Lankin: Difference between revisions

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{{Character Data
{{Character Data
|title=Lord Lankin
|title=Lord Lankin
|photo=
|photo=Blank.jpg|
|name=Lankin
|name=Lankin
|race=Elf
|race=Elf
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|marital status=
|marital status=


|books= {{LL}}
|books= {{LL}}<BR>{{TSC}}
|cameos=
|cameos=
}}
}}
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==Annotation==
==Annotation==


There is a song about someone named Lankin on [[Roundworld]]. A good version is on the Steeleye Span album '''''Commoners' Crown'''''. Lyrics include a Lord warning his Lady about this bogeyman:
There is a song about someone named Lankin on [[Roundworld]]. A good version is on the Steeleye Span album '''''[https://youtube/sSUH6YPM9oI| Commoners' Crown]'''''. Lyrics include a Lord warning his Lady about this bogeyman:


''Beware the moss;
''Beware the moss;
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The rest of the song deals with the grisly slaying of a Lady and her young child while the master of the house is away. Different versions of this song have been sung in the North of England in one form or another for seven hundred years, maybe longer. Other variants of the ballad use different names, commonly Lamkin, Lammikin, or Rankin and some explain that the murderer is an unpaid mason who holds a gruesome grudge. There are some who theorize that the folktale is based on actual events, the name an epithet for a pale skinned man who is possibly a leper. Other scholars suggest that the name indicates a character that is of the fairy folk, whose unpaid masonry fee was in the currency of blood and human life.[http://www.mustrad.org.uk/articles/lamkin.htm][http://jonandrika.org/articles/lamkin-terror-of-nurseries/]
The rest of the song deals with the grisly slaying of a Lady and her young child while the master of the house is away. Different versions of this song have been sung in the North of England in one form or another for seven hundred years, maybe longer. Other variants of the ballad use different names, commonly Lamkin, Lammikin, or Rankin and some explain that the murderer is an unpaid mason who holds a gruesome grudge. There are some who theorize that the folktale is based on actual events, the name an epithet for a pale skinned man who is possibly a leper. Other scholars suggest that the name indicates a character that is of the fairy folk, whose unpaid masonry fee was in the currency of blood and human life.[http://www.mustrad.org.uk/articles/lamkin.htm][http://jonandrika.org/articles/lamkin-terror-of-nurseries/]


[[Category:Discworld characters]]
[[Category:Discworld characters]]
[[de:Lankin]]
[[de:Lankin]]

Latest revision as of 00:01, 29 April 2018

Lord Lankin
Name Lankin
Race Elf
Age
Occupation Lord
Physical appearance High cheekbones, hair tied in a ponytail, perfect nose
Residence Fairyland
Death
Parents
Relatives
Children
Marital Status
Appearances
Books Lords and Ladies
The Shepherd's Crown
Cameos


Lord Lankin is a powerful figure in the elf hierarchy, standing second only to his Queen.

He exerts more power and glamour than the lesser Elves, and like other elves, he is cruel, evil and callous. He eagerly awaits the day he can hunt freely the humans of Discworld.

Annotation

There is a song about someone named Lankin on Roundworld. A good version is on the Steeleye Span album Commoners' Crown. Lyrics include a Lord warning his Lady about this bogeyman:

Beware the moss;
Beware the moors;
Beware of Long Lankin!
Be sure the doors are bolted well,
Lest Lankin should creep in!

The rest of the song deals with the grisly slaying of a Lady and her young child while the master of the house is away. Different versions of this song have been sung in the North of England in one form or another for seven hundred years, maybe longer. Other variants of the ballad use different names, commonly Lamkin, Lammikin, or Rankin and some explain that the murderer is an unpaid mason who holds a gruesome grudge. There are some who theorize that the folktale is based on actual events, the name an epithet for a pale skinned man who is possibly a leper. Other scholars suggest that the name indicates a character that is of the fairy folk, whose unpaid masonry fee was in the currency of blood and human life.[1][2]