Online Encyclopedia

GUILLAUME

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 694 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

GUILLAUME  D'

ORANGE (d . 812), also known as Guillaume Fierabrace, St Guillaume de Gellone, and the
See also:
Marquis au court nez, was the central figure of the
See also:
southern cycle of French ramauce, called by the trouveres the geste of Garin de Monglane . The cycle of Guillaume has more unity than the other
See also:
great cycles of Charlemagne or of Doon de Mayence, the various poems which compose it forming branches of the main story rather than
See also:
independent epic poems . There exist numerous cyclic
See also:
MSS. in which there is an attempt at presenting a continuous histoire poetique of Guillaume and his
See also:
family . MS . Royal 20 D xi. in the
See also:
British Museum contains eighteen chansons of the cycle . Guillaume, son of
See also:
Thierry or
See also:
Theodoric and of Alde, daughter of Charles Martel, was born in the north of France about the
See also:
middle of the 8th century . He became one of the best soldiers and trusted counsellors of Charlemagne, and in 790 was made count of Toulouse, when Charles's son Louis the Pious was put under his charge . He subdued the Gascons, and defended
See also:
Narbonne against the infidels . In 793 Hescham, the successor of Abd-al-Rahman II., proclaimed a
See also:
holy war against the Christians, and collected an army of 1oo,000 men,
See also:
half of which was directed against the
See also:
kingdom of the
See also:
Asturias, while the second invaded France, penetrating as far as Narbonne . Guillaume met the invaders near the
See also:
river Orbieux, at Villedaigne, where he was defeated, but only after an obstinate resistance which so far exhausted the
See also:
Saracens that they were compelled to retreat to Spain . He took
See also:
Barcelona from the Saracens in 803, and in the next
See also:
year founded the monastery of Gellorfe (now Saint Guilhem-le
See also:
Desert), of which he became a member in 8o6 .

He died there in the odour of sanctity on the 28th of May 812 . No less than thirteen

See also:
historical personages bearing the name of William (Guillaume) have been thought by various critics to have their share in the formation of the legend . William, count of Provence, son of Soso II., again delivered southern France from a Saracen invasion by his victory at Fraxinet in 973, and ended his
See also:
life in a cloister . William
See also:
Tow-head (Pete d'eloupe), duke of
See also:
Aquitaine (d . 983), showed a fidelity to Louis IV. paralleled by Guillaume d'Orange's service to Louis the Pious . The cycle of twenty or more chansons which form the geste of Guillaume reposes on the traditions of the Arab invasions of the south of France, from the
See also:
battle of
See also:
Poitiers (732) under Charles Martel onwards, and on the French
See also:
conquest of Catalonia from the Saracens . In the Norse version of the Carolingian epic Guillaume appears in his proper historical environment, as a chief under Charlemagne; but he plays a leading
See also:
part in the Couronnement Looys, describing the formal associations of Louis the Pious in the
See also:
empire at
See also:
Aix (813, the year after Guillaume's
See also:
death), and after the battle of Aliscans it is from the emperor Louis that he seeks reinforcements . This anachronism arises from the
See also:
fusion of the epic Guillaume with the champion of Louis IV., and from the fact that he was the military and
See also:
civil chief of Louis the Pious, who was titular king of Aquitaine under his
See also:
father from the time when he was three years old . The inconsistencies between the real and the epic Guillaume are often
See also:
left
See also:
standing in the poems . The personages associated with Guillaume in his
See also:
Spanish
See also:
wars belong to Provence, and have names
See also:
common in the south . The most famous of these are Beuves de Comarchis, Ernaud de Girone, Garin d'Anseun, Aimer le chetif, so called from his long captivity with the Saracens . The
See also:
separate existence of Almer, who refused to sleep under a roof, and spent his whole life in warring against the infidel, is proved .

