Brabantsche Yeesten Explained

The Brabantsche Yeesten or Gestes de Brabant is a rhyming chronicle of some 46,000 verses written in the 14th and 15th centuries in the Middle Dutch language. It provides a history of the Duchy of Brabant, and the original five volumes were written by Jan van Boendale (c. 1280–c. 1351) of Antwerp; his text was later extended to seven volumes by an anonymous continuator.

Composition and authorship

Van Boendale's text was written between around 1318 and around 1350, commissioned for a member of the Antwerp patriciate. It extends to 16,318 verses. Boendale's main sources were the Chronica de origine ducum Brabantiae of 1294 and Spieghel Historiael of Jacob van Maerlant. Much of the text of the first three books are taken from Jacob van Maerlant almost verbatim. The events in book five are from Boendale's own lifetime.

Books six and seven, which extend the scope of the chronicled events to 1440, were written by an anonymous continuator. Some scholars attribute these books to Wein van Cotthem;[1] others to Hennen van Merchtenen, amongst other candidates. Book six is dated 1432 and book seven is dated 1440; this latter date is also the approximate age of the oldest extant manuscripts of the text.

Manuscripts and editions

There are seven extant manuscript copies.

The text was first edited by Jan Frans Willems and Jean Henri Bormans beginning in 1839.

Literature

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bellon. Michael. Rijmen in de middeleeuwen. De Standaard. January 28, 2010. October 22, 2021. nl.