Raoul de Houdenc explained
Raoul de Houdenc (or Houdan; c. 1165 – c. 1230) was the French author of the Arthurian romance Meraugis de Portlesguez and possibly La Vengeance Raguidel. Modern scholarship suggests he is probably to be identified with one Radulfus from Hodenc-en-Bray. Raoul de Houdenc was esteemed as a master poet in the ranks of Chrétien de Troyes by Huon de Méry (Tournoiement de l’Antéchrist, 1226).[1] [2]
Life
Raoul de Houdenc takes his name from his native place. Of twelve possibilities,[1] Houdenc in Artois was once thought the most likely candidate.[1] But current scholarship favors identifying the author with Radulfus de Hosdenc from Hodenc-en-Bray near Beauvais.[3]
His works are now seen as the product of the first quarter of the 13th century,[2] though past scholars tended to date the production earlier, perhaps in the 12th century. (See: Past scholarship.)
It has been suggested that he was a monk, but from the scattered hints in his writings it seems more probable that he followed the trade of trouvère (or jongleur) and recited his chansons, with small success apparently, in the houses of the great. He was well acquainted with Paris, and probably spent a great part of his life there.[1]
Works
The works which by current general consensus attributed to him are:.
La Voie de paradis is the sequel to Le Songe d'enfer, but on whether it is penned by the same Raoul there is no firm agreement.
Past scholarship
Earlier scholars embraced the notion that Raoul de Houdenc was not younger than Chrétien de Troyes by many years. Accordingly, early editors of Raoul's works such as H. Michelant and A. Scheler dated their production in the 12th century. According to Friedwagner, Gaston Paris too initially assessed Raoul's writing activity to have occurred around the late 12th to early 13th century,[5] but later reconsidered the dates to c. 1210–1220.[6] Friedwagner himself felt the writings occurred in the first decade of the 13th century, i.e. 1201–1210, an attribution repeated by at least one modern scholar.
References
Texts
- Le Songe d'enfer
- La Voie de paradis
- Le Roman des eles
- Meraugis de Portlesguez
Studies
- Book: Busby, Keith. Mise en texte and Mise en image: Meraugis de Portlesguez in Vienna ÖNB 2599. Lacy. Norris J.. Por Le Soie Amisté: Essays in Honor of Norris J. Lacy. Rodopi. 2000. 95–. 904200620X.
- Book: Busby, Keith. Codex and Context: Reading Old French Verse Narrative in Manuscript. Rodopi. 2002. 420–. 9042013893.
- Encyclopedia: . Busby . Keith . Raoul de Houdenc . Lacy. Norris J.. The New Arthurian Encyclopedia. Garland. 2013 . 1986. 379. 9781136606335 .
- Book: Fourrier, Anthime. Raoul de Hodenc:est-ce lui?. Mélanges de linguistique romane et de philologie médiévale offerts á M. Maurice Delbouille. Gembloux, Belgium. Duculot. 1964. II. 165–193.
- Book: Paris, Gaston. Gaston Paris. Méraugis de Portlesguez. Histoire littéraire de la France. xxx. Imprimerie nationale. 1888. 220–237.
- , Uber Raoul de Houdenc und seine Werke (Erlangen, 1880)
- Boerner, Otto, Raoul de Houdenc. Eine stilistische Untersuchung (1885).
- William Cole, First and Otherwise Notable Editions of Medieval French Texts Printed from 1742 to 1874: A Bibliographical Catalogue of My Collection (Sitges, 2005).
External links
- Raoul de Houdenc on Archives de Littérature du moyen âge. Laurent Brun et al. Last updated April 27, 2018.
Notes and References
- Houdenc, Raoul de. 13. 807–808.
- , New Arthurian Encyclopedia, p.379, "Raoul de Houdenc", contributed by Keith Busby (KB).
- , citing
- Book: Schmolke-Hasselmann, Beate. Margaret Middleton, Roger Middleton (translators). The Evolution of Arthurian Romance: The Verse Tradition from Chrétien to Froissart. Cambridge University Press. 1998. 143. 052141153X.
- . Friedwagner cites Paris, p. 222, where Paris seems to say that Raoul was long dead when Huon de Méry wrote in 1226. There is also Paris's comment on p. 237 that the author of Durmart must have laid eyes on the works of Raoul de Houdenc, combined with Paris's dating of Durmart (Paris, pp. 141–159)
- Friedwagner cites G. Paris, La littérature française au Moyen Age, S.250