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The Song of Bertrand du Guesclin (Hardcover)
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The Song of Bertrand du Guesclin (Hardcover)
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Bertrand du Guesclin was one of the main architects of the recovery
of France. From humble beginnings he rose to become one of the
great heroic figures of French history. This is the first English
translation of Cuvelier's epic poem about him. Bertrand du Guesclin
is one of the great French heroes of the Hundred Years War, his
story every bit as remarkable as Joan of Arc's. The son of a minor
Breton noble, he rose in the 1360s and '70s to become the Constable
of France- a supreme military position, outranking even the princes
of the blood royal. Through campaigns ranging from Brittany to
Castile he achieved not only fame as a pre-eminent leader of
Charles V's armies, but a dukedom in Spain, burial among the kings
of France in the royal basilica at Saint-Denis, and recognition as
nothing less than the "Tenth Worthy", being ranked alongside the
nine paragons of chivalry who included Alexander the Great, Julius
Caesar, Charlemagne and King Arthur. His is a truly spectacular
story. And the image of Bertrand, and many of the key events in his
extraordinary life, are essentially derived from The Song of
Bertrand du Guesclin, this epic poem by Cuvelier. Written in the
verse-form and manner of a chanson de geste, it is the very last of
the Old French epics and an outstanding example of the roman
chevaleresque. It is a fascinating and major primary source
forhistorians of chivalry and of a critical period in the Hundred
Years War. This is its first translation into English. Cuvelier is
a fine storyteller: his depictions of battle and siege are vivid
and thrilling, offering invaluable insights into medieval warfare.
And he is a compelling propagandist, seeking through his story of
Bertrand to restore the prestige of French chivalry after the
disastrous defeat at Poitiers and the chaos that followed,
andseeking, too, to inspire devotion to the kingdom of France and
to the fleur-de-lis. NIGEL BRYANT is well known for his lively and
accurate versions of medieval French authors. His translations of
Chretien de Troyes' Perceval and all its continuations and of the
extraordinary late Arthurian romance Perceforest have been major
achievements; he has also translated Jean le Bel's history of the
early stages of the Hundred Years War, and the biography of William
Marshal.
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