Discover

Jean Froissart

Personal Information

Valenciennes, France
Also known as: Raphael Holinshed Thomas; Malory Jean Froissart, John, Sir Froissart
34 books
3.9 (10)
62 readers
Categories

Description

A French-speaking medieval author and court historian from the Low Countries, who wrote several works, including Chronicles and Meliador, a long Arthurian romance, and a large body of poetry, both short lyrical forms, as well as longer narrative poems (Wikipedia).

Books

Newest First

Chronicles

3.9 (10)
55

An autobiographical portrait of the acclaimed musical performer recounts personal and professional experiences.

Jean Froissart

0.0 (0)
0

"The fourteenth-century French writer Jean Froissart has for centuries been best known as the author of the Chroniques, a monumental four-volume account of the Hundred Years' War that provides a detailed view of medieval politics and courtly society. More recently, scholars have turned their attention to Froissart's other large corpus of writing, his poetry, which served as a source for Chaucer and is notable for the complexity of Froissart's use of conventions, his awareness of authorial presence, and the self-reflexive quality of his themes.". "This anthology provides many first-ever English translations of this important writer's works, including three of his major narrative poems (Le Paradis d'Amours, L'Espinette amoureuse, and Le Joli Buisson de Jonece), several of his shorter dits and debats, a sampling of his other lyric genres, and excerpts from the long verse romance Meliador. The varied selections give readers a sense of Froissart's range, and the dual-language presentation allows both scholars and students access to these significant texts, while inviting simultaneous study of the subtleties of the original French."--BOOK JACKET.

The chronicles of England, France, Spain, etc

0.0 (0)
0

Represents a primary source of the history of the French Wars. In Froissart, we hear the gallant knights, of whom he wrote, arrange the terms of combat and the manner of the onset; we hear their soldiers cry their war-cries; we see them strike their horses with the spur; and the liveliness of the narration hurries us along with them into the whirlwind of battle.