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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: HOR-I25 |
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HUON OF BORDEAUX , hero of romance. The French chanson de geste of Huon de Bordeaux dates
condition that he visits the court of Gaudisse, the amir of Babylon, and brings back a handful of hair from the amir's beard and four of his back teeth, after having slain the greatest of his knights and three times kissed his daughter Esclarmonde. By the help of the fairy dwarf Oberon, Huon succeeds in this errand, in the course of which he meets with further adventures. The Chariot of the story has been identified by A. Longnon (Romania viii. 1-11) with Charles 1'Enfant, one of the sons of Charles the Bald and Irmintrude, who died in 866 in consequence of wounds inflicted by a certain Aubouin in precisely similar circumstances to those related in the romance. The epic father of Huon may safely be identified with Seguin, who was count of Bordeaux under Louis the Pious in 839, and diedfighting against the Normans six years later. A Turin manuscript of the romance contains a prologue in the shape of a separate
exile is due to his having slain a count in the emperor's palace. The poem exists in a later version in alexandrines, and, with its continuations, was put into prose
great
translation
The Chanson de geste of Huon de Bordeaux was edited by MM F. Guessard and C. Grandmaison for the Anciens poetes de la France in 186o; Lord Berners's translation
Halle
Halle
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