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Notes -
I don't think there are any perfect instances of this motif in the Divine Comedy or Arthurian legend (as others have pointed out, Gawain doesn't fit at all), though you'll find many other variations on illicit love.
It is a common motif in Norse sagas in the form of the berserker stock character, who sometimes shows up to the father's farm demanding to carry off his daughter under threat of violence. Though, more often than not the berserker's aim is to marry by force rather than to treat the woman as disposable plunder, and he is almost always defeated anyway.
Outside of berserkers, among the more humanized characters, it's uncommon: while there is one case of a bad boy scandalously seducing a magnate's daughter (Killer-Hrapp, Njal's Saga), in the second nearest example that comes to mind, from Egil's Saga, it's a wealthy old widower (Bjorgolf) that comes calling on his social inferior to declare he will be taking his daughter home with him.
Lusty young men are more often a threat to husbands than to fathers.
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