• Thumbnail for Vida (Occitan literary form)
    Vida (Old Occitan [ˈvida]) is the usual term for a brief prose biography, written in Old Occitan, of a troubadour or trobairitz. [citation needed] The...
    4 KB (239 words) - 11:23, 24 November 2023
  • television series Vida (Occitan literary form), a medieval literary genre Vida (novel), a 1980 novel by Marge Piercy Vida: Women in Literary Arts, a non-profit...
    6 KB (707 words) - 19:50, 16 August 2024
  • sources. To that extent, they supplement the vidas in the same manuscripts and are useful to modern literary and historical researchers. Often, however...
    2 KB (282 words) - 09:40, 14 October 2022
  • Eliyahu de Vidas (1518–1592), 16th-century rabbi in Ottoman Palestine Vida (Occitan literary form) All pages with titles beginning with Vidas Vidas cruzadas...
    834 bytes (129 words) - 20:42, 13 June 2023
  • Thumbnail for Occitan language
    Occitan (English: /ˈɒksɪtən, -tæn, -tɑːn/; Occitan: occitan [utsiˈta, uksiˈta]), also known as lenga d'òc (Occitan: [ˈleŋɡɒ ˈðɔ(k)] ; French: langue d'oc)...
    108 KB (10,948 words) - 07:41, 4 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Troubadour
    Troubadour (category Articles containing Occitan (post 1500)-language text)
    /ˈtruːbədʊər, -dɔːr/, French: [tʁubaduʁ] ; Occitan: trobador [tɾuβaˈðu] ) was a composer and performer of Old Occitan lyric poetry during the High Middle Ages...
    65 KB (7,243 words) - 06:32, 9 September 2024
  • transcription delimiters. This article describes the phonology of the Occitan language. Below is a consonant chart that covers multiple dialects. Where...
    38 KB (2,605 words) - 19:55, 23 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Aragonese language
    Aragonese language (category Articles containing Occitan (post 1500)-language text)
    used by some Aragonese writers. It uses etymological forms which are closer to Catalan, Occitan, and medieval Aragonese sources; trying to come closer...
    44 KB (3,646 words) - 09:10, 6 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Catalan language
    Catalan language (category Articles containing Occitan (post 1500)-language text)
    Old Catalan shared many features with Gallo-Romance, diverging from Old Occitan between the 11th and 14th centuries. During the 11th and 12th centuries...
    160 KB (11,663 words) - 05:51, 9 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Ferrarino Trogni da Ferrara
    florilegium of Occitan lyric poetry appended to the end of manuscript D, an Italian chansonnier of 1254. He was also a poet himself. His vida was placed atop...
    7 KB (1,018 words) - 08:39, 27 March 2022
  • Thumbnail for History of the Spanish language
    History of the Spanish language (category Articles containing Occitan (post 1500)-language text)
    tuvo, sabe, vida, lago) (also in Galician, European Portuguese, Catalan and parts of Occitan) The Latin system of four verb conjugations (form classes) is...
    78 KB (7,760 words) - 22:29, 21 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Puy (society)
    encouraging composition in the Old French language, but also in Latin and Occitan. The typical puy was dedicated to the Virgin Mary. Membership was regulated...
    9 KB (1,139 words) - 02:17, 9 June 2024
  • Gab (song) (category Occitan literary genres)
    A gab or gap (Old Occitan [ˈɡap], "boast") is a troubadour boasting song. It is often considered related to the tenso and partimen, two types of debate...
    3 KB (271 words) - 17:54, 10 June 2023
  • Thumbnail for Spanish language
    Spanish language (category Articles containing Occitan (post 1500)-language text)
    Spain such as Galician, Basque, Asturian, Catalan/Valencian, Aragonese, Occitan and other minor languages. The Spanish Constitution of 1978 uses the term...
    228 KB (16,331 words) - 14:13, 10 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Baphomet
    Baphomet (category Articles containing Occitan (post 1500)-language text)
    De Bafomet is also the title of one of four surviving chapters of an Occitan translation of Ramon Llull's earliest known work, the Libre de la doctrina...
