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MINSTREL

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Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 557 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MINSTREL  . The word " minstrel," which is a derivative from the Latin

minister, a servant, through the diminutives ministellus, ministrallus (Fr. menestrel), only acquired its
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special sense of household entertainer
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late in the 13th century . It was the
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equivalent of the Low Latin joculator 1 (Prov. joglar, Fr. jougleur,
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Mid . Eng. jogclour), and had an equally wide significance . The minstrel of
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medieval England had his forerunners in the Teutonic
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soap (O.H.G. sco"pf or scot, a shaper or maker), and to a limited extent in the mimes of the later
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Roman
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empire . The earliest record of the Teutonic stop is found in the Anglo-Saxon poem of Widsith, which in an earlier form probably
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dates back before the
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English
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conquest . Widsith, the far-traveller, belonged to a tribe which was neighbour to the Angles, and was sent on a
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mission to the Ostrogoth Eormanric (Hermanric or Ermanaric, d . 375), from whom he received a
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collar of beaten gold . He wandered from place to place singing or telling stories in the mead-hall, and saw many nations, from the Picts and Scots in the west to the Medes and Persians in the east . Finally he received a gift of
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land in his native country . The Complaint of Deor and
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Beowulf give further proof that the Teutonic stop held an honour-able position, which was shaken by the advent of
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Christianity . The stop and the gleeman (the terms appear to have been practically synonymous) shared in the general condemnation passed by the Church on the dancers, jugglers, bear-leaders and tumblers .

Saxo Grammaticus (Historia danica, bk. v.) condemns the Irish

king Hugleik because he spent all his bounty on mimes and jugglers . That the loftier tradition of the scb'pas was preserved in spite of these influences is shown by the tales of
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Alfred and Anlaf disguised as minstrels . With the
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Normans came the joculator or jogleur, who wore
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gaudy-coloured coats and the flat 1 Used by John of Salisbury (Polycraticus, i . 8) as a generic
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term to cover mimi,
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salii or saliares, balatrones, aemiliani, gladiatores, palaestritae, gignadii, praestigiatores . shoes of the Latin mimes, and had a shaven face and close-cut hair . Jogleurs were admitted everywhere, and enjoyed the freedom of speech accorded to the professional
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jester . Their impunity, however, was not always maintained, for Henry I. is said to have put out the eyes of Luc de la Barre for
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lampoon.
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ing him . A fairly defined class distinction soon arose . Those minstrels who were attached to royal or noble households had a status very different from that of the motley entertainers, who soon came under the restrictions imposed on vagabonds generally . A joculator regis, Berdic by name, is mentioned in Domesday
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Book . The king's minstrels formed
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part of the royal household, and were placed under a rex, a fairly
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common term of honour in the craft (cf . Adenes li rois) .

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Edward III. had nineteen minstrels in his pay, including three who
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bore the title of waits . The large towns had in their pay bodies of waits, generally designated in the civic accounts as histriones . A wait under Edward III. had to "
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pipe the watch " four times nightly between Michaelmas and Shere Tuesday, and three times nightly during the remainder of the
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year . In spite of the repeated prohibitions of the 'Church, the
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matter was compromised in practice . Even religious houses had their minstrels, and so pious a prelate as Robert Grosseteste had his private harper, whose chamber adjoined the bishop's . St Thomas Aquinas (Summa theologia) said that there was no sin in the minstrel's
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art if it were kept within the bounds of decency . Thomas de Cabham, bishop of Salisbury (d . 1313), in a Penitential distinguished three kinds of minstrels (histriones)—buffoons or tumblers; the wandering scurrae, by whom he probably meant the goliardi (see
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GOLIARD) ; and the singers and players of
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instruments . In the third class he discriminated between the singers of lewd songs and those joculatores who took their songs from the deeds of princes and the lives of saints . The performances of these joculatores were permissible, and they themselves were not to be excluded from the consolations of the Church . The Parisian minstrels were formed into a gild in 1321, and in England a charter of Edward IV . (1469) formed the royal minstrels into a gild, which minstrels throughout the country were compelled to join if they wished to exercise their trade .

A new charter was conferred in 1604, when its

jurisdiction was limited to the city of
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London and 3 M. round it . This corporation still exists, under the style of the Corporation of the Master, Wardens and Commonalty of the Art or Science of the Musicians of London . During the best time of minstrelsy—the loth, 11th and 12th centuries—the minstrel, especially when he composed his own songs, was held in high honour . He was probably of noble or good bourgeois birth, and was treated by his hosts more or less as an equal . The distinction between the
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troubadour and the jogleur which was established in Provence probably soon spread to France and England . In any case it is probable that the poverty which forms the
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staple topic of the poems of Rutebeuf (q.v.) was the commonest lot of the minstrel . Entries of payments to minstrels occur in the accounts of corporations and religious houses throughout the 16th century; but the art of minstrelsy, already in its decline, was destroyed in England by the introduction of printing, and the minstrel of the entertainments given to Elizabeth at
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Kenilworth was little more than a survival . The best account of the subject is to be found in.E . K . Chambers's Medieval Stage (1903), i . 23-86 and ii . 230-266 .

See also L .

Gautier in Epopees francaises (vol. ii., 2nd ed., 1892) ; A . Schultz, Das hofische Leben zur Zeit der Minnesinger (2nd ed., 1889) ; T . Percy, Reliques of English
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Poetry (ed . H . B . Wheatley, 1876) ; J . Ritson, Ancient English Metrical Romances (1802); J . J . Jusserand, English Wayfaring
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Life in the
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Middle Ages (4th ed., 1892) .

End of Article: MINSTREL
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