Misplaced Pages

Chardo

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Chardon de Croisilles or de Reims ( fl . 1220–45) was an Old French trouvère and possibly an Occitan troubadour . He was probably from Croisilles, but perhaps Reims . He is associated with the school of trouvères in and around Arras . Chardon wrote four chansons d'amour , two jeux partis , and one partimen .

#308691

4-600: Chardo may refer to: Chardon de Croisilles , a French trouvère Roman Catholic Kshatriya , a Konkani Catholic caste Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Chardo . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chardo&oldid=932755851 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

8-463: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Chardon de Croisilles In two of his chansons Chardon represented Marguerite de Bourbon , the wife (from 1232) of Theobald I of Navarre , in acrostics . Based on this and another internal reference to the castle of Monreal near Pamplona , where Theobald was staying in 1237, it is thought that Chardon joined Theobald's Crusade , which left for

12-574: Is notable for the simplicity of its melody compared to the "floridity" of that of Rose ne lis . A poet named Chardo (or Cardo ) wrote a partimen (the Occitan version of a jeu parti ) with an otherwise unidentified poet named Uc. The rubric La tenzo del chardo e den ugo ("The tenso of [the] Chardo and of Lord Hugh") appears in the manuscript. While Chardo's portion of the exchange, N'Ugo, cauzetz, avans que respondatz , survives, Uc's part does not. Oskar Schultz-Gora (1884) first proposed to identify

16-512: The Holy Land in 1237. Henry II of Bar , who adjudicated one of Chardon's jeux partis , also went on Crusade with Theobald. All Chardon's French poems have the form ABABX: the chansons are decasyllabic , the jeux partis octosyllabic . His only surviving melodies, for Mar vit raison covoite trop haut and Rose ne lis ne me done talent , are through composed . A fifth chanson , no longer ascribed to Chardon, Li departirs de la douce contree ,

#308691