Rowenne
She bare in her hand a golden bowl, filled with wine, that was one wondrous good.
3 citations1 sources1 traditions2 relationships
She bare in her hand a golden bowl, filled with wine, that was one wondrous good. (Layamon's Brut, Layamon's Brut)
Layamon's Brut
- attestation: She bare in her hand a golden bowl, filled with wine, that was one wondrous good. (Layamon's Brut)
"She bare in her hand a golden bowl, filled with wine, that was one wondrous good."
- attribution: He was the best interpreter that ere came here: "Listen to me now, my lord king, and I will make known to thee what Rowenne saith, fairest of all women. It is the custom in Saxland, wheresoever any people make merry in drink, that friend sayeth to his friend, with fair comely looks, 'Dear friend, wassail! (Layamon's Brut)
"he was the best interpreter that ere came here: "Listen to me now, my lord king, and I will make known to thee what Rowenne saith, fairest of all women."
- relationship: Rowenne bethought her what she might do, how she might avenge her father and her friends' death. (Layamon's Brut)
"Rowenne bethought her what she might do, how she might avenge her father and her friends' death."
Appears in: Beings, Entities in Layamon's Brut, British Tradition
On trail: Genealogies