- Jordan Fantosme
Jordan Fantosme (died c. 1185) was an Anglo-Norman historian, chronicler, and
trouvère . He was a cleric and probably thespiritual chancellor of theDiocese of Winchester . His major work is an Anglo-Norman verse chronicle of the war betweenHenry II of England and his sonHenry the Young King andWilliam I of Scotland in 1173–1174. As literature, it stands, according to its latest editor, "absolutely first class".It has been conjectured that Fantosme was an Italian (named "Giordano Fantasma") who came to England in the train of
Henry of Blois . A few lines from his poem suggests that he wasScoto-Norman , but this may have been inserted for the sake of theminstrel s who would be reciting the piece. On the other hand, Fantosme may have simply identified with his adopted country, he referred to messengers of William, who were also subjects of the Young King, as "noz" (ours). Considering his evident knowledge and skill in the Anglo-Norman language, the most likely hypothesis is that he was Anglo-Norman.Fantosme was in fact a partisan of Henry II, though his work has been noted for its impartiality and admired for its detail and vigour. Nonetheless, it has been criticised frequently in the past, because of its unusual metre, as a deterioration of the continental French style, but more recent analysis by R. C. Johnston has led to the conclusion that in fact Fantosme's chronicle represents a conscious insular style of French verse. This hypothesis rests in part on the assumption that Fantosme integrated some characteristics of Occitan verse (perhaps "coblas" by the
troubadour Jaufre Rudel ) he encountered during a stay inPoitiers in the 1140s, where he probably studied underGilbert de la Porrée . [Gillingham, 69.] Fantosme was a contemporary and often claimed to be an eye-witness of the events he describes, but another probable source isRichard of Ilchester , his bishop. His work is in general reliable as a historical source.A
Goliard ic Latin poem defending theincarnation andatonement ofJesus Christ and which is preserved in many manuscripts is entitled in one near-contemporary source as "Rithmus Jordanis Fantasmatis" and it is likely that the author was Fantosme, or at least believed to be Fantosme. Elsewhere the skillful poem is entitled "Prædicatio Goliæ" ("Preaching of Golias").A legal document of
10 April 1160 refers to a "Magistrum Jordanum Fantasma" inFareham nearPortsmouth . He is recorded in connexion with the diocese of Winchester between about 1150 and 1180. At about the time of the war he versified he was involved in a suit against John Joichel, who had an unlicensed opened a school inWinchester ; he won the suit.Works
There is a nineteenth-century English translation of his chronicle available online at GoogleBooks:
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=9ic8AAAAIAAJ "Chronicle of the War Between the English and the Scots in 1173 and 1174".] Francisque Michel, trans. (J. B. Nichols and Son, 1840)ources
*Gillingham, John. "Events and Opinions: Norman and English Views of Aquitaine, c.1152–c.1204" (pp. 57–82). "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, 2005. ISBN 1 84383 114 7.
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