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Thomas of Britain

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thomas of Britain (also known as Thomas of England) was a poet of the 12th century. He is known for his Old French poem Tristan, a version of the Tristan and Iseult legend that exists only in eight fragments, amounting to around 3,300 lines of verse, mostly from the latter part of the story. It is calculated that this represents about one sixth of the original.

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Transcription

Works

Because Thomas's Tristan has an "obvious dependence" on Wace's Roman de Brut, which was completed by 1155,[1] it is likely that Thomas wrote it after 1155, and probably by 1160, possibly for Eleanor of Aquitaine,[2] since the work suggests close ties with the court of Henry II. Beyond this, the identity of the author is obscure. It has been speculated that he is to be identified with the "Thomas" who wrote the Romance of Horn, but this is unsupported.[2] Tristan has similarities to the Tristan story Chevrefoil by Marie de France, but either author could have borrowed from the other, or both from a third source.[3]

Although Thomas's own text is fragmentary, later adaptations of his work make it possible to reconstruct what is missing:

  • Gottfried von Strassburg's Tristan (Middle High German), left incomplete c. 1210, though fortuitously it covers all those parts of Thomas's work which are lost. Gottfried expanded the story by about a third, while nonetheless remaining fairly faithful to Thomas.
  • Brother Robert's Old Norse Tristrams saga ok Ísöndar (Saga of Tristram and Isond), written in 1226 (prose), condensing the story.
  • The Middle English Sir Tristrem (verse, late 13th Century), a much abbreviated retelling.
  • The Italian La Tavola Ritonda (prose, 14th century).

Thomas' version is the earliest known representative of the "courtly branch" of the legend, to which Gottfried's also belongs. This branch differs from the "common" or "primitive" versions of Béroul and Eilhart von Oberge, in that greater emphasis is placed on pleasing the sensibilities and expectations of a courtly audience. Some scholars have theorized an "Ur-Tristan", an original French version that inspired all later accounts. Joseph Bédier attempted to reconstruct this original from the evidence provided by the later versions.

See also

References

  1. ^ Legge, M. Dominica. Anglo-Norman Literature and its Background. London: Oxford University Press, 1963. p. 46.
  2. ^ a b Legge, p. 49
  3. ^ Legge, p. 46

Editions and translations

  • Thomas, Les fragments du Roman de Tristan, ed. Bartina H. Wind, Paris/Geneva 1960.
  • Gottfried von Strassburg, Tristan, with the surviving fragments of the Tristran of Thomas, translated A.T. Hatto, Penguin, 1960.
  • The Saga of Tristram and Ísönd, translated with an introduction by Paul Schach, University of Nebraska Press 1973.

External links

This page was last edited on 9 March 2024, at 10:17
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