- Ensenhamen
An "ensenhamen" (meaning "instruction" or "teaching", _ca. ensenyament, _fr. enseignement, _it. insegnamento) was an
Occitan didactic (often lyric)poem associated with thetroubadour s. As a genre ofOccitan literature , its limits have been open to debate since it was first defined in the 19th century. The word "ensenhamen" has many variations in old Occitan: "ensenhamenz", "ensenhamens", "essenhamen", "ensegnamen", "enseinhamen", and "enseignmens".The "ensenhamen" had its own subgenres, such as "conduct literature" that told noblewomen the proper way to comport themselves and "
mirror of princes " literature that told the nobleman how to bechivalrous . Besides these were types defining and encouragingcourtly love and courtly behaviour, from topics as mundane astable manners to issues ofsexual ethics .The earliest attestable "ensenhamen" was written around 1155 by
Garin lo Brun . It is the "Ensenhamen de la donsela" ("Instruction of the girl"). Around 1170Arnaut Guilhem de Marsan wrote the "Ensenhamen del cavaier" ("Instruction of the knight") for a warrior audience. A decade or so laterArnaut de Mareuil wrote a long, classically-informed "ensenhamen" on "cortesia" (courtesy). In the 1220s or 1230s the subjet of honour was treated by the Italian troubadourSordel in his "Ensenhamen d'onor" and byUc de Saint Circ in a similarly titled work. Late in the thirteenth century the CatalanCerverí de Girona wrote an "ensenhamen" ofproverb s in 1,197 quartets for his son. Even later, another Catalan troubadour,Amanieu de Sescars , composed two "ensenhamens": the "Ensenhamen del scudier" ("Instruction of the squire") dictating ideal knightly behaviour and the "Ensenhamen de la donsela" ("Instruction of the girl") precribing respectable behaviour for young women.Daude de Pradas wrote an "ensenhamen" on the fourcardinal virtues .Peire Lunel wrote "L'essenhamen del guarso" in 1326, the latest example of the genre.At de Mons andRaimon Vidal are other known contributors to the genre.There were also mock "ensenhamens" designed to satirise the
jongleur s. "Fadet juglar" byGuiraut de Calanso is an example.Bertran de Paris andGuiraut de Cabreira ("Cabra joglar") are known to also have written this way.ources
*Gaunt, Simon, and Kay, Sarah (edd.) "The Troubadours: An Introduction". Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999. ISBN 0 521 574730.
*Monson, Don A. "Les "ensenhamens" occitans: essai de definition et délimitation du genre". Paris: Libraire C. Klincksieck, 1981. ISBN 2 252 02319 8.
*Riquer, Martín de . "Los trovadores: historia literaria y textos". 3 vol. Barcelona: Planeta, 1975.
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