Ademar de Peiteus: Difference between revisions
Complainer (talk | contribs) and this belongs here...why?? |
rv: because we don't have an article on Philippa of Fay |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''Adémar II de Poitiers''', known in [[Old Occitan]] as '''Ademar''' or '''Aimeric de Peiteus''',<ref>In one [[chansonnier]], he is ''Naimerics de peiteus'', where the initial ''N'' means "Sir", in the rubric above the ''torneyamen'' in which he participated. In one poem of Raimbaut de Vaqueiras, he is ''N'Azemars ... de Peitieus''.</ref> was the [[count of Valentinois]] and [[Diois]] from 1188 or 1189 until 1230. He was the son of Count Guillaume and grandson of Count Adémar I. He married Philippa, daughter of the lord of [[Fay-le-Clos|Fay]].<ref>Joseph Linskill, "An Enigmatic Poem of Raimbaut de Vaqueiras", ''The Modern Language Review'' '''53''', 3 (1958): 357–58.</ref> |
'''Adémar II de Poitiers''', known in [[Old Occitan]] as '''Ademar''' or '''Aimeric de Peiteus''',<ref>In one [[chansonnier]], he is ''Naimerics de peiteus'', where the initial ''N'' means "Sir", in the rubric above the ''torneyamen'' in which he participated. In one poem of Raimbaut de Vaqueiras, he is ''N'Azemars ... de Peitieus''.</ref> was the [[count of Valentinois]] and [[Diois]] from 1188 or 1189 until 1230. He was the son of Count Guillaume and grandson of Count Adémar I. He married Philippa, daughter of the lord of [[Fay-le-Clos|Fay]].<ref>Joseph Linskill, "An Enigmatic Poem of Raimbaut de Vaqueiras", ''The Modern Language Review'' '''53''', 3 (1958): 357–58.</ref> |
||
In June 1189, Count [[Raymond V of Toulouse]] and Adémar signed an agreement whereby the former renounced his righst in the Diois in return for the latter's [[homage]]. This is probably the occasion on which Adémar broke with the [[lords of Baux]], a alluded to in the poem "Leus sonetz si cum suoill" by the troubadour [[Raimbaut de Vaqueiras]].<ref>Linskill, "An Enigmatic Poem": 360–61.</ref> Around 1195–96, Adémar participated in a three-way ''[[torneyamen]]'' (a type of collaborative poem) with Raimbaut de Vaqueiras and [[Perdigon]]. |
In June 1189, Count [[Raymond V of Toulouse]] and Adémar signed an agreement whereby the former renounced his righst in the Diois in return for the latter's [[homage]]. This is probably the occasion on which Adémar broke with the [[lords of Baux]], a alluded to in the poem "Leus sonetz si cum suoill" by the troubadour [[Raimbaut de Vaqueiras]].<ref>Linskill, "An Enigmatic Poem": 360–61.</ref> Around 1195–96, Adémar participated in a three-way ''[[torneyamen]]'' (a type of collaborative poem) with Raimbaut de Vaqueiras and [[Perdigon]]. The Finnish scholar Aimo Sakari hypothesised that Philippa of Fay was the trobairitz known as the [[Comtessa de Dia]], and that the friend (''amic'') mentioned by the Comtessa in her poems was Raimbaut. |
||
==Notes== |
==Notes== |
||
{{Reflist}} |
{{Reflist}} |
||
Line 7: | Line 8: | ||
==Further reading== |
==Further reading== |
||
*[[André Duchesne|Duchesne, André]]. ''Histoire généalogique des comtes de Valentinois et de Diois''. Paris: 1628. |
*[[André Duchesne|Duchesne, André]]. ''Histoire généalogique des comtes de Valentinois et de Diois''. Paris: 1628. |
||
*Sakari, Aimo. "Qui étaient la Comtesse de Die et son ''amic''?" ''Estudis de lingüística i filologia oferts a Antoni M. Badia i Margarit'' (Barcelona: 1995), 253–67. |
|||
[[Category:Troubadours]] |
[[Category:Troubadours]] |
Revision as of 18:02, 19 June 2013
Adémar II de Poitiers, known in Old Occitan as Ademar or Aimeric de Peiteus,[1] was the count of Valentinois and Diois from 1188 or 1189 until 1230. He was the son of Count Guillaume and grandson of Count Adémar I. He married Philippa, daughter of the lord of Fay.[2]
In June 1189, Count Raymond V of Toulouse and Adémar signed an agreement whereby the former renounced his righst in the Diois in return for the latter's homage. This is probably the occasion on which Adémar broke with the lords of Baux, a alluded to in the poem "Leus sonetz si cum suoill" by the troubadour Raimbaut de Vaqueiras.[3] Around 1195–96, Adémar participated in a three-way torneyamen (a type of collaborative poem) with Raimbaut de Vaqueiras and Perdigon. The Finnish scholar Aimo Sakari hypothesised that Philippa of Fay was the trobairitz known as the Comtessa de Dia, and that the friend (amic) mentioned by the Comtessa in her poems was Raimbaut.
Notes
- ^ In one chansonnier, he is Naimerics de peiteus, where the initial N means "Sir", in the rubric above the torneyamen in which he participated. In one poem of Raimbaut de Vaqueiras, he is N'Azemars ... de Peitieus.
- ^ Joseph Linskill, "An Enigmatic Poem of Raimbaut de Vaqueiras", The Modern Language Review 53, 3 (1958): 357–58.
- ^ Linskill, "An Enigmatic Poem": 360–61.
Further reading
- Duchesne, André. Histoire généalogique des comtes de Valentinois et de Diois. Paris: 1628.
- Sakari, Aimo. "Qui étaient la Comtesse de Die et son amic?" Estudis de lingüística i filologia oferts a Antoni M. Badia i Margarit (Barcelona: 1995), 253–67.