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See also: original name was See also: Jean Clopinel or Chopinel, was See also: born at Meunsur-See also: Loire
.
Tradition asserts that he studied at the university of See also: Paris
.
At any See also: rate he was, like his contemporary, Rutebeuf, a defender of Guillaume de See also: Saint-Amour and a bitter critic of the mendicant orders
.
Most of his See also: life seems to have been spent in Paris, where he possessed, in the Rue Saint-Jacques, a See also: house with a tower, See also: court and garden. which was described in 1305 as the house of the See also: late Jean de Meung, and was then bestowed by a certain See also: Adam d'Andely on the See also: Dominicans
.
Jean de Meun says that in his youth he composed songs that were sung in every public place and school in See also: France
.
In the enumeration of his own See also: works he places first his continuation of the See also: Roman de la See also: rose of Guillaume de Lorris (q.v.)
.
The date of this second See also: part
' The birds known as blue jays in See also: India and See also: Africa are rollers (q.v.)
.
is generally fixed between x268 and 1285 by a reference in the poem to the See also: death of See also: Manfred and Conradin, executed (1268) by See also: order of See also: Charles of
See also: Anjou (d
.
1285) who is described as the See also: present See also: king of
See also: Sicily
.
M
.
F
.
Guillon (Jean Clopinel, 1903), however, considering the poem primarily as a See also: political satire, places it in the last five years of the 13th century
.
Jean de Meun doubtless edited the See also: work of his predecessor, Guillaume de Lorris, before using it as the starting-point of his own vast poem, See also: running to 19,000 lines
.
The continuation of Jean de Meun is a satire on the monastic orders, on celibacy, on the See also: nobility, the papal see, the excessive pretensions of royalty, and especially on See also: women and See also: marriage
.
Guillaume had been the servant of love, and the exponent of the See also: laws of " courtoisie "; Jean de Meun added an " See also: art of love," exposing with brutality the vices of women, their arts of deception, and the means by which men may outwit them
.
Jean de Meun embodied the mocking, sceptical spirit of the fabliaux
.
He did not share in current superstitions, he had no respect for established institutions, and he scorned the conventions of feudalism and See also: romance
.
His poem shows in the highest degree, in spite of the looseness of its See also: plan, the faculty of keen observation, of lucid reasoning and exposition, and it entitles him to be considered the greatest of French See also: medieval poets
.
He handled the French language with an ease and precision unknown to his predecessors, and the length of his poem was no See also: bar to its popularity in the 13th and 14th centuries
.
Part of its vogue was no doubt due to the fact that the author, who had mastered practically all the scientific and See also: literary knowledge of his contemporaries in France, had found See also: room in his poem for a See also: great amount of useful information and for numerous citations from classical authors
.
The See also: book was attacked by Guillaume de Degulleville in his Pelerinage de la See also: vie humaine (c
.
1330), long a favourite work both in See also: England and France; by See also: John
See also: Gerson, and by Christine de See also: Pisan in her Epftre au dieu d'amour; but it also found energetic defenders
.
Jean de Meun translated in 1284 the See also: treatise, De re militari, of See also: Vegetius into French as Le livre de Vegece de l'art de chevaleriez (ed
.
Ulysse Robert, See also: Soc. See also: des anciens textes fr., 1897)
.
He also produced a spirited version, the first in French, of the letters of See also: Abelard and Heloise
.
A 14th-century MS. of this See also: translation in the Bibliotheque Nationale has annotations by See also: Petrarch
.
His translation of the De consolatione philosophiae of Boetius is preceded by a letter to See also: Philip IV. in which he enumerates his earlier works, two of which are lost—De spirituelle amitie from the De spirituali amicitia of Aelred of
See also: Rievaulx (d
.
1166), and the Livre des merveilles d'Hirlande from the Topographia Hibernica, or De Mirabilibus Hiberniae of Giraldus Cambrensis (See also: Giraud de See also: Barry)
.
His last poems are doubtless his Testament and Codicille
.
The Testament is written in quatrains in monorime, and contains advice to the different classes of the community
.
See also Paulin Paris in Hist. lit. de la France, See also: xxviii
.
391–439 and E
.
See also: Langlois in His& de la langue et de la lit. franraise, ed
.
L
.
See also: Petit de Julleville, ii
.
125–161 (1896); and See also: editions of the Roman de la rose (q.v.)
.
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