- Jean Froissart
Jean Froissart (c. 1337 – c. 1405) was one of the most important of the
chronicle rs ofmedieval France . For centuries, "Froissart's Chronicles " have been recognized as the chief expression of the chivalric revival of the 14th centuryKingdom of England and France. His history is also one of the most important sources for the first half of theHundred Years' War .Life
Very little is known of Froissart's life and the little that is known comes mainly from Froissart's own Chronicle and his poems. Froissart originated from
Valenciennes , Hainaut, and his writings suggest his father was a painter of armorial bearings. Froissart began working as amerchant but soon gave that up to become aclerk . By about age 24, he had gained significant distinction and carried with him a letter of recommendation from theKing of Bohemia when he became a court poet and a kind of official historian toPhilippa of Hainault , queen consort ofEdward III of England .The memoirs of his time in Philippa's service, between 1361 and 1369, were later put together with reports of other events he had witnessed, in his "Chroniques" ("Chronicles"). He took a serious approach to his work:
:"Je suis de nouveau entré dans ma forge pour travailler et forger en la noble matière du temps passé":("Again I entered my smithy to work and forge something from the noble material of time past")
He traveled around
England ,Scotland ,Wales ,France ,Flanders andSpain gathering material and first-hand accounts for his "Chronicle". He also went with Lionel Duke of Clarence toMilan to attend the duke's marriage to the daughter of Galeazzo Visconti. At this wedding two other significant writers of the Middle Ages were present,Chaucer andPetrarch .After the publication of this first book, and after the death of Philippa, he enjoyed the patronage of
Joanna, Duchess of Brabant among various others. He received rewards—including thebenefice ofEstinnes , a village nearBinche and later became canon ofChimay —which were sufficient to finance further travels, which provided additional material for his work. He returned to England in 1395 but seemed disappointed by the changes since he was last there and what he viewed as the end ofchivalry . The date and circumstances of his death are unknown butSt Monegunda of Chimay claims to be the final resting place for his remains although this is unverified.Legacy
The text of Froissart's Chronicles is preserved in more than 100
illuminated manuscript s, illustrated by a variety of miniaturists. One of the most lavishly illuminated copies was commissioned byLouis of Gruuthuse , a Flemish nobleman, in the 1470s. The four volumes of this copy (BNF, Fr 2643 ; BNF, Fr 2644 ; BNF, Fr 2645 ; BNF, Fr 2646 ) contain 112 miniatures painted by the best Brugeois artists of the day, among them Loiset Lyédet, to whom the miniatures in the first two volumes are attributed.The English composer
Edward Elgar wrote an overture entitled "Froissart".Jean Froissart is also known to have been one of the first to mention the use of the verge and foliot, or
verge escapement in European clockworks, by 1368.External links
* [http://www.liv.ac.uk/~gcroenen/biblio.htm Bibliography Jean Froissart] , compiled by Dr. Godfried Croenen, University of Liverpool
* [http://www.royalarmouries.org/extsite/view.jsp?sectionId=3687 The Chronicles of Froissart exhibition] in theRoyal Armouries
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