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==Composition and sources== {{Unbalanced|date=November 2024}} {{Tone|date=November 2024}} In June 1819, Walter Scott still suffered from the severe stomach pains that had forced him to dictate the last part of ''[[The Bride of Lammermoor]]'', and also most of ''[[A Legend of the Wars of Montrose]]'', which he finished at the end of May. By the beginning of July, at the latest, Scott had started dictating his new novel ''Ivanhoe'', again with [[John Ballantyne (publisher)|John Ballantyne]] and [[William Laidlaw (poet)|William Laidlaw]] as [[Amanuensis|amanuenses]]. For the second half of the manuscript, Scott was able to take up the pen, and completed ''Ivanhoe: A Romance'' in early November 1819.<ref>{{cite book |first=Walter |last=Scott |title=Ivanhoe |editor-first=Graham |editor-last=Tulloch |publisher=Edinburgh University Press |date=1998 |pages=403β13 |isbn=978-0191794940}}</ref> For detailed information about the Middle Ages Scott drew on three works by the antiquarian [[Joseph Strutt (engraver and antiquary)|Joseph Strutt]]: ''Horda Angel-cynnan or a Compleat View of the Manners, Customs, Arms, Habits etc. of the Inhabitants of England'' (1775β76), ''Dress and Habits of the People of England'' (1796β99), and ''Sports and Pastimes of the People of England'' (1801). Two historians gave him a solid grounding in the period: [[Robert Henry (minister)|Robert Henry]] with ''The History of Great Britain'' (1771β93), and [[Sharon Turner]] with ''The History of the Anglo-Saxons from the Earliest Period to the Norman Conquest'' (1799β1805). His clearest debt to an original medieval source involved the Templar Rule, reproduced in ''The Theatre of Honour and Knight-Hood'' (1623) translated from the French of AndrΓ© Favine. Scott was happy to introduce details from the later Middle Ages, and [[Geoffrey Chaucer|Chaucer]] was particularly helpful, as (in a different way) was the fourteenth-century romance ''[[Richard Coer de Lyon|Richard Coeur de Lion]]''.<ref>''Ibid.'', 498β500.</ref> The figure of Locksley in the story and many elements of the tale are undoubtedly influenced by Scott's association with [[Joseph Ritson]], who had earlier compiled ''Robin Hood: a collection of all the ancient poems, songs and ballads now extant relative to that celebrated English outlaw (1795).''
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