1019:, and of such prodigious strength that at one shake he pulled up an oak as if it had been a hazel wand. On a certain day, when Brutus (founder of Britain and Corineus' overlord) was holding a solemn festival to the gods, in the port where they at first landed, this giant with twenty more of his companions came in upon the Britons, among whom he made a dreadful slaughter. But the Britons at last assembling together in a body, put them to the rout, and killed them every one but Goëmagot. Brutus had given orders to have him preserved alive, out of a desire to see a combat between him and Corineus, who took a great pleasure in such encounters. Corineus, overjoyed at this, prepared himself, and throwing aside his arms, challenged him to wrestle with him. At the beginning of the encounter, Corineus and the giant, standing, front to front, held each other strongly in their arms, and panted aloud for breath, but Goëmagot presently grasping Corineus with all his might, broke three of his ribs, two on his right side and one on his left. At which Corineus, highly enraged, roused up his whole strength, and snatching him upon his shoulders, ran with him, as fast as the weight would allow him, to the next shore, and there getting upon the top of a high rock, hurled down the savage monster into the sea; where falling on the sides of craggy rocks, he was torn to pieces, and coloured the waves with his blood. The place where he fell, taking its name from the giant's fall, is called Lam Goëmagot, that is, Goëmagot's Leap, to this day.
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great club in his hand, and smote at the king that his coronal fell to the earth. And the king hit him again that he carved his belly and cut off his genitours, that his guts and his entrails fell down to the ground. Then the giant threw away his club, and caught the king in his arms that he crushed his ribs ... And then Arthur weltered and wrung, that he was other while under and another time above. And so weltering and wallowing they rolled down the hill till they came to the sea mark, and ever as they so weltered Arthur smote him with his dagger.
843:(1976) that children may experience "grown-ups" as frightening giants, but stories such as "Jack" teach them that they can outsmart the giants and can "get the better of them". Bettelheim observes that a parent may be reluctant to read a story to a child about adults being outsmarted by children, but notes that the child understands intuitively that, in reading him the tale, the parent has given his approval for "playing with the idea of getting the better of giants", and of retaliating "in fantasy for the threat which adult dominance entails".
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1148:). Blunderbore discovers the sleeping Jack, and recognising him by his labelled belt, carries him to his castle and locks him in a cell. While Blunderbore is off inviting a fellow giant to come help him eat Jack, Jack creates nooses from some rope. When the giants arrive, he drops the nooses around their necks, ties the rope to a beam, slides down the rope, and slits their throats. A giant named Blunderbore appears in the similar Cornish fairy tale "
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bigger, the other lesser, with
Clubbes in their hands, (whom they terme Gog-Magog) and (as I have learned) it is renewed by order of the Townesmen, when cause requireth, which should inferre the same to bee a monument of some moment. And lastly the place, having a steepe cliffe adjoyning, affordeth an oportunitie to the fact.
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The Opies observe that "no telling of the tale has been recorded in
English oral tradition", and that no mention of the tale is made in sixteenth or seventeenth century literature, lending weight to the probability of the tale originating from the oral traditions of the Cornish (and/or Breton) 'droll
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In "Jack and Arthur: An
Introduction to Jack the Giant Killer", Thomas Green writes that Jack has no place in Cornish folklore, but was created at the beginning of the eighteenth century simply as a framing device for a series of gory, giant-killing adventures. The tales of Arthur precede and inform
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Jack ventures forth alone with his magic shoes, sword, cloak, and cap to rid the realm of troublesome giants. He encounters a giant terrorizing a knight and his lady. He cuts off the giant's legs, then puts him to death. He discovers the giant's companion in a cave. Invisible in his cloak, Jack cuts
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Againe, the activitie of Devon and
Cornishmen, in this facultie of wrastling, beyond those of other Shires, dooth seeme to derive them a speciall pedigree, from that graund wrastler Corineus. Moreover, upon the Hawe at Plymmouth, there is cut out in the ground, the pourtrayture of two men, the one
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Then came to an husbandman ... and told him how there was ... a great giant which had slain, murdered and devoured much people of the country ... ... and hailed him, saying ... rise and dress thee, thou glutton, for this day shalt thou die of my hand. Then the glutton anon started up, and took a
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depicted the appearance of giants in the concrete reality of early 20th
Century Britain. The giants arouse increasing hostility and prejudice, eventually leading to a rabble-rousing politician named Caterham forming an "Anti-Giant Party" and sweeping to power; the ambitious Caterham takes the
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version). The giant holds captive many knights and ladies and a Duke's daughter who has been transformed into a white doe through the power of a sorcerer. Jack beheads the giant, the sorcerer flees, the Duke's daughter is restored to her true shape, and the captives are freed.
