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[[File:NameOfTheRose_7984.jpg|frame|''Cavete Fratres Franciscanos.''
{{quote| ''Stat rosa pristina nomine, nomina nuda tenemus.''
'''''The Name Of The Rose''''' is a novel written by [[Umberto Eco]] in 1980, which also received a [[The Film of the Book|movie adaptation]] in 1986, directed by Jean-Jacques Annaud, and starring [[Christian Slater]], F. Murray Abraham, [[Ron Perlman]], [[Michael Lonsdale (Creator)|Michael Lonsdale]], and [[Sean Connery]].
It is set in what has been called the [[Medieval Morons|disastrous]] [[The Late Middle Ages|fourteenth century]], during the period of the Medieval Inquisition. The story, described by some as [[Sherlock Holmes]] [[Recycled in Space|IN THE 14th CENTURY]], follows Brother William of Baskerville and his young friar apprentice, Adso of [[Useful Notes/Austria|Melk]], who go to an abbey where a murder was committed in order to [[Detective Story|investigate it]].
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* [[Adaptation Decay]] / [[Pragmatic Adaptation]]: The book is a detective mystery interwoven with 500 pages of incredible detail of the religious and political schism in the church that is nearly inscrutable to anyone without a post-graduate degree in Theology and 14th Century Political History. (Or, reasonably arguably, anyone but [[Umberto Eco]].) The movie drops most of the Theology, History and Politics in favor of the detective story.
* [[A Man Is Not a Virgin]]: Adso gets to have one fling before recommitting to chastity; William, his mentor and supposed guardian, says something along the lines of, "Way to go, kid."
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