Chronicle of Nantes explained

Chronicle of Nantes (Latin: Chronicon Namnetense, French: Chronique de Nantes) is an eleventh-century Latin chronicle of history extending from 570 to about 1049 AD. The original manuscript, kept in the city of Nantes, has not survived, but there exist:

  1. a late fifteenth-century French translation of much of it, made by a certain Pierre Le Baud, who inserted it in two histories of Brittany he wrote;
  2. Latin excerpts, which have been inserted into other chronicles. The editor of the Chronicle, René Merlet,[1] assembled twenty additional scattered chapters he collected from other sources.

Merlet presented reasons for dating the Chronicle of Nantes to the 1050s, and detected the presence of charters from the cathedral archives of Tours and Nantes, and annals and narratives in the unknown author's[2] source materials.[3]

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Merlet, La chronique de Nantes (Paris, 1896)
  2. The plausible suggestion made by Merlet, that he was a canon of the cathedral chapter, has no documentary evidence.
  3. David C. Douglas, ed. English Historical Documents (Routledge, 1979) "Secular Narrative Sources" pp 345f.