User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
troubadours- Plural of troubadour
Extensive Definition
A troubadour (IPA:
[tɾuβaˈðuɾ], originally [tɾuβaˈðoɾ]) was a composer and performer of Occitan lyric poetry
during the High
Middle Ages (1100–1350). The troubadour school or
tradition began in the eleventh century in Occitania, but it
subsequently spread into Italy, Spain, and even
Greece.
Under the influence of the troubadours, related movements sprang up
throughout Europe: the Minnesang in
Germany,
trovadorismo in
Galicia
and Portugal, and that
of the trouvères in
northern France. Dante
Alighieri in his De
vulgari eloquentia defined the troubadour lyric as fictio
rethorica musicaque poita: rhetorical, musical, and poetical
fiction. After a "classical" period around the turn of the
thirteenth century and a mid-century resurgence, the art of the
troubadours declined in the fourteenth century and eventually died
out around the time of the Black Death
(1348).
The texts of troubadour songs deal mainly with
themes of chivalry and
courtly
love. Most were metaphysical, intellectual, and formulaic. Many
were humorous or vulgar satires. Works can be grouped into three
styles: the trobar leu
(light), trobar ric
(rich), and trobar clus
(closed). Likewise there were many genres, the most popular being the
canso, but
sirventes and tensos were especially popular in
the post-classical period, in Italy, and among the female
troubadours, the trobairitz.
Etymology of name
The word "troubadour" and its cognates in other languages—trov(i)èro and then trovatore in Italian, trovador in Spanish, trobador in Catalan—are of disputed origin.Latin
The English word "troubadour" comes by way of Old French from the Occitan word trobador, the oblique case of the nominative trobaire, a substantive of the verb trobar, which is derived from the hypothetical Late Latin *tropāre, in turn from tropus, meaning a trope, from Greek τρόπος (tropos), meaning "turn, manner". Another possible Latin root is turbare, to upset or (over)turn. Trobar is cognative with the modern French word trouver, meaning "to find". Whereas French trouver became trouvère, the nominative form, instead of the oblique trouveor or trouveur, the French language adopted the Occitan oblique case and from there it entered English.Origins
The early study of the troubadours focussed intensely on their origins. No academic consensus was ever achieved in the area. Today, one can distinguish at least eleven competing theories (the adjectives used below are a blend from the Grove Dictionary of Music and Roger Boase's The Origins and Meaning of Courtly Love):- Arabic (also Arabist or Hispano-Arabic)Ezra Pound, in his Canto VIII, famously declared that William of Aquitaine "had brought the song up out of Spain / with the singers and veils..." referring to the troubadour song. The hypothesis that the troubadour tradition was created, more or less, by William after his experience of Moorish arts while fighting with the Reconquista in Spain was championed by Ramón Menéndez Pidal in the early twentieth-century, but its origins go back to the Cinquecento and Giammaria Barbieri (died 1575) and Juan Andrés (died 1822). Meg Bogin, English translator of the trobairitz, held this hypothesis. Certainly "a body of song of comparable intensity, profanity and eroticism [existed] in Arabic from the second half of the 9th century onwards."
- Bernardine-Marianist or ChristianAccording to this theory, it was the theology espoused by Bernard of Clairvaux and the increasingly important Mariology that most strongly influenced the development of the troubadour genre. Specifically, the emphasis on religious and spiritual love, disinterestedness, mysticism, and devotion to Mary would explain "courtly love". The emphasis of the reforming Robert of Arbrissel on "matronage" to achieve his ends can explain the troubadour attitude towards women. Chronologically, however, this hypothesis is hard to sustain (the forces believed to have given rise to the phenomenon arrived later than it). But the influence of Bernardine and Marian theology can be retained without the origins theory. This theory was advanced early by Eduard Wechssler and further by Dmitri Scheludko (who emphasises the Cluniac Reform) and Guido Errante. Mario Casella and Leo Spitzer have added "Augustinian" influence to it.
- Celtic or Chivalric-MatriarchalThe survival of pre-Christian sexual mores and warrior codes from matriarchal societes, be they Celtic, Germanic, or Pictish, among the aristocracy of Europe can account for the idea (fusion) of "courtly love". The existence of pre-Christian matriarchy has usually been treated with scepticism as has the persistence of underlying paganism in high medieval Europe.
- Classical LatinThe classical Latin theory emphasises parallels between Ovid, especially his Amores and Ars amatoria, and the lyric of courtly love. The aetas ovidiana that predominated in the eleventh century in and around Orléans, the quasi-Ciceronian ideology that held sway in the Imperial court, and the scraps of Plato then available to scholars have all been cited as classical influences on troubadour poetry.
- (Crypto-)CatharAccording to this thesis, troubadour poetry is a reflection of Cathar religious doctrine. While the theory is supported by the traditional and near-universal account of the decline of the troubadours coinciding with the suppression of Catharism during the Albigensian Crusade (first half of the thirteenth century), support for it has come in waves. The explicitly Catholic meaning of many early troubadour works also works against the theory.
- LiturgicalThe troubadour lyric may be a development of the Christian liturgy and hymnody. The influence of the Song of Songs has even been suggested. There is no preceding Latin poetry resembling that of the troubadours. On those grounds, no theory of the latter's origins in classical or post-classical Latin can be constructed, but that has not deterred some, who believe that a pre-existing Latin corpus must merely be lost to us. That many troubadours received their grammatical training in Latin through the Church (from clerici, clerics) and that many were trained musically by the Church is well-attested. The musical school of Saint Martial's at Limoges has been singled out in this regard. "Para-liturgical" tropes were in use there in the era preceding the troubadours' appearance.
- Feudal-social or -sociologicalThis theory or set of related theories has gained ground in the twentieth century. It is more a methodological approach to the question than a theory; it asks not from where the content or form of the lyric came but rather in what situation/circumstances did it arise. It includes the prevailing Marxist theory. Under Marxist influence, Erich Köhler, Marc Bloch, and Georges Duby have suggested that the "essential hegemony" in the castle of the lord's wife during his absence was a driving force. The use of feudal terminology in troubadour poems is seen as evidence. This theory has been developed away from sociological towards psychological explanation.
- Folklore or Spring Folk RitualAccording to María Rosa Menocal, Alfred Jeanroy first suggested that folklore and oral tradition gave rise to troubadour poetry in 1883. According to F. M. Warren, it was Gaston Paris, Jeanroy's reviewer, in 1891 who first located troubadour origins in the festive dances of women hearkening the spring in the Loire Valley. This theory has since been widely discredited, but the discovery of the jarchas raises the question of the extent of literature (oral or written) in the eleventh century and earlier. The influence of late eleventh-century poets of the "Loire school", such as Marbod of Rennes and Hildebert of Lavardin, is stressed in this connexion by Brinkmann.
- NeoplatonicThis theory is one of the more intellectualising. The "ennobling effects of love" in specific have been identified as Neoplatonic. It is viewed either as a strenth or weakness that this theory requires a second theory about how the Neoplatonism was transmitted to the troubadours; perhaps it can be coupled with one of the other origins stories or perhaps it is just peripheral. Käte Axhausen has "exploited" this theory and A. J. Denomy has linked it with the Arabist (through Avicenna) and the Cathar (through John Scotus Eriugena).
History
Early period
The earliest troubadour whose work survives is Guilhem de Peitieus (1071–1127). Peter Dronke, author of The Medieval Lyric, however, believes that "[his] songs represent not the beginnings of a tradition but summits of achievement in that tradition." His name has been preserved because he was the Duke of Aquitaine, but his work plays with already established structures; Eble II of Ventadorn is often credited as a predecessor, though none of his work survives. Orderic Vitalis referred to Guilhem composing songs about his experiences on his return from the Crusade of 1101 (c. 1102). This may be the earliest reference to troubadour lyrics.Orderic also provides us what may be the first
description of a troubadour performance: an eyewitness account of
William of Aquitaine in 1135.
Picauensis uero dux ... miserias captiuitatis
suae ... coram regibus et magnatis atque Christianis coetibus
multotiens retulit rythmicis uersibus cum facetis modulationibus.
(X.21)
Then the Poitevin duke ... the miseries of his
captivity ... before kings, magnates, and Christian assemblies many
times related with rhythmic verses and witty measures.
Spread (rayonnement)
The first half of the twelfth century saw relatively few recorded troubadours. Only in the last decades of the century did troubadour activity explode. Almost half of all troubadour works survive from the period 1180–1220.The troubadour tradition seems to have begun in
western Aquitaine (Poitou and Saintonge) and
Gascony,
from there spreading over into eastern Aquitaine (Limousin
and Auvergne)
and Provence. At its
height it had become popular in Languedoc and the
regions of Rouergue, Toulouse, and
Quercy (c.
1200). Finally, in the early thirteenth century it began to spread
into first Italy and then Catalonia, whence
to the rest of Spain. This development has been called the
rayonnement des troubadours.
Classical period
The classical period of troubadour activity lasted from about 1170 until about 1220. The most famous names among the ranks of troubadours belong to this period. During this period the lyric art of the troubadours reached the height of its popularity and the number of surviving poems is greatest from this period. During this period the canso, or love song, became distinguishable as a genre. The master of the canso and the troubadour who epitomises the classical period is Bernart de Ventadorn. He was highly regarded by his contemporaries, as were Giraut de Bornelh, reputed by his biographer to be the greatest composer of melodies to ever live, and Bertran de Born, the master of the sirventes, or political song, which became increasingly popular in this period.The classical period came to be seen by later
generations, especially in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries
and outside of Occitania, as representing the high point of lyric
poetry and models to be emulated. The language of the classic
poets, its grammar and vocabularly, their style and themes, were
the ideal to which poets of the troubadour revival in Toulouse and
their Catalan and Castilian contemporaries aspired. During the
classical period the "rules" of poetic composition had first become
standardised and written down, first by Raimon Vidal
and then by Uc
Faidit.
Albigensian Crusade and decline
Gay Saber and revival
Who they were
The 450 or so troubadours known to us came from a variety of backgrounds. They made their living in a variety of ways, lived and travelled in many different places, and were actors in many types of social context. The troubadours were not wandering entertainers. Typically, they stayed in one place for a lengthy period of time under the patronage of a wealthy nobleman or woman. Many did travel extensively, however, sojourning at one court and then another.Status
The earliest troubadour, the Duke of Aquitaine, came from the high nobility. He was followed immediately by two members of the knightly class, Cercamon and Marcabru, and by a member of the princely class, Jaufre Rudel. At the outset, the troubadours were universally noblemen, sometimes of high rank and sometimes of low. Many troubadours are described in their vidas as poor knights. It was one of the most common descriptors of status: Berenguier de Palazol, Gausbert Amiel, Guilhem Ademar, Guiraudo lo Ros, Peire de Maensac, Peirol, Raimon de Miraval, Rigaut de Berbezilh, and Uc de Pena. Albertet de Sestaro is described as the son of a noble jongleur, presumably a petty noble lineage.Later troubadours especially could belong to
lower classes, ranging from the middle class of merchants and
"burgers" (persons of urban standing) to tradesmen and others who
worked with their hands. Salh
d'Escola and Elias de
Barjols were described as the sons of merchants and Elias
Fonsalada was the son of a burger and jongleur. Perdigon was the
son of a "poor fisherman" and Elias Cairel
of a blacksmith. Arnaut de
Mareuil is specified in his vida as coming from a poor family,
but whether this family was poor by noble standards or more global
ones is not apparent.
Trobadors and joglars
seealso Jongleur The Occitan words trobador and trobaire are relatively rare compared with the verb trobar (compose, invent), which was usually applied to the writing of poetry. It signified that a poem was original to an author (trobador) and was not merely sung or played by one. The term was used mostly for poetry only and in more careful works, like the vidas, is not generally applied to the composition of music or to singing, though the troubadour's poetry itself is not so careful. Sometime in the middle of the twelfth century, however, a distinction was definitely being made between an inventor of original verse and the performers of others'. These last were called joglars, from the Latin ioculatores, giving rise also to the French jongleur, Castilian juglar, and English juggler, which has come to refer to a more specific breed of performer. The medieval jongleur/joglar is really a minstrel.At the height of troubadour poetry (the
"classical period"), troubadours are often found attacking
jongleurs and at least two small genres arose around the theme: the
ensenhamen joglaresc and the sirventes joglaresc. These terms are
debated, however, since the adjective joglaresc would seem to imply
"in the manner of the jongleurs". Inevitably, however, pieces of
said genres are verbal attacks at jongleurs, in general and in
specific, with named individuals being called out. It is clear, for
example from the poetry of Bertran de
Born, that jongleurs were performers who did not usually
compose and that they often performed the troubadour's songs:
singing, playing instruments, dancing, and even doing
acrobatics.
In the late thirteenth century Guiraut
Riquier bemoaned the inexactness of his contemporaries and
wrote a letter to Alfonso
X of Castile, a noted patron of literature and learning of all
kinds, for clarification on the proper reference of the terms
trobador and joglar. According to Riquier, every vocation deserved
a name of its own and the sloppy usage of joglar assured that it
covered a multitude of activities, some which, no doubt, Riquier
did not wish to be associated. In the end Riquier
argued—and Alfonso X seems to agree, though his
"response" was probably penned by Riquier—that a joglar
was a courtly entertainer (as opposed to popular or low-class one)
and a troubadour was a poet and composer.
Vidas and razos
Podestà-troubadours
A phenomenon arose in Italy, recognised around the turn of the twentieth-century by Giulio Bertoni, of men serving in several cities as podestàs on behalf of either the Guelph or Ghibelline party and writing political verse in Occitan rhyme. These figures generally came from the urban middle-class. They aspired to high culture and though, unlike the nobility, they were not patrons of literature, they were its disseminators and its readers.The first podestà-troubadour was Rambertino
Buvalelli, possible the first native Italian troubadour, who
was podestà of Genoa between 1218
and 1221. Rambertino, a Guelph, served at one time or another as
podestà of Brescia, Milan, Parma, Mantua, and Verona. It was
probably during his three-year tenure there that he introduced
Occitan lyric poetry to the city, which was later to develop a
fluorishing Occitan literary culture.
Among the podestà-troubadours to follow
Rambertino, four were from Genoa: the Guelphs Luca
Grimaldi, who also served in Florence, Milan, and Ventimiglia,
and Luchetto
Gattilusio, who served in Milan, Cremona, and
Bologna,
and the Ghibellines Perceval
Doria, who served in Arles, Avignon, Asti, and Parma, and Simon Doria,
sometime podestà of Savona and Albenga. Among the
non-Genoese podestà-troubadours was Alberico
da Romano, a nobleman of high rank who governed Vicenza and
Treviso as
variously a Ghibelline and a Guelph. He was a patron as well as a
composer of Occitan lyric.
Mention should be made of the Provençal
troubadour Isnart
d'Entrevenas, who was podestà of Arles in 1220, though he does
not fit the phenomenon Giulio Bertoni first identified in
Italy.
Trobairitz
The trobairitz were the female troubadours, the first female composers of secular music in the Western tradition. The word trobairitz was first used in the thirteenth-century Romance of Flamenca and its derivation is the same as that of trobaire but in feminine form. There were also female counterparts to the joglars: the joglaresas. The number of trobairitz varies between sources: there were twenty or twenty-one named trobairitz, plus an additional poetess known only as Domna H. There are several anonymous texts ascribed to women; the total number of trobairitz texts varies from twenty-three (Schultz-Gora), twenty-five (Bec), thirty-six (Bruckner, White, and Shepard), and forty-six (Rieger). Only one melody composed by a trobairitz (the Comtessa de Dia) survives. Out of a total of about 450 troubadours and 2,500 troubadour works, the trobairitz and their corpus form a minor but interesting and informative portion. They are, therefore, quite well-studied.The trobairitz were in most respects as varied a
lot as their male counterparts, with the general exceptions of
their poetic style and their provenance. They wrote predominantly
cansos and tensos; only one sirventes by a
named woman, Gormonda
de Monpeslier, survives (though two anonymous ones are
attributed to women). One salut
d'amor, by a woman (Azalais
d'Altier) to a woman (Clara
d'Anduza) is also extant and one anonymous planh is usually assigned a female
authorship. They wrote almost entirely within the trobar leu
style, only two poems, one by Lombarda and
another
Alais, Yselda, and Carenza, are usually considered to belong to
the more demanding trobar clus.
None of the trobairitz were prolific, or if they were there work
has not survived. Only two have left us more than one piece: the
Comtessa de Dia, with four, and Castelloza, with
three or four. One of the known trobairitz, Gaudairença,
wrote a song entitled Coblas e dansas, which has not survived; no
other piece of hers has either.
The trobairitz came almost to a woman from
Occitania. There
are representatives from the Auvergne,
Provence,
Languedoc, the
Dauphiné,
Toulousain, and
the Limousin.
One trobairitz, Ysabella,
may have been born in Périgord,
Northern
Italy, Greece, or
Palestine.
All the trobairitz whose families we know were high-born ladies;
only one, Lombarda, was probably of the merchant class. All the
tobairitz known by name lived around the same time: the late
twelfth century and the early thirteenth (c. 1170 – c.
1260). The earliest was probably Tibors de
Sarenom, who was active in the 1150s (the date of her known
composition is uncertain). The latest was either Garsenda
of Forcalquier, who died in 1242, though her period of poetic
patronage and composition probably occurred a quarter century
earlier, or Guilleuma
de Rosers, who composed a tenso with Lanfranc
Cigala, known between 1235 and 1257. There exist brief prose
biographies—vidas—for eight
trobairitz: Almucs
de Castelnau (actually a razo), Azalais
de Porcairagues, the Comtessa de Dia, Castelloza, Iseut de
Capio (also a razo), Lombarda, Maria de
Ventadorn, and Tibors de Sarenom.
Gay Science
Works
Schools and styles
There have been three main styles of Occitan lyric poetry identified: the trobar leu (light), trobar ric (rich), and trobar clus (closed, hermetic). The first was by far the most common: the wording is straightforward and relatively simple compared to the ric and literary devices are less common than in the clus. This style was the most accessible and it was immensely popular. The most famous poet of the trobar leu was Bernart de Ventadorn. The most difficult style on the other hand was the last. The trobar clus regularly escapes modern scholarly interpretation. Words are commonly used metaphorically and symbolically and what a poem appears to be about on its surface is rarely what is intended by the poet or understood by audiences "in the know". The clus style was invented early by Marcabru but only favoured by a few masters thereafter. The trobar ric style is not as opaque as the clus, rather it employs a rich vocabulary, using many words, rare words, invented words, and unusual, colourful wordings.Modern scholars reocgnise several "schools" in
the troubadour tradition. Among the early is a school of followers
of Marcabru, sometimes called the "Marcabrunian school": Bernart
Marti, Bernart
de Venzac, Gavaudan, and
Peire
d'Alvernhe. These poets favoured the trobar clus or ric or a
hybrid of the two. They were often moralising in tone and critical
of contemporary courtly society. Another early school, whose style
seems to have fallen out of favour, was the "Gascon school" of
Cercamon,
Peire de
Valeira, and Guiraut
de Calanso. Cercamon was said by his biographer to have
composed in the "old style" and Guiraut's songs were d'aquella
saison ("of that time"). This style of poetry seems to be attached
to early troubadours from Gascony and was
characterised by references to nature: leaves, flowers, birds, and
their songs. This Gascon "literary fad" was unpopular in Provence in the
early thirteenth century, harming the reputation of the poets
associated with it.
