Chanson de Roland: Difference between revisions

From Cunnan
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
==Plot:==
==Plot:==
Loosely based on real events in 778. French King [[Charlemagne]] is fighting in Spain when a fake peace offer is recieved. Knight [[Roland]] volunteers his stepfather, Ganelon, to the almost certainly fatal job of responding to the offer. [[Ganelon]] betrays his King to the Muslems (and assorted demonised non-Christians) in order to get his revenge on Roland. Charlemagne takes the offered gold to return to [[France]], but Ganelon engineers an attack on Roland, who he entraps to lead the rearguard of the army. Roland, too proud to call for Charlemagne's help until too late, is slaughtered along with the 12 finest Lords of France, including his brave companion [[Oliver]]. Charlemagne avenges their death and Ganelon is brought to justice by trial.
Loosely based on real events in 778. French King [[Charlemagne]] is fighting in Spain when a fake peace offer is recieved. Knight [[Roland]] volunteers his stepfather, Ganelon, to the almost certainly fatal job of responding to the offer. [[Ganelon]] betrays his King to the Muslems (and assorted demonised non-Christians) in order to get his revenge on Roland. Charlemagne takes the offered gold to return to [[France]], but Ganelon engineers an attack on Roland, who he entraps to lead the rearguard of the army. Roland, too proud to call for Charlemagne's help until too late, is slaughtered along with the 12 finest Lords of France, including his brave companion [[Oliver]]. Charlemagne avenges their death and Ganelon is brought to justice by trial.


==poetic style:== [[decasyllabic assonanced couplets]] in [[Old French]]
==poetic style:== [[decasyllabic assonanced couplets]] in [[Old French]]

Revision as of 01:17, 27 July 2005

Plot:

Loosely based on real events in 778. French King Charlemagne is fighting in Spain when a fake peace offer is recieved. Knight Roland volunteers his stepfather, Ganelon, to the almost certainly fatal job of responding to the offer. Ganelon betrays his King to the Muslems (and assorted demonised non-Christians) in order to get his revenge on Roland. Charlemagne takes the offered gold to return to France, but Ganelon engineers an attack on Roland, who he entraps to lead the rearguard of the army. Roland, too proud to call for Charlemagne's help until too late, is slaughtered along with the 12 finest Lords of France, including his brave companion Oliver. Charlemagne avenges their death and Ganelon is brought to justice by trial.

==poetic style:== decasyllabic assonanced couplets in Old French

translations:

Very widely translated, one of the most famous chansons.

  • "The Song of Roland" trans Glyn Burgess (Penguin Books, London, 1990) ISBN: 0-14-044532-3
    • translation style: English translated line by line, some editing of word order for easier reading. Part of the old French Text presented in an appendix.