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De Rode Ridder #17 De Zeekoning
Cover Date: January, 1963
Johan is traveling trough Norway when he's suddenly attacked by three robbers who are looking for Djorndal, the invincible sword. They tie Johan to a tree and leave him behind. Johan is freed by Brundar, the recluse. He tells Johan the way to find the s ...
Issue Description
Johan is traveling trough Norway when he's suddenly attacked by three robbers who are looking for Djorndal, the invincible sword. They tie Johan to a tree and leave him behind. Johan is freed by Brundar, the recluse. He tells Johan the way to find the sword. He is put to the test and succeeds, when he returns to claim the sword he finds out it's been stolen.
English translation of the title: The King of the Sea.
Silver cover, with full color pages released in 1995.
De Rode Ridder (1959)
- Publisher
- Standaard Uitgeverij
Volume Description
This Flemish comic started came from the hand and mind of Willy Vandersteen. It's based on Johan de Rode Ridder (Johan the Red Knight) a character from the youth books by the same name that were written by Leopold Vermeiren. It's the publisher Standaard Uitgeverij longest running series after to Suske en Wiske.
History
The first 106 issue covers were originally blue with black and white stories, with the exception to number 106, which had a full color story. From issue 107 on the cover was in silver, with full cover stories. They also re-released most of the blue series as full colored series with silver covers (added here as alternative covers). When Karel Biddeloo left in 2004 the cover got a complete makeover now with only the left side of the cover being silver.
De Rode Ridder stories were drawn and written by Willy Vandersteen. At first the stories started as normal medieval knight stories with a mythical element here and there. From issue number 19 (King Arthur) the Arthurian legend was woven into the story line. From issue number 44 (Three Mercenaries), Karel Biddeloo drew and wrote the stories on his own. He used a lot more Fantasy and Sword and Sorcery than his predecessor.
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