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is a giant who holds captive many knights and ladies and a Duke's daughter who has been transformed into a white doe through the power of a sorcerer. Jack beheads the giant, the sorcerer flees, the Duke's daughter is restored to her true shape, and the captives are freed.
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For it was a diversion to him to encounter the said giants, which were in greater numbers there than in all the other provinces that fell to the share of his companions. Among the rest was one detestable monster, named Goëmagot , in stature twelve
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of c. 1220, they note, resembles the incident between Jack and the stomach-slashing Welsh giant. The Opies further note that the
Swedish tale of "The Herd-boy and the Giant" shows similarities to the same incident, and "shares an ancestor" with the
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nickname "Jack the Giant Killer", derived from the above tale. Unlike that tale, however, in Wells' depiction the giants are depicted sympathetically, as well-meaning innocents unjustly persecuted while the "Giant Killer" is the book's villain.
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They spend the night with a three-headed giant and rob him in the morning. In gratitude for having spared his castle, the three-headed giant gives Jack a magic sword, a cap of knowledge, a cloak of invisibility, and shoes of swiftness.
218:, where in Act 3, one character, Edgar, in his feigned madness, cries, "Fie, foh, and fum,/ I smell the blood of a British man"). Jack's story did not appear in print until 1711. One scholar speculates the public had grown weary of
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vows vengeance for
Cormoran's death and carries Jack off to an enchanted castle. Jack manages to slay Blunderbore and his brother Rebecks by hanging and stabbing them. He frees three ladies held captive in the giant's castle.
872:(1992) that giants are very common throughout British folklore, and often represent the "original" inhabitants, ancestors, or gods of the island before the coming of "civilised man", their gigantic stature reflecting their "
489:", a tale with wide distribution. According to the Opies, Jack's magical accessories – the cap of knowledge, the cloak of invisibility, the magic sword, and the shoes of swiftness – could have been borrowed from the tale of
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that Jack's final adventure with
Galigantus was influenced by the "magical devices" of French fairy tales. The Opies conclude that analogues from around the world "offer no surety of Jack's antiquity."
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off the giant's nose then slays him by plunging his sword into the monster's back. He frees the giant's captives and returns to the house of the knight and lady he earlier had rescued.
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Tales of monsters and heroes are abundant around the world, making the source of "Jack the Giant Killer" difficult to pin down. However, the ascription of Jack's relation to
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in 1711, the Opies indicate, but was not listed in catalogues or inventories of the period nor was Jack one of the folk heroes in the repertoire of Robert Powel (i.e.,
1953:
Weiss, Harry B. "The
Autochthonal Tale of Jack the Giant Killer". The Scientific Monthly 28, no. 2 (1929): 126–33. Accessed 30 June 2020. www.jstor.org/stable/14578.
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On a trip into Wales, Jack tricks a two-headed Welsh giant into slashing his own belly open. King Arthur's son now enters the story and Jack becomes his servant.
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Growing weary of the festivities, Jack sallies forth for more adventures and meets an elderly man who directs him to an enchanted castle belonging to the giant
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had been out of print since 1634 and concludes from this fact that the public had grown weary of Arthur. Jack, he posits, was created to fill Arthur's shoes.
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462:(1974) that "the tenor of Jack's tale, and some of the details of more than one of his tricks with which he outwits the giants, have similarities with
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1069:, apparently an ancient pre-Christian site of worship. According to Cornish legend, the couple were responsible for its construction by carrying
327:. Jack is dubbed 'Jack the Giant-Killer' for this feat and receives not only the giant's wealth, but a sword and belt to commemorate the event.
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672:, however, contains parallels and cognates with the contemporary insular British tale of "Jack the Giant Killer", in particular the violently
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slab from a shorter distance away. Cormoran awoke and kicked the stone out of her apron, where it fell to form the island of Chapel Rock.
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from the West
Penwith Moors to the current location of the Mount. When Cormoran fell asleep from exhaustion, his wife tried to sneak a
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chant (" ... fie, foh, and fumme, / I smell the blood of a British man"), making it certain he knew a tale of "blood-sniffing giants".
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At the court of King Arthur, Jack marries the Duke's daughter and the two are given an estate where they live happily ever after.
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who is not only strong but so clever he easily confounds the learned with his penetrating wit. Jack encounters a livestock-eating
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and was released on 1 March 2013. It is a very loose adaption of both "Jack and the Beanstalk" and "Jack the Giant Killer".
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This plot summary is based on a text published c. 1760 by John Cotton and Joshua Eddowes, which in its turn was based on a
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chanting "Fee, fau, fum". Jack defeats and beheads the giant with a trick involving the house's moat and drawbridge.
