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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Come,_all_ye_jolly_tinner_boys
rdf:type
yago:MusicalComposition107037465 yago:ExpressiveStyle107066659 yago:PopularMusic107059255 yago:Abstraction100002137 yago:MusicGenre107071942 yago:Communication100033020 yago:WikicatCornishPatrioticSongs yago:WikicatCornishFolkSongs yago:FolkMusic107060167 yago:Music107020895 yago:FolkSong107050952 dbo:Single yago:Song107048000 yago:AuditoryCommunication107109019
rdfs:label
Come, all ye jolly tinner boys
rdfs:comment
"Come, all ye jolly tinner boys" is a traditional folk song associated with Cornwall that was written about 1807, when Napoleon Bonaparte made threats that would affect trade in Cornwall at the time of the invasion of Poland. The song contains the line Why forty thousand Cornish boys shall knawa the reason why. According to Cornish historian Robert Morton Nance, it was possibly the inspiration for R. S. Hawker's "The Song of the Western Men" which was written in 1824 and contains a strikingly similar line: Here's twenty thousand Cornish men will know the reason why!
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dbc:Cornish_patriotic_songs dbc:Cornish_folk_songs
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dbo:abstract
"Come, all ye jolly tinner boys" is a traditional folk song associated with Cornwall that was written about 1807, when Napoleon Bonaparte made threats that would affect trade in Cornwall at the time of the invasion of Poland. The song contains the line Why forty thousand Cornish boys shall knawa the reason why. According to Cornish historian Robert Morton Nance, it was possibly the inspiration for R. S. Hawker's "The Song of the Western Men" which was written in 1824 and contains a strikingly similar line: Here's twenty thousand Cornish men will know the reason why!
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wikipedia-en:Come,_all_ye_jolly_tinner_boys