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Froissart's Chronicles
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Froissart's Chronicles : ウィキペディア英語版
Froissart's Chronicles


Froissart's ''Chronicles'' (or ''Chroniques'') are a prose chronicle of the Hundred Years' War. The ''Chronicles'' open with the events leading up to the deposition of Edward II in 1326, and cover the period up to 1400, recounting events in western Europe, mainly in England, France, Scotland, the Low Countries and the Iberian Peninsula, although at times also mentioning other countries and regions such as Italy, Germany, Ireland, the Balkans, Cyprus, Turkey and North Africa.
For centuries the ''Chronicles'' have been recognized as the chief expression of the chivalric culture of 14th-century England and France. Froissart's work is perceived as being of vital importance to informed understandings of the European 14th century, particularly of the Hundred Years' War. However, modern historians also recognize that the ''Chronicles'' have many shortcomings as a historical source: they contain erroneous dates, have misplaced geography, give inaccurate estimations of sizes of armies and casualties of war, and are potentially biased in favor of the author's patrons.
Froissart is sometimes repetitive or covers seemingly insignificant subjects. Nevertheless, his battle descriptions are lively and engaging. For the earlier periods Froissart based his work on other existing chronicles, but his own experiences, combined with those of interviewed witnesses, supply much of the detail of the later books. Although Froissart may never have been in a battle, he visited Sluys in 1386 to see the preparations for an invasion of England. He was present at other significant events such as the baptism of Richard II in Bordeaux in 1367, the coronation of King Charles V of France in Rheims in 1380, the marriage of Duke John of Berry and Jeanne of Boulogne in Riom and the joyous entry of the French queen Isabeau of Bavaria in Paris, both in 1389.
Sir Walter Scott once remarked that Froissart had "marvelous little sympathy" for the "villain churls."〔(Sir Walter Scott: Tales of my landlord )〕 It is true that Froissart often omits to talk about the common people of the time, but that is largely the consequence of his stated aim to write not a general chronicle but a history of the chivalric exploits that took place during the wars between France and England. Nevertheless, Froissart was not indifferent to the wars' effects on the rest of society. His Book II focuses extensively on popular revolts in different parts of western Europe (France, England and Flanders) and in this part of the ''Chronicles'' the author often demonstrates good understanding of the factors that influenced local economies and their effect on society at large; he also seems to have a lot of sympathy in particular for the plight of the poorer strata of the urban populations of Flanders.〔Peter Ainsworth, 'Froissardian perspectives on late-fourteenth-century society', in Jeffrey Denton and Brian Pullan (eds.), ''Orders and Hierarchies in Late Medieval and Renaissance Europe'' (Basingstoke / London: Macmillan Press, 1999), pp. 56-73.〕
The ''Chronicles'' are a very extensive work: with their almost 1.5 million words, they are amongst the longest works written in French prose in the late Middle Ages. Few modern complete editions have been published, but the text was printed from the late 15th century onwards. Enguerrand de Monstrelet continued the ''Chronicles'' to 1440, while Jean de Wavrin incorporated large parts of it in his own work. In the 15th and 16th centuries the Chronicles were translated into Dutch, English, Latin, Spanish, Italian and Danish. The text of Froissart's Chronicles is preserved in more than 150 manuscripts, many of which are illustrated, some extensively.〔Godfried Croenen, 'Froissart illustration cycles', in Graeme Dunphy (ed.), ''The Encyclopedia of the Medieval Chronicle'' (Leiden: Brill, 2010), I, 645-650.〕
==Background==

Jean Froissart came from Valenciennes in the County of Hainaut, situated in the western tip of the Holy Roman Empire, bordering France (it is now in France). He seems to have come from what we would today call a middle-class background, but spent much of his adult life in courts, and took on the world-view of the late medieval feudal aristocracy, who initially represented his readership. He appears to have gained his living as a writer, and was a notable French poet in his day. At least by the end of his life he had taken holy orders, and received a profitable benefice.
He first wrote a rhyming chronicle for the English queen Philippa of Hainault, which he offered to her in 1361 or 1362.〔Normand R. Cartier, 'The lost chronicle', ''Speculum'' 36 (1961), 424-434; Peter F. Ainsworth, ''Jean Froissart and the Fabric of History: Truth, Myth, and Fiction in the Chroniques'' (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990), pp. 32-50; Jean Devaux, 'From the court of Hainault to the court of England: the example of Jean Froissart', in Christopher Allmand (ed.), ''War, Government and Power in Late Medieval France'' (Liverpool: Liverpool UP, 2000), pp. 1-20.〕 The text of this earliest historical work, which Froissart himself mentioned in the prologue of his ''Chronicles'', is usually considered to have been completely lost, but some scholars have argued that a 14th-century manuscript containing a rhyming chronicle, of which fragments are now kept in libraries in Paris and Berlin, may be identified as this so-called 'lost chronicle'.〔Dominique Stutzmann, 'Un deuxième fragment du poème historique de Froissart', ''Bibliothèque de l'Ecole des Chartes'', 164 (2006), 573-580.〕

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