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As the eighteenth century wore on, Jack became a familiar figure. Research by the Opies indicate that the farce
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are honour-bound to fulfill before Olwen is released to the lad; and the Giant King must die. Folklorists
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and made its way, via Geoffrey of Monmouth into Early Modern English canon where it was absorbed by the
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1551:"National Trust archaeologists surprised by likely age of Cerne Abbas Giant | National Trust"
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may be a development of the Corineus and Gogmagog legend. The motifs are echoed in the
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in Cornwall where he demands Olwen as his bride; the beautiful daughter of the giant
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Green, Thomas. "Tom Thumb and Jack the Giant-Killer: Two Arthurian Fairytales?" In:
818:. She points out however that "Jack the Giant Killer" is rendered directly from the
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have been detected in the tale, and the trappings of Jack's last adventure with the
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of the United States, Jack became a generic hero of tales usually adapted from the
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prior to the eighteenth century (there is an allusion to Jack the Giant Killer in
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ruling from 908 to 913 and may be an alternative source of the Giant's name
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reported a carved chalk figure of a giant at the site in the first book of
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Britain places Arthur as chief among the kings of Britain. The young hero
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is a two-headed giant that crashes a banquet that is prepared for Jack.
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that the indigenous giants of Cornwall were slaughtered by Brutus, the (
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name 'Blunderbore' is sometimes appropriated by other giants, as in "
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A banquet is prepared, but it is interrupted by the two-headed giant
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is a nearby alternative location. In the early seventeenth century,
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The last Speech of John Good, vulgarly called Jack the Giant-Queller
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of 22 January 1708, according to the Opies, and in the tenth number
680:, published 1697) is now believed to ultimately derive in part from
269:
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Taliesin: Shamanism and the Bardic Mysteries in Britain and Ireland
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Taliesin: Shamanism and the Bardic Mysteries in Britain and Ireland
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The Uses of Enchantment: The Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales
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The Uses of Enchantment: The Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales
751:(1744) promises the reader two letters from Jack the Giant Killer.
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The Opies note that tales of giants were long known in Britain.
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On the road, Jack and the Prince meet an enchanted Lady serving
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and the sorcerer transform the Duke's daughter into a white doe
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belief systems, they represent the force of nature. The modern
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and directed by Mark Atkins. A modern take of the fairy tales
493:
or from Norse mythology, however older analogues in British
1800:"Jack and Arthur: An Introduction to Jack the Giant Killer"
994:
founder of Great Britain), Corineus (eponymous founder of
935:
The foundation myth of Cornwall originates with the early
826:
in the incident of the belly-slashing Welsh giant becomes
538:
mentioned in two of the branches; or the similar cloak of
1136:". In the version of "Jack the Giant Killer" recorded by
1023:
The match is traditionally presumed to have occurred at
998:) and his brothers who had settled in Britain after the
2766:
803:"Jack the Giant Killer", he notes, but points out that
965:, other mythical British kings. Carol Rose reports in
1387:. It is based on the 19th-century English fairy tale
550:, who was given a magic sword, the winged sandals of
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The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales
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1778:"Nicholas Hoult To Star In 'Jack The Giant Killer'"
1002:. Following the defeat of the giants, their leader
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1950:118 (2007): 123–140. DOI:10.1080/00155870701337296
1917:
599:in 1485 in the fifth chapter of the fifth book of
1821:The Encyclopedia of Celtic Mythology and Folklore
730:. "Jack and the Giants" however is referenced in
666:teller'. The 17th century Franco-Breton tale of
1045:
1012:
864:in Dorset was probably carved about 700-1100CE.
3037:Tiny Toon Adventures: Buster and the Beanstalk
1152:" (or "Tom the Tinkard"), a local variant of "
984:reported in the first book of his imaginative
436:makes his way to his cousin Arthur's court at
162:. Some parallels to elements and incidents in
142:about a young adult who slays a number of bad
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1202:The Food of the Gods and How It Came to Earth
8:
1513:
1473:
1471:
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908:in death, a particularly recurrent theme in
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536:Thirteen Treasures of the Island of Britain
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3021:Jumpin' Kid: Jack to Mame no Ki Monogatari
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1254:released a middle-budget film produced by
47:
3045:Tiny Toon Adventures: The Great Beanstalk
1610:
1608:
900:plural, transcribed into Late Cornish as
692:, associated in later folklore with both
554:and the 'cap of darkness' (borrowed from
182:. Jack's belt is similar to the belt in "
1626:
1599:
1575:
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810:Bottigheimer notes that in the southern
767:printed fictional letters about Jack in
546:. Another parallel is the Greek demigod
249:based on the tale was released starring
1416:
651:; the earliest version can be found in
428:(tentatively dated to c. 1100), set in
222:and Jack was created to fill the role.
