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Writer and folklorist Cristea Sandu Timoc collected a Romanian variant from teller Florescu Floarea, from Vidin, with the title Cele trei roade de aur ("The Three Golden Fruits"). In this tale, an orphan youth with leprosy goes to draw water from a well, when he hears a voice coming from the well, telling him to go to the enchanted land in ...
"Capra cu trei iezi", by Ion Creangă" "Cei trei frați împărați" "Cele douăsprezece fete de împărat și palatul cel fermecat" "Cele trei rodii aurite", by Petre Ispirescu" "Ciobănașul cel isteț sau țurloaiele blendei" "Copiii văduvului și iepurele, vulpea, lupul și ursul" "Cotoșman năzdrăvanu"
Their most common names are ursitori and ursitoare, [3] but variations appear locally, like ursători, ursoaie, ursońi, urzoaie, [4] ursite. [5] Similarly, in the Oltenia region, they are dialectally known as ursătóri(le), ursitóri(le), ursătoáre(le). [6]
"The Goat and Her Three Kids" or "The Goat with Three Kids" (Romanian: Capra cu trei iezi) is an 1875 short story, fable and fairy tale by Romanian author Ion Creangă. Figuratively illustrating for the notions of motherly love and childish disobedience, it recounts how a family of goats is ravaged by the Big Bad Wolf , allowed inside the ...
Treatise of the Three Impostors. The Treatise of the Three Impostors (Latin: De Tribus Impostoribus) was a long-rumored book denying all three Abrahamic religions: Christianity, Judaism, and Islam, with the "impostors" of the title being Jesus, Moses, and Muhammad.
The Three Treasures (日本誕生, Nippon Tanjō, lit. ' The Birth of Japan ') is a 1959 Japanese epic religious fantasy film directed by Hiroshi Inagaki, with special effects by Eiji Tsuburaya.
At a very early stage of the controversy the incriminated writings themselves came to be spoken of as the Three Chapters.In consequence those who refused to anathematize these writings were said to defend the Three Chapters, and accused of professing Nestorianism; and, conversely, those who did anathematize them, were said to condemn the Three Chapters as heretical.
A native of Bucharest, he was born out of wedlock to Ion Luca Caragiale and Maria Constantinescu, an unmarried former Town Hall employee [3] who was 21 at the time. [4] Living his first years at his mother's house on Frumoasă Street, near Calea Victoriei (until the building was sold), [5] Mateiu had a half-sister, his mother's daughter from another extra-conjugal affair. [6]