The "Roman de Troie"

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Benoît de Sainte-Maure's "Roman de Troie", dating to around 1165, is, along with the "Roman de Thèbes" and the "Roman d'Eneas", one of the three "romances of antiquity" ("romans d'antiquité"). These romances launched the plots, themes and structures of the genre, then blossoming in the hands of authors such as Chrétien de Troyes. As an account of the Trojan War, Benoît's work is of necessity a poem about war and its causes, how it was fought and what its consequences were for the combatants. But the author's choice of the octosyllabic rhyming couplet, his fondness for description, his ability to recount the intensity of personal struggles, and above all his fascination with the trials and tribulations of Love, which affect some of the work's most prominent warriors (among them Paris and his love for Helen, and Troilus and his love for Briseida), all combine to fashion this romance - in which events from long ago are presented as a reflection of the poet's own feudal and courtly worlds. This translation, the first into English, aims to bring the poem and the author to a wider audience. It is accompanied by an introduction and notes.

Author(s): Benoît de Sainte-Maure, Glyn S. Burgess, Douglas Kelly (transl.)
Series: Gallica, 41
Publisher: D. S. Brewer
Year: 2017

Language: English
Pages: VIII+478
City: Cambridge

Preface and Acknowledgements vii
Introduction 1
A Note on the Translation 33
Outline of the "Roman de Troie" 35
THE "ROMAN DE TROIE"
Prologue 43
Overview of the Plot 45
Part One: Causes and Effects 53
Part Two: The Trojan War 127
Part Three: Settling Scores and Surviving 367
Appendix I: Notes on Some Common Words in the "Roman de Troie" 415
Appendix II: Manuscripts of the "Roman de Troie" 432
Bibliography 435
Indexes of Personal and Geographical Names 453
Index of Personal Names 454
Index of Geographical Names 469