Misplaced Pages

Ulrich von Gutenburg

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
12th-century German nobleman and poet
Ulrich von Gutenberg in the 14th-century Codex Manesse.

Ulrich von Gutenburg (or Gutenberg; fl. late 12th century) was an Alsatian nobleman and Middle High German poet. He can be traced at the court of Emperors Frederick Barbarossa and Henry VI between 1172 and about 1200. The main influence on his poetry was Friedrich von Hausen, whom he may have known personally. His style is highly formal and he is represented in the chansonniers by a lyric poem of six stanzas in the Minnesang tradition and a similarly themed long poem of 350 verses.

His long poem is a Leich and may be the earliest secular example of its kind in German. Both his known works explore unrequited love, but whereas the lyric verses portray a lady's love as ennobling and educative, the Leich is an expression of feelings of hopelessness. In the lyric, the knight earns the lady's love by becoming a better person. In the Leich the knight pleads with the lady for mercy by appealing to her greater virtue.

Notes

  1. Garland & Garland 2005.
  2. Gibbs & Johnson 2002, p. 250.
  3. ^ Kaplowitt 1986, pp. 52–53.
  4. Gibbs & Johnson 2002, p. 238.

Sources

External links

Categories: