- Bernardo del Carpio
Bernardo del Carpio is a legendary hero of
medieval Iberian legend (namely Spanish), comparable toEl Cid , though with less historical evidence of his actual existence.The story
Supposedly the nephew of
Alfonso II of Asturias , stories feature him striving against Alfonso to release his father from prison. Other stories have him as the rival and slayer ofRoland at Roncesvaux.Bernardo was said to be the son of Sancho, the Count of Saldaña and Dona Jimena (Alfonso II's sister, therefore grandson of King
Fruela I of Asturias ). Alfonso was not happy with the marriage, so he had Sancho blinded and thrown into prison and took Bernardo. He was raised in Alfonso II's court. Everybody was ordered not to tell the young Bernardo who his father was. [http://geo.ya.com/conceyucatalan/hismedieval/hisme1.htm]Alfonso invited
Charlemagne into Iberia to defeat theMoors , promising to name him as heir. Bernardo's victory at Roncesvaux ended that plan. But Bernardo then joined up with the Moors, hoping to force Alfonso into action; but Alfonso secretly had Sancho killed while in prison.Origins
The original legend of Bernardo del Carpio was sung by the "
jongleurs " of theKingdom of León . Later, the Castilian poetPero Ferrús (fl.1380 ) mentions Bernardo del Carpio in one of his cantigas, which combines the theme of the good life in Castile with a series of "loores", or lyric paeans, to a series of Greek, Roman,Biblical , chivalric, andArab heroes.In
1624 Bernardo de Balbuena published "El Bernardo ", an account of Bernardo's exploits. It is considered one of the masterpieces ofSpanish literature .In the opening of "
Don Quixote ",Cervantes has the Don especially admiring Bernardo because he crushed Roland with his arms alone, although the context is clear that Don Quixote is placing too much credence in the fantastic stories of romance.References
*Burton, David. "The Legend of Bernardo del Carpio: from Chronicle to Drama".
External links
* [http://www.bernardodelcarpio.org Asociación cultural Bernardo del Carpio]
* [http://www.sewanee.edu/Spanish/santiago/carpio.html Romances de Bernardo del Carpio]
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