18 Feb 2008 04:33:49 | Robert Bruce Baird
CHRETIEN DE TROYES:
Academics will freely admit that this man was a troubadour. But
what is a Troubadour? They were important to the genesis of the
Cathar mystique for a certainty and the Princeton people I will
shortly quote will say that Chrétien was one of the first
Troubadours in this region. Surely they do not think it would be
one of the first involved in these arts. In point of fact they
are very very ancient arts in the training of a Druid, who would
become a minstrel and jester before taking up the involved study
to be a Bard or Baird. Druids, Bairds and Ovates are the best
known appellations for those who completed these long and
arduous studies which were already suffering and shortening by
the time of Pythagoras who was part of the last known Dean of
Studies in the Mediterranean region. Abaris (Rabbi) the Druid
was that Dean and his name gives us a clue as to one of the
branches or systems which took over some of their training.
The Cathars were very Gnostic and open to the Pharisaic
Rabbinical message. In Caesar’s Journals we are told the period
of study was 20 years but it was 25 a millennium earlier and
there were still other specialties one could study throughout
their lives. One of those might lead to being called a Peryllat
or ‘alchemist’. Many members of the family of Jesus were
alchemists and it is quite likely that Yeshua bar Joseph studied
with Comarius who also tutored Cleopatra. Apollonius of Tyana is
part of the Jesus amalgam and the Cathars kept most of the
Gaedhil/Gnostic learning alive. One of the charges that the
Inquisition leveled against the Cathars had to do with Dianistic
or Tantric sexual practices and I believe the sexual or Bhakti
‘union’ (Yoga) was part of their training and system which
highly valued women including giving them high priestly
functions and leadership roles including Esclarmonde de Foix who
is reminiscent of Hypatia of Alexandria, who both should be
studied as a great heroine for all time.
The Bairdic Educational system had included a seven year
specialty in developing languages for their far flung colonies
in the second millennium BCE and they developed such codes and
Gematria as you see in Hebrew and the Aymará of Peru. I have
delved into these Oghamic studies in many other books including
one with the title From OM to Ogham. Plato observed that
knowledge was declining due to the written word after the
Phoenicians gave them their refined alphabet. Some scholars
think a few of the poems attributed to Orpheus (a lesser Bard or
Troubadour) are in fact the writing of Pythagoras. The Grail
myths are rich repositories of the pre-Christian traditions.
“Little concerning the person we call "Chrétien de Troyes" (fl.
ca. 1160-1191) can be affirmed with certainty. What we know must
largely be inferred from the writings attributed to him. These
include five romance narratives written in rhyming octosyllabic
couplets during the final third of the 12th century (Érec et
Énide [ca. 1165], Cligés [ca. 1176], Le Chevalier de la
Charrette (Lancelot), Le Chevalier au Lion (Yvain) [ca. 1177?
1179-80?], and Le Conte du Graal (Perceval) [ca. 1190]); a sixth
narrative, Guillaume d'Angleterre, has been attributed to him by
some, although many scholars find this doubtful. At least two
surviving lyric songs are said to have been composed by him (if
so, he is the oldest known trouvère with work closely related to
that of the Old Provençal troubadours). {The region is also
known as Langue d’Oc or Languedoc. Occamy is ‘alchemy’ in one
translation so we can see the importance of the Troubadour to
Bairdic or Peryllat spiritual quest is the tongue or language
and codes of alchemy.}
Certain works said by him to belong to his oeuvre--they are
listed in the opening verses to Cligés--have not survived; these
include, especially, a romance entitled Du roi Marc et d'Iseut
la Blonde. One of the Ovidian poems given in the Cligés list
appears as part of an early 14th-century compilation called the
Ovide moralisé.
Of the above-mentioned titles two were left incomplete by
Chrétien: the Charrette was brought to a close by Godefroi de
Leigni, under Chrétien's supervision (according to Godefroi);
the Graal was (almost certainly) interrupted by the poet's death.
Not only did each of our poet's works undergo copying throughout
the 13th century (all eight manuscripts of the Charrette were
produced in that century), they were each subject to myriad
reworkings, in verse and, especially, in prose. Perceval
underwent a number of "continuations" and inspired many textual
"spin-offs" before the Grail story it told came to be
incorporated into the vast Prose Lancelot (along with the
Charrette, which constitutes the midpoint text of this great
compilation). Post-World War II scholarship has demonstrated
that Chrétien's oeuvre was fully integrated into the system of
textual references and allusions underlying many important
13th-century texts--a series of "epigonal romances" (e.g.,
Fergus, Le Bel Inconnu) and a work like the Roman de la Rose
(Guillaume de Lorris's Narcissus episode, as M.A. Freeman has
shown, "re-reads/re-writes" Ovid through a process of refraction
involving Chrétien's Blood Drops on the Snow scene in Perceval
[Freeman 1976-77]). A romance composed as late as Froissart's
14th-century Méliador "revives" Chrétien de Troyes's Arthurian
manner and matter, as P.F. Dembowski has demonstrated (1983).
Chrétien himself utilized a similar network of textual allusion
in his own romances. Scholars interested in sources have for
generations pointed to such "first-generation" romances as the
romans antiques (Énéas, Troie, and Thèbes) and Wace's Brut and
Rou, not to mention the Tristan corpus (especially Thomas), as
constituting a kind of quarry from which Chrétien extracted
materials which he utilized in his own constructions. Chrétien's
bookish learning--he was clearly a clerc fully trained in the
arts curriculum of his day--is evident in his love of such
figures of ornamentation as adnominatio, rich rhyme, and
chiasmus, and, as well, in the particularly fertile manner in
which he refracted the Arthurian materials he borrowed from
Geoffrey of Monmouth and Wace through the lens of such works of
late Antiquity as Martianus Capella's De Nuptiis Mercurii et
Philologiae (in Érec et Énide) or the writings of Macrobius. As
he states in the Prologue to Érec et Énide, he--and he proudly
names himself--and his work must be distinguished from the
fragmented and vulgar tales hawked before kings and counts by
uneducated minstrels.” (6)
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