释义 |
- References
- Bibliography
Simon Chèvre d'Or was poet and a canon at the Abbey of St. Victor, Paris in the 12th century.{{sfn|DiMarco|2007|p=1338}} It is believed that Simon was commissioned by Henry I, Count of Champagne to write three poems in Latin based on the Trojan Wars including a summary of the Aeneid and the Iliad.{{sfn|Reichert|2006|p=10}} In his Ylias,{{sfn|Swanson|1999|pp=60-61}} Simon drew on Joseph of Exeter's work Frigii Daretis Yliados libri sex as well as Virgil's Aeneid. The largest version of this poem runs to 994 verses.{{sfn|Ziolkowski|1996|p=551}} Albert C. Friend has argued that Chaucer, in turn, relied on Simon's work along with the original version by Virgil for his own retelling of the Aeneid.{{sfn|Sundwall|1975|pp=151-156}} Simon is also credited with the composition of a series of epitaphs dedicated to Saint Bernard.{{sfn|Benton|1991|p=22}} References Bibliography {{refbegin|2}}- {{cite book|last1=Benton|first1=John F.|editor1-last=Bisson|editor1-first=Thomas N.|title=Culture, Power and Personality in Medieval France|date=1991|publisher=Continuum|isbn=978-1852850302|pages=3–44|chapter=The Court of Champagne as a Literary Center|quote=The only author known to have written at Count Henry's request is Simon Chèvre d'Or (Capra Aurea), a canon of Saint-Victor of Paris. Simon composed a series of short poetic epitaphs for St Bernard|ref= harv}}
- {{cite book|last1=DiMarco|first1=Vincent|editor1-last=Kittel|editor1-first=Harald|editor2-last=House|editor2-first=Juliane|editor3-last=Schultze|editor3-first=Brigitte|title=Ubersetzung - Translation - Traduction.|date=2007|publisher=Walter de Gruyter|isbn=978-3110171457|pages=1337–1374|chapter="The Matter of Troy" and its transmission through translation in Medieval Europe|ref= harv}}
- {{cite book|last1=Reichert|first1=Michelle|title=Between Courtly Literature and Al-Andaluz: Oriental Symbolism and Influences in the Romances of Chretien de Troyes|date=2006|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-0415976152|ref= harv}}
- {{cite journal|last1=Sundwall|first1=McKay|title=Deiphobus and Helen: A Tantalizing Hint|journal=Modern Philology|date=1975|volume=73|issue=2|pages=151–156|jstor=436329|publisher=University of Chicago Press|ref= harv|doi=10.1086/390633}}
- {{cite book|last1=Swanson|first1=R.N.|title=The Twelfth-Century Renaissance|date=1999|publisher=Manchester University Press|isbn=978-0719042560|ref= harv}}
- {{cite book|last1=Ziolkowski|first1=Jan M.|editor1-last=Mantello|editor1-first=Frank A. C.|editor2-last=Rigg|editorlink2=A. G. Rigg|editor2-first=A. G.|title=Medieval Latin: An Introduction and Bibliographical Guide|date=1996|publisher=Catholic University of America Press|isbn=978-0813208428|pages=537–555|chapter=Epic|ref= harv}}
{{refend}}{{authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Simon Chevre d'Or}} 5 : 12th-century French writers|French Roman Catholic priests|French male writers|12th-century Latin writers|12th-century French poets |