In the late thirteenth century a school arose at
Béziers, once
the centre of pre-Albigensian Languedoc and of the Trencavel
lordships, in the 1260s–80s. Three poets epitomise this
"school": Bernart
d'Auriac, Joan Esteve,
Joan
Miralhas, and Raimon
Gaucelm. All three were natives of Béziers and lived there. All
three were members of the urban middle class and no courtesans:
Miralhas was possibly a potter and Bernart was a mayestre
(teacher). All three were supporters of the French king
Louis
IX and the French aristocracy against the native Occitan
nobility. They have been described as "Gallicised". Raimon Gaucelm
supported the Eighth
Crusade and even wrote a planh, the only known one of its kind,
to a burgher of Béziers. Joan Esteve and Bernart both composed in
support the French in the Aragonese
Crusade. The Béziers are a shining example of the
transformation of Occitania in the aftermath of Albigensian
Crusade, but also of the ability of troubadours to survive
it.
Genres
Troubadours, at least after their style became established, usually followed some set of "rules", like those of the Leys d'amors (compiled between 1328 and 1337). Initially all troubadour verses were called simply vers, yet this soon came to be reserved for only love songs and was later replaced by canso, though the term lived on as an antique expression for the troubadours' early works and was even employed with a more technically meaning by the last generation of troubadours (mid-fourteenth century), when it was thought to derive from the Latin word verus (truth) and was thus used to describe moralising or didactic pieces. The early troubadours developed many genres and these only proliferated as rules of composition came to be put in writing. The known genres are:- Alba (morning song)— the song of a lover as dawn approaches, often with a watchman warning of the approch of a lady's jealous husband
- Canso, originally vers, also chanso or canço— the love song, usually consisting of five or six stanzas with an envoi
- Cobla esparsa— a stand-alone stanza
- Comiat— a song renouncing a lover
- Crusade song (canso de crozada)— a song about the Crusades, usually encouraging them
- Dansa or balada— a lively dance song with a refrain
- Descort— a song heavily discordant in verse form and/or feeling
- Desdansa— a dance designed for sad occasions
- Ensenhamen— a long didactic poem, usually not divided into stanzas, teaching a moral or practical lesson
- Enuig— a poem expressing indignation or feelings of insult
- Escondig— a lover's apology
- Estampida— a late thirteenth-century dance song
- Gap— a boasting song, often presented as a challenge, often similar to modern sports chants
- Maldit— a song complaining about a lady's behaviour and character
- Partimen— a poetical exchange between two or more poets in which one is presented with a dilemma by another and responds
- Pastorela— the tale of the love request of a knight to a shepherdess
- Planh— a lament, especially on the death of some important figure
- Plazer— a poem expressing pleasure
- Salut d'amor— a love letter addressed to another, not always one's lover
- Sestina— highly-structure verse form
- Sirventes— a political poem or satire, originally put in the mouth of a paid soldier (sirvens)
- Sonnet— an Italian genre imported into Occitan verse in the thirteenth century
- Tenso, also tenson, later tenço— a poetical debate which was usually an exchange between two poets, but could be fictional
- Torneyamen— a poetical debate between three or more persons, often with a judge (like a tournament)
- Viadeyra— a traveller's complaint
All these genres were highly fluid. A cross
between a sirventes and a canso was a meg-sirventes
(half-sirventes). A tenso could be "invented" by a single poet; an
alba or canso could be written with religious significance,
addressed to God or the Virgin; and a sirventes may be nothing more
than a political attack. The maldit and the comiat were often
connected as a maldit-comiat and they could be used to attack and
renounce a figure other than a lady or a lover, like a commanding
officer (when combined, in a way, with the sirventes).
Most "Crusading songs" are classified either as
cansos or sirventes but sometimes separately. Some styles became
popular in other languages and in other literary or musical
traditions. In French,
the alba became the aubade, the pastorela the
pastourelle, and the
partimen the jeu parti. The
sestina became popular in Italian
literature. The troubadours were not averse to borrowing
either. The planh developed out of the Latin planctus and the sonnet was
stolen from the Sicilian
School. Interestingly, the basse danse
(bassa dansa) was first mentioned in the troubadour tradition (c.
