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Trouvère (/truːˈvɛər/, French: [tʁuvɛʁ]),
sometimes spelled trouveur (/truːˈvɜːr/, French: [tʁuvœʁ]), is the
Northern French (langue d'oïl) form of the...
- is one of the world's most
frequently performed operas. In
French as Le
trouvère After the
successful presentation of the
opera in
Italian in Paris, François-Louis...
- Adam de la
Halle (1245–50 – 1285–8/after 1306) was a
French poet-composer
trouvère.
Among the few
medieval composers to
write both
monophonic and polyphonic...
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William (né Adgar; fl. 1150–1200),
later called William the
Trouvère, was an
English poet. He
translated tales from the
Latin Miracles of the
Virgin into...
- Dame
Margot (fl. 13th century) was a
trouvère from Arras, in Picardy, France. One
extant work of hers is jeu parti, a
debate song, in
which she debates...
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Troies [kresˈtjẽn də ˈtrojəs]; fl. c. 1160–1191) was a
French poet and
trouvère known for his
writing on
Arthurian subjects such as Gawain, Lancelot, Perceval...
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Richart de Fournival,
French trouvère 1284 4
April –
Alfonso X of
Castile 1286 8
October – John I, Duke of Brittany,
French trouvère (b. 1217) 1288 – Adam de...
- the
trouvère tradition in
northern France,
since he was well
known there, his
melodies were
widely circulated, and the
early composers of
trouvère music...
-
discography of
Giuseppe Verdi's
opera Il
trovatore (The Troubadour) and Le
trouvère (the
revised version in
French translation). At
least 83
recordings exist...
- a shepherdess. Alba is
complaint of
lovers upon parting.
Songs of the
Trouvère are
songs and
poetry that
stemmed from poet-composers who were roughly...