Medieval France saw Constantinople as something of a quintessential ideal city. Aspects of Byzantine life were imitated in and assimilated to the West in a movement of political and cultural renewal, but the Byzantine capital wasalso celebrated as the locus of a categorical and inimitable difference. This book analyses the debate between renewal and utopia in Western attitudes to Constantinople as it evolved through the twelfth and thirteenth centuries in a series of vernacular (Old French, Occitan and Franco-Italian) texts, including the 'Pèlerinage de Charlemagne', 'Girart de Roussillon', 'Partonopeus de Blois', the poetry of Rutebeuf, and the chronicles by Geoffroy de Villehardouin and Robert de Clari, both known as the 'Conquête de Constantinople'. It establishes how the texts' representation of the West's relationship with Constantinople enacts this debate between renewal andutopia; demonstrates that analysis of this relationship can contribute to a discussion on the generic status of the texts themselves; and shows that the texts both react to the socio-cultural context in which they were produced, and fulfil a role within that context.
Author(s): Rima Devereaux
Series: Gallica, 25
Publisher: D. S. Brewer
Year: 2012
Language: English
Pages: 248
City: Cambridge
List of illustrations vi
Acknowledgements ix
List of abbreviations x
Note to the reader x
Introduction 1
Part I: Renewal and Utopia: The Terms of the Debate
1. Making Sense of History: East–West Relations and the Idea of the City in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries 9
2. Renewal and Utopia: Two Paradigms for Understanding East–West Relations in Medieval French Texts 36
Part II: Constantinople Desired
3. Aemulatio: The Limitations of East–West Alliance 75
4. Admiratio: Utopia as Social Critique 105
Part III: The Renovatio of the West
5. Translatio Embodied? Renewal, Truth and the Status of Constantinople in Thirteenth-Century Didactic Texts 131
6. Renovatio as Commemoration: Civic Loyalty and the Latin Empire of Constantinople in Venetian Historiography 157
Conclusion 183
Appendix 1: Original Latin Quotations 189
Appendix 2: References to Constantinople in Other Epics and Romances 192
Appendix 3: Outline of Events in the History of East–West Relations from the Second Crusade to the Palaeologan Reconquest 198
Bibliography 203
Index 227