He was Hadhemar, count of Narbonne, who in 809 and 810 was one of the leaders sent by Louis against

See also:
Tortosa . No doubt the others had historical prototypes . In the hands of the trouveres they became all brothers of Guillaume, and sons of Aymeri de Narbonne,' the grandson of Garin de Monglane, and his wife Ermenjart . Nevertheless when Guillaume seeks help from Louis the emperor he finds all his relations in
See also:
Laon, in accordance with his historic Frankish origin . ' The poem of Aymeri de Narbonne contains the account of the young Aymeri's brilliant capture of Narbonne, which he then receives as a
See also:
fief from Charlemagne, of his
See also:
marriage with Ermenjart,
See also:
sister of Boniface, king of the Lombards, and of their children . The fifth daughter, Blanchefleur, is represented as the wife of Louis the Pious . The opening of this poem furnished, though indirectly, the
See also:
matter of the Aymerillot of Victor Hugo's Legende
See also:
des siecles . The central fact of the geste of Guillaume is the battle of the Archamp or Aliscans, in which perished Guillaume's heroic
See also:
nephew, Vezian or Vivien, a second Roland . At the
See also:
eleventh
See also:
hour he summoned Guillaume to his help against the overwhelming forces of the Saracens . Guillaume arrived too
See also:
late to help Vivien, was himself defeated, and returned alone to his wife Guibourc, leaving his knights all dead or prisoners . This event is related in a Norman-French transcript of an old French chanson de geste, the Chancun de Willame—which only was brought to
See also:
light in 1901 at the sale of the books of
See also:
Sir Henry Hope Edwardes—in the Covenant Vivien, a recension of an older French chanson and in Aliscans . Aliscans continues the story, telling how Guillaume obtained reinforcements from Laon, and how, with the help of the comic hero, the scullion Rainouart or Rennewart, he avenged the defeat of Aliscans and his nephew's death .

Rainouart turns out to be the

See also:
brother of Guillaume's wife Guibourc, who was before her marriage the Saracen princess and enchantress Orable . Two other poems are consecrated to his later exploits, La Bataille Loquifer, the
See also:
work of a French Sicilian poet, Jendeu de Brie (fl . 1170), and Le Moniage Rainouart . The staring-point of Herbert le duc of
See also:
Dammartin (fl . 1170) in Foucon de Candie (Candie =
See also:
Gandia in Spain ?) is the return of Guillaume from the battle; and the
See also:
Italian compilation I Nerbonesi, based on these and other chansons, seems in some cases to represent an earlier tradition than the later of the French chansons, although its author Andrea di Barherino wrote towards the end of the 14th century . The minnesinger Wolfram von Eschenbach based his Willehalm on a French
See also:
original which must have differed from the versions we have . The variations in the story of the defeat of Aliscans or the Archant, and the numerous inconsistencies of the narratives even when considered separately have occupied many critics . Aliscans (Aleschans, Alyscamps, Elysii Campi) was, however, generally taken to represent the battle of Villedaigne, and to take its name from the famous cemetery outside Arles . Wolfram von Eschenbach even mentions the tombs which studded the field of battle . Indications that this tradition was not unassailable were not lacking before the
See also:
discovery of the Chanqun de Willame,which, although preserved in a very corrupt form, represents the earliest recension we have of the story, dating at least from the beginning of the 12th century . It seems probable that the Archant was situated in Spain near Vivien's headquarters at Tortosa, and that Guillaume started from Barcelona, not from Orange, to his nephew's help . The account of the disaster was modified by successive trouveres, and the uncertainty of their methods may be judged by the fact that in the Chancun de Willame two consecutive accounts (11 .

450-1326 and 1r . 1326-2420) of the fight appear to be set

side by side as if they were separate episodes . Le Couronnement Looys, already mentioned, Le Charroi de Nimes (12th century) in which Guillaume, who had been forgotten in the distribution of fiefs, enumerates his services to the terrified Louis, and Aliscans (12th century), with the earlier Chancun, are among the finest of the French epic poems . The figure of Vivien is among the most heroic elaborated by the trouveres, and the giant Rainouart has more than a touch of Rabelaisian humour . The chansons de geste of the cycle of Guillaume are: Enfances Garin de Monglane (15th century) and Garin de Monglane (13th century), on which is founded the
See also:
prose
See also:
romance of Guerin de Monglane, printed in the 15th century by Jehan Trepperel and often later; Girars de Viane (13th century, by Bertrand de Barsur-
See also:
Aube), ed . P . Tarbe (Reims, 1850) ; Hernaut de Beaulande (fragment 14th century); Renier de Gennes, which only survives in its prose form; Aymeri de Narbonne (c . 1210) by Bertrand de Bar-sur-Aube, ed . L. bemaison (
See also:
Soc. des anc. textes fr., Paris, 2 vols., 1887) ;
See also:
Les Enfances Guillaume (13th century) ; Les Narbonnais, ed . H . Suchier (Soc. des anc. textes fr., 2 vols., 1898), with a Latin fragment dating from the 11th century, preserved at the Hague; Le Couronnement Looys (ed . E .