    65 KB (7,807 words) - 15:27, 6 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Uc de Saint Circ
    most significant to modern historians as the probable author of several vidas and razos of other troubadours, though only one of Bernart de Ventadorn...
    13 KB (1,692 words) - 16:54, 10 June 2023
  • Descort (category Occitan literary genres)
    descort (Old Occitan [desˈkɔɾt]) was a form and genre of Old Occitan lyric poetry used by troubadours. It was heavily discordant in verse form and/or feeling...
    5 KB (245 words) - 13:26, 26 August 2023
  • Romance, compare: Latin fraxinus "ash (tree)" → OFr fraisne (mod. frêne), Occitan fraisse, Catalan freixe, Portuguese freixo, Romansch fraissen (vs. Italian...
    80 KB (9,554 words) - 23:59, 7 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Franco-Provençal
    Franco-Provençal (category Articles containing Occitan (post 1500)-language text)
    and Occitan forms. A significant document from the same period containing a list of vassals in the County of Forez also is not without literary value...
    110 KB (10,350 words) - 12:56, 1 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for La Spezia–Rimini Line
    Megleno-Romanian, Istro-Romanian),[citation needed] whereas Catalan, French, Occitan, Portuguese, Romansh, Spanish, and the Gallo‒Italic languages are representatives...
    12 KB (1,216 words) - 13:25, 5 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Italian language
    the vernacular in Italy. Full literary manifestations of the vernacular began to surface around the 13th century in the form of various religious texts and...
    127 KB (11,814 words) - 09:25, 10 September 2024
  • to [f] in urban speech, likely due to the influx of numerous French and Occitan speakers (and their particular pronunciation of Latin) beginning in the...
    26 KB (2,445 words) - 23:07, 9 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Italian literature
    tenure there that he introduced Occitan lyric poetry to the city, which later developed a flourishing Occitan literary culture. The margraves of Montferrat—Boniface...
    146 KB (16,954 words) - 18:15, 6 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Spanish verbs
    replaces hemos to form the present perfect tense in modern language, and in certain contexts it is even acceptable in formal or literary language: Había...
    79 KB (10,119 words) - 04:11, 7 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Judaeo-Spanish
    Judaeo-Spanish (category Articles containing Occitan (post 1500)-language text)
    complicated. Before the expulsion of Jews from Spain, the word meant "literary Spanish" as opposed to other dialects,[citation needed] or "Romance" in...
    113 KB (9,841 words) - 06:32, 9 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for French Basque Country
    French Basque Country (category Articles containing Occitan (post 1500)-language text)
    more specifically the triangle formed by Ciboure, Sare, and Saint-Jean-de-Luz. The language has evolved in the literary plane from classical Labourd dialect...
    53 KB (6,669 words) - 08:31, 10 September 2024
  • -o), a trait shared with French and Occitan; and the fact that the remote preterite tense of verbs is usually formed with a periphrasis consisting of the...
    44 KB (3,871 words) - 07:54, 2 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for List of epic poems
    erliest form of it was Kitab Kalila wa dimna of Aban Lahiqi. According to that article, world folk epics are those that are not just literary masterpieces...
    38 KB (4,081 words) - 19:59, 22 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Catalonia
    Catalonia (category Articles containing Occitan (post 1500)-language text)
    (/ˌkætəˈloʊniə/; Catalan: Catalunya [kətəˈluɲə] ; Spanish: Cataluña [kataˈluɲa] ; Occitan: Catalonha [kataˈluɲa]) is an autonomous community of Spain, designated...
    233 KB (22,302 words) - 23:12, 10 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Galician language
    "lenguaje gallego" is already documented in this same century, circa 1330; in Occitan circa 1290, in the Regles de Trobar by Catalan author Jofre de Foixà: "si...
    83 KB (7,646 words) - 11:47, 7 September 2024