3029:The Simpsons: Bart & the Beanstalk
2979:Jack and the Beanstalk: The Real Story
1764:
1754:
1423:
1362:. It was released on DVD in the UK as
773:in 1744; and that a political satire,
204:and his tale are rarely referenced in
38:
32:Jack the Giant Killer (disambiguation)
1711:cornish dictionary, gerlyver kernewek
1587:
1525:
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1391:. In Japan, the game was released as
7:
2696:Federation of Old Cornwall Societies
1735:Gantz, Jeffrey (translator) (1987).
1614:
1395:. There were no home console ports.
1112:, and was living in Ludgvan Lese (a
799:was another who mentioned the tale.
565:. Ruth B. Bottigheimer observes in
295:The tale is set during the reign of
3097:Politically Correct Bedtime Stories
2035:Days of Yore: Jack the Giant-Killer
1965:The History of the Kings of Britain
1920:The Oxford Companion to Fairy Tales
1226:for Milton Bode's Grand Pantomime,
1099:hangs Blunderbore and another giant
1065:, are particularly associated with
987:The History of the Kings of Britain
567:The Oxford Companion to Fairy Tales
2711:Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society
1776:Flemming, Kit (11 February 2010).
912:and folklore. An obscure Count of
795:read the tale in his boyhood; and
709:The History of Jack and the Giants
323:) and lures him to his death in a
170:Galigantus suggest parallels with
25:
3317:This Is the House That Jack Built
1318:Jack the Giant Killer (2013 film)
1246:Jack the Giant Killer (1962 film)
623:in 1549, the Opies note, and, in
253:. The film made extensive use of
2749:
2153:
2012:The Story of Jack and the Giants
292:by Iona and Peter Opie in 1974.
3378:Arthurian literature in English
2945:Tom and Jerry's Giant Adventure
932:as "he of the brown eyebrows".
644:Have with You to Saffron-Walden
577:'s encounter with the giant of
2528:Come, all ye jolly tinner boys
1713:. Cornish Language Partnership
791:admitted to reading the tale;
1:
3111:Hoodwinked Too! Hood vs. Evil
2897:Jack-Wabbit and the Beanstalk
2721:Royal Institution of Cornwall
1991:from the Hockliffe Collection
1881:. W.W. Norton & Company.
1878:Giants, Monsters, and Dragons
1553:. 11 May 2021. Archived from
967:Giants, Monsters, and Dragons
641:also alluded to the chant in
585:in Brittany – was related by
319:: 'The Giant of the Sea' SWF:
242:were familiar with the tale.
27:Cornish fairy tale and legend
3282:Puss in Boots: The Last Wish
2706:Institute of Cornish Studies
647:, written nine years before
523:, Arthur's invincible sword
3393:Fiction about shapeshifting
3124:Fe, Fi, Fo, Fum, and Phooey
2549:The Song of the Western Men
1924:. Oxford University Press.
1860:. Oxford University Press.
1819:Monaghan, Patricia (2004).
1383:developed and published by
1276:as the sorcerer Pendragon.
1128:" and in some versions of "
1061:and his wife, the giantess
770:A Little Pretty Pocket-Book
748:A Little Pretty Pocket-Book
420:(Celtic) origin. The early
3424:
1315:
1285:
1243:
1006:wrestled with the warrior
850:
595:in 1136, and published by
288:c. 1711, and reprinted in
116:The Herd-boy and the Giant
29:
3341:The House That Jack Built
3333:The Mouse That Jack Built
2744:
2472:
2150:
2119:Cornish kilts and tartans
2079:
2004:19 September 2005 at the
1832:. History Press Limited.
1322:The direct-to video film
620:The Complaynt of Scotland
592:Historia Regum Britanniae
507:, cognate with the Irish
487:The Valiant Little Tailor
330:A man-eating giant named
184:The Valiant Little Tailor
120:The Valiant Little Tailor
46:
3398:The Devil in fairy tales
3069:A Gander at Mother Goose
2929:Tweety and the Beanstalk
2905:Mickey and the Beanstalk
2731:Movyans Skolyow Meythrin
2269:Cornish pilot-gig racing
1664:The Death of King Arthur
1662:Armitage, Simon (2012).
868:John Matthews writes in
676:character of Bluebeard (
629:of 1605, they indicate,
617:giants are mentioned in
2972:Beanstalks and Bad Eggs
2454:The Pirates of Penzance
2368:List of Cornish writers
2279:Rugby union in Cornwall
1967:by Geoffrey of Monmouth
1900:. Turner Classic Movies
1898:"Jack the Giant Killer"
1896:Stafford, Jeff (2010).
1857:The Classic Fairy Tales
1828:O'Connor, Mike (2010).