Langlois, 1888), Le Charroi de Names, La Prise d'Orange, Le Covenant Vivien, Aliscans, which were edited by W . J . A . Jonckbloet in vol. i. of his Guillaume d'Orange (The Hague, 1854); a critical text of Aliscans (Halle, 1903, vol . 1.) is edited by E . Wienbeck, W . Hartnacke and P . Rasch; Loquifer and Le Moniage Rainouart (12th century); Bovon de Commarchis (13th century), recension of the earlier Siege de Barbastre, by Adenes li Rois, ed . A . Scheler (Brussels, 1874); Guibert d'Andrenas (13th century) ; La Prise de Cordres (13th century) ; La Mort Aimeri de Narbonne, ed . J . Couraye de Parc (Soc. des Anciens Textes francais, Paris, 1884) ; Foulque de Candie (ed .

P . Tarbe, Reims, 1860) ; Le Moniage Guillaume (12th century); Les Enfances Vivien (ed . C . Wahlund and H. v . Feilitzen,

Upsala and Paris, 1895) ; Chancun de Willame (
See also:
Chiswick Press, 1903), described by P . Meyer in Romania (xxxiii . 597-618) . The ninth branch of the Karlamagnus Saga (ed . C . R . Unger, Christiania, 186o) deals with the geste of Guillaume . I Nerbonesi is edited by J .

G . Isola (

Bologna, 1877, &c.) . See C . R6villout, Etude hist. el lilt. sur la vita sancti Willelmi (
See also:
Montpellier, 1876) ; W . J . A . Jonckbloet, Guillaume d'Orange (2 vols., 1854, The Hague) ; L . Clarus (ps. for W . Volk), Herzog Wilhelm von Aquitanien (Munster, 1865) ; P . Paris, in Hist. lift. de la France (vol. xxii., 1852) ; L . Gautier, Epopees francaises (vol. iv., 2nd ed., 1882) ; R . Weeks, The newly discovered Chancun de Willame (Chicago, 1904); A .

Thomas, Eludes romanes (Paris, 1891), on Vivien; L . Saltet, " S . Vidian de Martres-Tolosanes " in Bull. de 1itt.
See also:
eccles . (Toulouse, 1902); P . Becker, Die altfrz . Wilhelmsage u. ihre Beziehung zu Wilhelm dem Heiligen (Halle, 1896), and Der sudfranzosische Sagenkreis and seine Probleme (Halle, 1898) ; A . Jeanroy, " Etudes sur le cycle de Guillaume au court nez " (in Romania, vols . 25 and 26, 1896–1897) ; H . Suchier, " Recherches sur . . . Guillaume d'Orange " (in Romania, vol . 32, 1903) .

The conclusions arrived at by earlier writers are combated by

Joseph Bedier in the first
See also:
volume, " Le Cycle de Guillaume d'Orange " (1908), of his Legendes epiques, in which he constructs a theory that the cycle of Guillaume d'Orange grew up round the various shrines on the
See also:
pilgrim route to Saint Gilles of Provence and Saint James of Compostella—that the chansons de geste were, in fact, the product of 11th and 12th century trouveres, exploiting
See also:
local ecclesiastical traditions, and were not
See also:
developed from earlier poems dating back perhaps to the lifetime of Guillaume of Toulouse, the saint of Gellone .

End of Article: GUILLAUME
[back]
BARONS AND EARLS OF GUILFORD
[next]
GUILLAUME DE LORRIS (fl. 1230)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.