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Jean Lemaire de Belges

 
French Literature Companion: Jean Lemaire de Belges

Lemaire de Belges, Jean (c.1475-before 1525). Born in Bavai (also called Belges), Hainault, he was one of the last, but one of the best, of the Rhétoriqueurs, often seen as a precursor of the Renaissance. A godson of Molinet, he was educated in Valenciennes and Paris. He had a good knowledge of Latin and Italian literature, and a lively interest in painting and sculpture. In his career as court poet and historiographer he was principally attached to Marguerite d'Autriche, later to Anne de Bretagne. His most significant works in verse include La Couronne margaritique (1504-5, on the death of Marguerite's second husband, Philibert de Savoie), Les Chansons de Namur (1507, in support of a popular revolt), La Concorde des deux langages (1511, i.e. French and Italian—a plea for cultural unity), Les Épîtres de l'amant vert (1505, burlesque epistles, supposedly written by Marguerite's parrot, which dies because of its love for her). His prose chronicle in three books, Les Illustrations de Gaule et singularités de Troie (1510-13), treats the Trojan origins of the French. In both poetry and prose his language is more supple and subtle than that of the earlier Rhétoriqueurs, and contains interesting descriptive elements, particularly in the evocation of the natural world.

[Christine Scollen-Jimack]

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Jean Lemaire de Belges (c. 1473 – c. 1525) was a Walloon poet and historian who lived primarily in France.

He was born in Hainaut (Hainault), the godson and possibly a nephew of Jean Molinet, and spent some time with him at Valenciennes, where the elder writer held a kind of academy of poetry. Lemaire in his first poems calls himself a disciple of Molinet. In certain aspects he does belong to the school of the grands rhétoriqueurs ("rhetoricians"), but his great merit as a poet is that he emancipated himself from the affectations of his masters. This independence of the Flemish school he owed in part perhaps to his studies at the University of Paris and to the study of the Italian poets at Lyon, a centre of the French Renaissance. In 1504 he was attached to the court of Margaret of Austria, duchess of Savoy, afterwards Regent of the Netherlands. For this princess he undertook more than one mission to Rome where he came into contact with the culture of the Italian Renaissance; he became her librarian and a canon of Valenciennes.

To her were addressed his most original poems,[1] the burlesque Épîtres de l'amant vert, of 1505 (see 1505 in poetry).[2] The amant vert (green lover) of the title being a green parrot belonging to his patroness. This latter piece was subsequently utilised in the sublimely melancholic Soubz ce tumbel (Within this tomb) by Pierre de la Rue. It is an intense elegiac farewell to Margaret's 'green lover'.

Within this tomb, which is a harsh, locked cell,

Lies the green lover, the very worthy slave

Whose noble heart, drunk with true, pure love,

Losing its lady, cannot bear to live.

Lemaire gradually became more French in his sympathies, eventually entering the service of Anne of Brittany, wife of Louis XII, and supporting Louis's ambitions to create a church relatively independent of the Pope. His prose Illustrations de Gaule et singularitez de Troye (1510-1514), largely adapted from Benoit de Sainte More, is a novel-like history that connects the Burgundian royal house[clarification needed] with Hector using fictional characters.

Lemaire probably died before 1525. Étienne Pasquier, Pierre de Ronsard and Joachim du Bellay all acknowledged their indebtedness to him. In his love for antiquity, his sense of rhythm, and even the peculiarities of his vocabulary he anticipated the humanist movement led by Du Bellay and Ronsard, the Pléiade.

Contents

Bibliography

Prose

  • 1510–1514: Illustrations de Gaule et singularitez de Troye

Poetry

Each year links to its corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:

References

  1. ^ Encyclopaedia Britannica article, 1911
  2. ^ a b c d e "Jean Lemaire de Belges" article, p 453, in France, Peter, editor, The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French, New York: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0198661258

 
 

 

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French Literature Companion. The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Copyright © 1995, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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