1810:Matthews, John (1992).
1798:Green, Thomas (2009) .
1726:Davies, Sioned (2007).
1140:, Blunderbore lives in
975:Hunting of Twrch Trwyth
853:Giants (Welsh folklore)
466:." An incident between
460:The Classic Fairy Tales
290:The Classic Fairy Tales
3215:Jack, the Giant Killer
2964:Jack and the Beanstalk
2937:Jack and the Beanstalk
2913:Woody the Giant Killer
2881:Jack and the Beanstalk
2838:Jack and the Beanstalk
2830:Jack and the Beanstalk
2822:Jack and the Beanstalk
2806:Jack and the Beanstalk
2378:Cornwall Film Festival
2020:The Survey of Cornwall
1640:"Jack the Giantkiller"
1405:Jack and the Beanstalk
1389:Jack and the Beanstalk
1341:Jack and the Beanstalk
1231:
1184:
1175:In an illustration by
1130:Jack and the Beanstalk
1100:
1050:
1041:The Survey of Cornwall
1021:
865:
752:
612:
529:Mantle of Invisibility
409:
364:
281:
3368:Jack the Giant Killer
3196:Jack the Giant Killer
3188:Jack the Giant Slayer
3180:Jack the Giant Killer
3138:Jack the Giant Killer
2846:Jack the Giant Slayer
2725:Royal Cornwall Museum
2645:Jack the Giant Killer
2597:Prayer Book Rebellion
2037:by Arin Lee Kambitsis
1989:Jack the Giant Killer
1981:Jack the Giant Killer
1973:Jack the Giant Killer
1814:. The Aquarian Press.
1741:. New York: Penguin.
1666:. Faber & Faber.
1359:Jack the Giant Slayer
1336:Jack the Giant Killer
1324:Jack the Giant Killer
1294:Jack the Giant Slayer
1288:Jack the Giant Slayer
1281:Jack the Giant Slayer
1265:Jack the Giant Killer
1228:Jack the Giant Killer
1221:
1174:
1095:
971:Jack the Giant Killer
882:Standard Written Form
860:
851:Further information:
759:was performed at the
757:Jack the Giant-Killer
744:
607:
426:How Culhwch won Olwen
401:
382:(Galligantua, in the
359:
299:and tells of a young
272:
132:Jack the Giant Killer
70:Jack the Giant Killer
42:Jack the Giant Killer
18:Jack the Giant-Killer
3265:Jack Horner (comics)
3234:Jack the Giantkiller
2542:Hail to the Homeland
1975:by Flora Annie Steel
1875:Rose, Carol (2001).
1728:The Mabinogion trans
1502:Opie & Opie 1992
1461:Opie & Opie 1992
1376:Jack the Giantkiller
982:Geoffrey of Monmouth
745:The title page from
587:Geoffrey of Monmouth
178:fairy tales such as
30:For other uses, see
3408:Cornwall in fiction
3388:English fairy tales
2756:Cornwall portal
2716:Royal Cornwall Show
2602:Radyo an Gernewegva
2514:Bro Goth agan Tasow
2492:Fisherman's Friends
2322:Cornish Gilliflower
2073:Culture of Cornwall
1602:, pp. 211–212.
1480:, pp. 266–268.
1326:is a 2013 American
833:Child psychologist
822:except the English
781:alluded to Jack in
456:Iona and Peter Opie
443:Ysbaddaden Ben Cawr
363:– home of the Giant
303:farmer's son named
247:feature-length film
210:William Shakespeare
88:English Fairy Tales
3250:Little Jack Horner
3118:Jack and the Witch
3076:Fun and Fancy Free
2577:Cornish literature
2373:Tristan and Iseult
2183:Chewidden Thursday
2139:Saint Piran's Flag
1830:Cornish Folk Tales
1783:Deadline Hollywood
1767:has generic name (
1306:Legendary Pictures
1272:stars as Jack and
1232:
1199:in the 1904 novel
1185:
1101:
1067:St Michael's Mount
957:alongside that of
946:Historia Brittonum
866:
753:
698:St Michael's Mount
579:St Michael's Mount
509:Fionn mac Cumhaill
410:
365:
361:St Michael's Mount
282:
206:English literature
190:or those found in
3355:
3354:
3351:
3350:
3311:
3310:
3301:The Wolf Among Us
3244:
3243:
3132:
3131:
2982:(2001 miniseries)
2764:
2763:
2665:Mermaid of Zennor
2558:
2557:
2433:Rosamunde Pilcher
2413:Daphne du Maurier
2312:Cornish cream tea
2274:Cornish wrestling
2248:Tom Bawcock's Eve
2203:Kernewek Lowender
2124:Jonathan Trelawny
2087:Gonisogeth Kernow
2014:by Edward Dalziel
1997:Le Morte D'Arthur
1690:. Vintage Books.