1324), but only as being performed by jongleurs.
Performance
A complementary role to that of the troubadour was filled at the same period by performers known as joglares in Occitan, jongleurs in French (minstrels in English). Jongleurs are often addressed in troubadour lyrics. Their profession was that of popular entertainer; as such jongleurs sometimes performed troubadour compositions but more often other genres, notably chansons de geste (epic narratives).Poetry
Music
Troubadour songs were usually monophonic. Fewer than 300 melodies out of an estimated 2500 survive. Most were composed by the troubadours themselves. Other troubadours set their poems to pre-existing pieces music. Raimbaut de Vaqueyras wrote his Kalenda maya (The Calends of May) to music composed by jongleurs at Montferrat. Troubadours sing tales of bravery and stories about life and death. The most common kinds of songs they sang were: morning songs; political poems; dirges; and disputes. Their favorite kinds of songs were about courtly love, war, and nature.Legacy
Transmission
Some 2,600 poems or fragments of poem shave survived from around 450 identifiable troubadours. They are largely preserved in songbooks called chansonniers made for wealthy patrons.Table of parchment chansonniers
References
Sources
- Akehurst, F. R. P., and Davis, Judith M., edd. (1995). A Handbook of the Troubadours. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 052 007 976 0.
- Aubrey, Elizabeth (1989). "References to Music in Old Occitan Literature." Acta Musicologica, 61:2 (May–August), pp. 110–149.
- Boase, Roger (1977). The Origin and Meaning of Courtly Love: A Critical Study of European Scholarship. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 0 87471 950 x.
- Chaytor, Henry John (1912). The Troubadours. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Gaunt, Simon, and Kay, Sarah, edd. (1999) The Troubadours: An Introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0 521 574730.
- Jones, W. Powell (1931). "The Jongleur Troubadours of Provence." PMLA, 46:2 (June), pp. 307–311.
- Menocal, María Rosa (1981). "Close Encounters in Medieval Provence: Spain's Role in the Birth of Troubadour Poetry." Hispanic Review, 49:1 (Williams Memorial Issue, Winter), pp. 43–64.
- Paden, William D. (2005) "Troubadours and History" (pp. 157–182). The World of Eleanor of Aquitaine: Literature and Society in Southern France between the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries, edd. Marcus Bull and Catherine Léglu. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. ISBN 1 84383 114 7.
- Riquer, Martín de. Los trovadores: historia literaria y textos. 3 vol. Barcelona: Planeta, 1975.
- Silverstein, Theodore (1949). "Andreas, Plato, and the Arabs: Remarks on Some Recent Accounts of Courtly Love." Modern Philology, 47:2 (November), pp. 117–126.
- Warren, F. M. (1912). "The Troubadour Canso and Latin Lyric Poetry." Modern Philology, 9:4 (April), pp. 469–487.
External links
- Literary Encyclopedia: Troubadour.
- Said I. Abdelwahed. Troubadour Poetry: An Intercultural Experience.
Notes
troubadours in Catalan: Trobador
troubadours in Danish: Troubadour
troubadours in German: Trobador
troubadours in Estonian: Trubaduur
troubadours in Spanish: Trovador
troubadours in Esperanto: Trobadoro
troubadours in Persian: تروبادور
troubadours in French: Troubadour
troubadours in Galician: Trobador
troubadours in Italian: Trovatore
troubadours in Hebrew: טרובדור (מוזיקה)
troubadours in Hungarian: Trubadúr
troubadours in Dutch: Troubadour
troubadours in Japanese: トルバドゥール
troubadours in Norwegian: Trubadur
troubadours in Occitan (post 1500):
Trobador
troubadours in Polish: Trubadur
troubadours in Portuguese: Trovadorismo
troubadours in Russian: Трубадуры
troubadours in Slovenian: Trubadur
troubadours in Finnish: Trubaduuri
troubadours in Swedish: Trubadur
troubadours in Chinese: 遊吟詩人