baptized, and then the Emperor his "first friend will be." Baligant tells him, "Your sermon's but ill preached." Of course, the medieval belief that being non-Christian necessarily makes Baligant the villian of the piece hits modern [[Values Dissonance]].
* [[Shut Up, Kirk]]: In the ''[[The Song of Roland|Chanson De Roland]]'', Charlemagne calls on the Pagan leader Baligant to repent and be baptized, and then the Emperor his "first friend will be." Baligant tells him, "Your sermon's but ill preached." Of course, the medieval belief that being non-Christian necessarily makes Baligant the villian of the piece hits modern [[Values Dissonance]].
* [[Simple Staff]]: Little John, ''[[Robin Hood]]'', 14th century
* [[Simple Staff]]: Little John, ''[[Robin Hood]]'', 14th century
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{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
{{The Oldest Ones in the Book}}
[[Category:Index]]
[[Category:Index]]
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Latest revision as of 21:08, 9 January 2021

From the fall of Rome (c. 476 CE) to the invention of printing. The precise dates vary from region to region, but this was a time when literacy was low and books rare. Most western folklore originated here, often echoing earlier tropes. Chivalric Romance developed in this era.

Note: this is older than Johannes Gutenberg's printing press (1439 CE), not metal movable-type characters (ca. 1230 CE, Korea), movable-type printing (1040 CE, China), and certainly not wood-block printing (220 CE or earlier, China again). In short, the Middle Ages—assuming you don't take Petrarch's definition for it, as he lived in the 1300s.

Specific works from this time period include:

Tropes from this time period
  1. The "Wild Hunt" myth is also often connected to the army of the Harii described by Tacitus in Germania (c. 100 AD). The Harii supposedly attack at night, with their bodies painted black, thus willfully spreading fear. However, Tacitus says they are a real, living tribe.