1682:Bettelheim, Bruno
1540:, pp. 27–28.
1463:, pp. 47–50.
1344:, the film stars
1230:, c.1938 or prior
1031:border, although
969:that the tale of
862:Cerne Abbas Giant
805:Le Morte d'Arthur
732:The Weekly Comedy
702:Mont Saint Michel
682:King Mark Conomor
602:Le Morte d'Arthur
597:Sir Thomas Malory
583:Mont Saint-Michel
503:and the tales of
458:have observed in
434:Culhwch ap Cilydd
257:in the manner of
160:Welsh Bardic lore
128:
127:
16:(Redirected from
3415:
3383:Cornish folklore
3322:
3255:
3143:
3104:Revolting Rhymes
2987:Once Upon a Time
2974:" (1997 episode)
2811:
2791:
2784:
2777:
2768:
2754:
2753:
2752:
2736:Akademi Kernewek
2587:Beunans Meriasek
2477:Cornish bagpipes
2470:
2408:Barbara Hepworth
2317:Cornish fairings
2158:
2157:
2144:Scillonian Cross
2066:
2059:
2052:
2043:
2022:by Richard Carew
1999:by Thomas Malory
1983:by Joseph Jacobs
1935:
1923:
1909:
1907:
1905:
1892:
1871:
1843:
1824:
1823:. Facts on File.
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1421:
1364:The Giant Killer
1304:was produced by
1258:and directed by
1150:Tom the Tinkeard
1126:Tom the Tinkeard
928:, translated by
835:Bruno Bettelheim
517:Lleu Llaw Gyffes
156:Breton mythology
152:Cornish folklore
102:Cornish folklore
51:
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2921:Beanstalk Bunny
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2684:
2640:Cruel Coppinger
2620:Beast of Bodmin
2606:
2554:
2501:
2459:
2418:William Golding
2398:Charles Causley
2356:
2307:Cornish cheeses
2283:
2264:Cornish hurling
2252:
2208:Montol Festival
2159:
2152:
2148:
2090:
2075:
2070:
2028:Tom the Tinkard
2006:Wayback Machine
1960:
1943:
1941:Further reading
1938:
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1903:
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1538:Bettelheim 1977
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1528:, pp. 1–4.
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1260:Nathan H. Juran
1248:
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1237:
1216:
1197:
1154:Tom Hickathrift
1081:, the giant of
1027:on the Cornish-
953:as the tale of
855:
849:
726:established in
712:
663:
633:alludes to the
464:Norse mythology
396:
280:with a pick-axe
267:
259:Ray Harryhausen
164:Norse mythology
134:" is a Cornish
124:
112:Norse mythology
107:Welsh mythology
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3083:Into the Woods
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2862:Into the Woods
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2701:Gorsedh Kernow
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2482:Brenda Wootton
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2448:Minack Theatre
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2388:St Ives School
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2109:Cornish chough
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1958:External links
1956:
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1916:, ed. (2000).
1910:
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1738:The Mabinogion
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1653:
1650:
1649:
1644:Gaming History
1631:
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1557:on 11 May 2021
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1316:Main article:
1313:
1310:
1302:Nicholas Hoult
1296:, directed by
1286:Main article:
1283:
1278:
1274:Torin Thatcher
1270:Kerwin Mathews
1252:United Artists
1244:Main article:
1241:
1238:
1236:
1233:
1215:
1212:
1196:
1193:
1177:Arthur Rackham
884:in Cornish is
848:
847:British giants
845:
816:Brothers Grimm
797:William Cowper
784:Joseph Andrews
779:Henry Fielding
763:in 1730; that
711:
706:
678:La Barbe bleue
662:
659:
615:Anthropophagic
558:) to slay the
470:and the giant
395:
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266:
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251:Kerwin Mathews
240:William Cowper
232:Samuel Johnson
224:Henry Fielding
126:
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2302:Clotted cream
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2114:Cornish heath
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2015:
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1931:0-9653635-7-0
1927:
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1915:
1911:
1899:
1894:
1890:
1888:0-393-32211-4
1884:
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1869:
1867:0-19-211559-6
1863:
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1839:9780752450667
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1748:0-14-044322-3
1744:
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1697:0-394-72265-5
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1673:9780571249473
1669:
1665:
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1659:
1654:
1645:
1641:
1635:
1632:
1628:
1627:Flemming 2010
1623:
1620:
1617:, p. 87.
1616:
1611:
1609:
1605:
1601:
1600:Monaghan 2004
1596:
1593:
1589:
1584:
1581:
1578:, p. 27.
