Guiot de Dijon (fl. 1215–25) was a Burgundian trouvère. The seventeen chansons ascribed to him in the standard listing of Raynaud-Spanke are found in fifteen...
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silliness. Guiot de Dijon (fl. 1215–1225), Burgundian trouvère Guiot or Guyot du Repaire (1755–1818), French Army general Guiot de Provins (fl. 1180–1208)...
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Accessed 20 September 2008. For a modern edition of his poems, see E. Nissen (ed.), Les chansons attribuées à Guiot de Dijon et Jocelin (Paris, 1928)....
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de Ferrières (recorded as the Vidame de Chartres) Guillaume le Vinier (fl. c. 1220–45; †1245) Guillaume Veau Guiot de Dijon (fl. c. 1200–30) Guiot de...
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Guiot de Provins, also spelled Guyot (died after 1208), was a French poet and trouvère from the town of Provins in the Champagne area. A declining number...
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Chrétien de Troyes (Modern French: [kʁetjɛ̃ də tʁwa]; Old French: Crestien de Troies [kresˈtjẽn də ˈtrojəs]; fl. c. 1160–1191) was a French poet and trouvère...
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Richard I of England (redirect from Richard Coeur de Lion)
I (8 September 1157 – 6 April 1199), known as Richard Cœur de Lion (Norman French: Quor de Lion) or Richard the Lionheart because of his reputation as...
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Adam de la Halle (1245–50 – 1285–8/after 1306) was a French poet-composer trouvère. Among the few medieval composers to write both monophonic and polyphonic...
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wife, performed by Ensemble Convivencia from the Troubadoure album. Guiot de Dijon, Chanterai por mon corage – French trouvère lyric from the time of the...
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Chanson (section Chanson de geste)
precedents were 16 works by Adam de la Halle and one by Jehan de Lescurel. Not until the ars nova composer Guillaume de Machaut did any composer write a...
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Friedrich von Hausen's "Ich denke underwilen" is regarded as a contrafactum of Guiot de Provins's "Ma joie premeraine". By around 1190, the German poets began...
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List of medieval composers (category CS1 German-language sources (de))
(subscription or UK public library membership required) Karp, Theodore (2001). "Guiot de Dijon". Grove Music Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630...
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compositional characteristics of the later madrigal. The Madrigali de diversi musici: libro primo de la Serena (1530), by Philippe Verdelot (1480–1540), included...
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Pérez de Azagra, 4th Lord of Albarracín. With Marquesa López de Rada, daughter of Lope Díaz de Rada and Brunisende of Narbonne, he had Marquesa Gil de Rada...
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Troubadour (category CS1 German-language sources (de))
de Belenoi, Aimeric de Sarlat, Albertet Cailla, Arnaut de Mareuil, Elias de Barjols, Elias Fonsalada, Falquet de Romans, Guillem Magret, Guiraut de Calanso...
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Medieval music (section Cantigas de Santa Maria)
(Marchettus of Padua), Jacques of Liège, Johannes de Grocheo, Petrus de Cruce (Pierre de la Croix), and Philippe de Vitry. Chant (or plainsong) is a monophonic...
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six of these are attributed to two other poets, Gautier d'Espinal and Guiot de Dijon, in the rubrics. Only three of Jehan's pieces survive with melodies...
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Guido of Arezzo (category CS1 German-language sources (de))
writer on music between Boethius and Johannes Tinctoris, after the former's De institutione musica, Guido's Micrologus was the most widely distributed medieval...
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Brulé Gautier de Coincy Gautier de Dargies Gautier d'Espinal Gillebert de Berneville Gontier de Soignies Guillaume le Vinier Guiot de Dijon Jehan Bretel...
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Raoul de Houdenc was esteemed as a master poet in the ranks of Chrétien de Troyes by Huon de Méry (Tournoiement de l’Antéchrist, 1226). Raoul de Houdenc...
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Blondel de Nesle – either Jean I of Nesle (c. 1155 – 1202) or his son Jean II of Nesle (died 1241) – was a French trouvère. The name 'Blondel de Nesle'...
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(c.1159-after 1212) Gautier de Coincy (1177/8–1236) Guiot de Dijon (fl c.1200–30) Thibaut IV of Champagne (1201–53) Adam de la Halle (c.1240–88) Audefroi...
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Notker the Stammerer (redirect from De Carolo Magno)
Metzler [de] in 1613. For modern translations, see Farrier 1993, pp. 30–31 The Gesta Karoli Magni ("The Deeds of Charles the Great")—also known as De Carolo...
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William of Villehardouin (French: Guillaume de Villehardouin; Kalamata, c. 1211 – 1 May 1278) was the fourth prince of Achaea in Frankish Greece, from...
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Maurice II de Craon (c. 1132–1196) was Lord of Craon, Governor of Anjou and Maine under Henry II, a military figure and Anglo-Norman of the 12th century...
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only existing song by a trobairitz which survives with music, by Comtessa de Diá. Problems playing this file? See media help. The trobairitz (Occitan pronunciation:...
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Chansonnier du Roi (category Bibliothèque nationale de France collections)
famous trouvères, such as Theobald I of Navarre, Gace Brulé, Guiot de Dijon or Richard de Fournival, but others are anonymous. It contains as an addendum...
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d'Espinal († before July 1272) Gillebert de Berneville (fl c.1255) Gontier de Soignies (fl c.1180–1220) Guiot de Dijon (fl c.1200–30) Perrin d'Angicourt (fl...
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Conon de Béthune (before 1160[1] in the former region of Artois, today Pas-de-Calais - 17 December 1219, possibly at Adrianople) was a French crusader...
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pour vous m'esjoïs boinement 3. Penser ne doit villonie, attributed to Guiot de Dijon and Jehan Erart in some manuscripts. 4. Au tens que je voi averdir 5...
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