erec roman arthurien en prose
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๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>The 13th-century prose novel <em>Guiron le Courtois</em> tells the story of the fathers of the Arthurian heroes. The third branch of the work that is presented here illustrates the development from the previous texts, <em>Meliadus</em> and <em>Guiron</em>, and offers valuable insights into the na
<p>The 13th-century prose novel <em>Guiron le Courtois</em> tells the story of the fathers of the Arthurian heroes. The third branch of the work that is presented here illustrates the development from the previous texts, <em>Meliadus</em> and <em>Guiron</em>, and offers valuable insights into the na
These essays on Arthurian prose romances, published as a tribute to Cedric E. Pickford, reflect their development and the reshaping of the romances in response to changing taste and fashion from the death of Chretien de Troyes to the end of the medieval period in England. Topics include the question
In the middle of the fifteenth century two anonymous writers `translated' into prose Chr?ยฉtien de Troyes's first verse romances, Erec and Clig?ยฉs (dating from the twelfth century), for the circle of Philip the Good, duke of Burgundy. For a long time unfairly dismissed as trite and slavish renderings