1577:
1576:Matthews 1992
1572:
1569:
1556:
1552:
1546:
1543:
1539:
1534:
1531:
1527:
1522:
1519:
1515:
1514:O'Connor 2010
1510:
1507:
1504:, p. 78.
1503:
1498:
1495:
1491:
1490:Armitage 2012
1486:
1483:
1479:
1474:
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1470:
1466:
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1441:
1438:, p. 80.
1437:
1432:
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1410:
1406:
1403:
1402:
1398:
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1394:
1393:Treasure Hunt
1390:
1386:
1385:Cinematronics
1382:
1378:
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1355:
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1300:and starring
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1151:
1147:
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1139:
1138:Joseph Jacobs
1135:
1134:Molly Whuppie
1131:
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1123:
1119:
1115:
1111:
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1098:
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1084:
1083:Trencrom Hill
1080:
1076:
1072:
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1056:
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1049:
1044:
1042:
1038:
1037:Richard Carew
1034:
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824:hasty pudding
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635:Fee-fi-fo-fum
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521:Fourth Branch
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2844:
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2829:
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2644:
2535:Delkiow Sivy
2452:
2443:D. M. Thomas
2438:Derek Tangye
2393:W. J. Burley
2383:Tate St Ives
2352:Cornish Yarg
2347:Stargazy pie
2213:Mummer's Day
2104:Celtic cross
2086:
2085:
2034:
2027:
2019:
2011:
1996:
1988:
1980:
1972:
1964:
1947:
1919:
1902:. Retrieved
1877:
1856:
1829:
1820:
1811:
1787:. Retrieved
1781:
1765:|first=
1737:
1727:
1715:. Retrieved
1710:
1685:
1663:
1643:
1634:
1622:
1595:
1583:
1571:
1559:. Retrieved
1555:the original
1545:
1533:
1521:
1509:
1497:
1485:
1431:
1419:
1392:
1374:
1373:
1363:
1357:
1339:
1335:
1330:produced by
1328:fantasy film
1323:
1321:
1298:Bryan Singer
1293:
1291:
1280:
1263:
1256:Edward Small
1249:
1227:
1224:John Hassall
1200:
1198:
1187:
1186:
1163:
1162:
1103:
1102:
1052:
1051:
1046:
1040:
1025:Plymouth Hoe
1022:
1013:
985:
979:
970:
966:
951:Elizabethans
944:
934:
925:
901:
897:
893:
885:
874:otherworldly
869:
867:
838:
837:observes in
832:
812:Appalachians
809:
804:
801:
782:
774:
768:
765:John Newbery
756:
754:
746:
736:Terra-Filius
735:
731:
713:
708:
677:
674:misogynistic
667:
664:
652:
648:
642:
639:Thomas Nashe
624:
618:
613:
608:
600:
590:
572:
566:
531:
505:Gwyn ap Nudd
499:
475:
459:
441:
411:
389:
377:
370:
366:
344:
340:
337:
329:
320:
294:
289:
283:
244:
228:John Newbery
213:
200:
131:
129:
86:
83:Published in
36:
3293:Video games
3226:Video games
3163:Thunderdell
3153:Blunderbore
3013:Video games
2994:Tallahassee
2655:King Arthur
2625:Blunderbore
2342:Saffron bun
2238:Picrous Day
2188:Furry Dance
2134:Saint Piran
1914:Zipes, Jack
1852:Opie, Peter
1705:CLP staff.
1561:25 February
1516:, p. .
1492:, p. .
1426:, p. .
1424:Davies 2007
1381:arcade game
1214:Adaptations
1207:H. G. Wells
1195:H. G. Wells
1188:Galligantus
1181:Galligantus
1165:Thunderdell
1105:Blunderbore
1075:greenschist
963:King Arthur
939:chronicler
930:Joseph Loth
926:Gourmaillon
910:Celtic myth
789:Dr. Johnson
631:Shakespeare
575:King Arthur
534:one of the
416:suggests a
380:Galligantus
351:Round Table
332:Blunderbore
321:Kowr-Mor-An
297:King Arthur
255:stop motion
245:In 1962, a
220:King Arthur
198:mythology.
148:King Arthur
3373:1711 books
3362:Categories
3258:Characters
3146:Characters
2956:Television
2592:Bewnans Ke
2506:Folk songs
2327:Hevva cake
2297:Cloam oven
2233:'Obby 'Oss
2228:Noze looan
1904:1 December
1848:Opie, Iona
1717:1 February
1655:References
1526:Green 2009
1478:Zipes 2000
1436:Gantz 1987
1379:is a 1982
1370:Video game
1354:mockbuster
1352:. It is a
1350:Jane March
1332:The Asylum
1222:Poster by
1146:Mabinogion
1000:Trojan War
918:Gourmaëlon
916:was named
888:singular (
540:Caswallawn
525:Caledfwlch
500:Y Mabinogi
477:Prose Edda
394:Background
373:Thunderdel
136:fairy tale
56:title page
3403:Chapbooks
2889:Giantland
2612:Mythology
2582:Ordinalia
2423:Alan Kent
2223:Nos Lowen
2178:Allantide
2165:Festivals
1854:(1992) .
1757:cite book
1684:(1977) .
1615:Rose 2001
1588:CLP staff
1346:Ben Cross
1312:2013 film
1292:The film
1250:In 1962,
1240:1962 film
1079:Trecobben
1063:Cormelian
1033:Rame Head
992:eponymous
980:In 1136,
959:Cymbeline
955:King Leir
937:Brythonic
906:petrified
820:chapbooks
761:Haymarket
738:in 1721.
724:puppeteer
716:Newcastle
669:Bluebeard
661:Bluebeard
657:of 1528.
649:King Lear
626:King Lear
491:Tom Thumb
430:Arthurian
418:Brythonic
215:King Lear
188:Tom Thumb
180:Bluebeard
62:Folk tale
3158:Cormoran
3003:" (2013)
2996:" (2012)
2873:Cartoons
2680:Spriggan
2660:Lyonesse
2635:Cormoran
2564:Language
2173:AberFest
2002:Archived
1948:Folklore
1399:See also
1158:Marazion
1122:Germanic
1059:Cormoran
1054:Cormoran
1008:Corineus
1004:Gogmagog
996:Cornwall
922:Cormoran
914:Brittany
890:mutating
787:(1742);
694:Cormoran
690:Dumnonia
686:Domnonée
527:and his
515:; Welsh
483:Grimms's
438:Celliwig
414:Cornwall
325:pit trap
313:Cormoran
286:chapbook
278:Cormoran
54:Chapbook
3056:Related
2650:Knocker
2289:Cuisine
2198:Guldize
2193:Golowan
2096:Symbols
2082:Cornish
1789:2 March
1262:called
1142:Penwith
1132:" and "
1118:Ludgvan
1110:Penwith
1087:St Ives
1071:granite
943:in the
941:Nennius
878:animist
793:Boswell
548:Perseus
542:in the
519:of the
474:in the
472:Skrymir
407:Skrymir
347:Lucifer
317:Cornish
311:called
301:Cornish
236:Boswell
146:during
95:Related
75:Country
3344:(2018)
3336:(1959)
3304:(2013)
3285:(2022)
3237:(1982)
3218:(1987)
3199:(2013)
3191:(2013)
3183:(1962)
3048:(1998)
3040:(1996)
3032:(1994)
3024:(1990)
2967:(1967)
2948:(2013)
2940:(1974)
2932:(1957)
2924:(1955)
2916:(1947)
2908:(1947)
2900:(1943)
2892:(1933)
2884:(1931)
2865:(2014)
2857:(2011)
2849:(2013)
2841:(2009)
2833:(1952)
2825:(1902)
2675:Piskie
2670:Owlman
2497:Crowns
2257:Sports
1928:
1885:
1864:
1836:
1745:
1707:"kowr"
1694:
1670:
1590:, kowr
1085:(near
1017:cubits
563:Medusa
560:gorgon
552:Hermes
495:Celtic
448:Bedwyr
276:kills
238:, and
176:Breton
172:French
144:giants
140:legend
3207:Novel
2630:Bucca
2487:Dalla
2465:Music
2337:Pasty
1803:(PDF)
1411:Notes
1235:Films
1114:manor
1029:Devon
924:, or
898:Kewri
722:), a
581:– or
556:Hades
532:Gwenn
513:Lugus
424:tale
422:Welsh
309:giant
196:Norse
192:Welsh
168:Giant
3325:Film
3274:Film
3172:Film
3001:Tiny
2814:Film
2798:Jack
2361:Arts
1926:ISBN
1906:2010
1883:ISBN
1862:ISBN
1834:ISBN
1791:2011
1769:help
1743:ISBN
1719:2015
1692:ISBN
1668:ISBN
1563:2024
1348:and
1338:and
1097:Jack
961:and
902:Gour
894:Gowr
886:Kowr
828:mush
700:and
468:Thor
450:and
405:and
403:Thor
305:Jack
274:Jack
265:Plot
202:Jack
194:and
174:and
158:and
138:and
67:Name
1356:of
1116:in
896:),
892:to
696:of
589:in
452:Cai
212:'s
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1850:;
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1759:}}
1755:{{
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1908:.
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1771:)
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1730:.
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1676:.
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1629:.
1565:.
605::
485:"
315:(
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34:.
20:)
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