- The
Archpoet (c. 1130 – c. 1165), or
Archipoeta (in
Latin and German), is the name
given to an
anonymous 12th-century
author of ten
medieval Latin poems...
- of Blois,
Walter of Châtillon and an
anonymous poet
referred to as the
Archpoet. The
collection was
found in 1803 in the
Benedictine monastery of Benediktbeuern...
- to
Paris to
become a scholar. In Paris, he
gains friends (such as the
Archpoet, Abdul,
Robert de
Boron and Kyot, the
purported source of
Wolfram von Eschenbach's...
- 1155)
Ailred of
Rievaulx (1110–1167) Otto of
Freising (c. 1114–1158)
Archpoet (c. 1130 – c. 1165)
William of Tyre (c. 1130–1185)
Peter of
Blois (c. 1135 –...
- A
Companion to
Chaucer (2008), p. 94. Sean Ward, "Circa 1175–1195: The
Archpoet and
Goliard Poetry", in A New
History of
German Literature,
edited by D...
- vagantes; in
German fahrenden Schüler) like Hugh
Primas and the
anonymous Archpoet (both 12th century)
satirically criticised the
Medieval Church, has been...
-
thriller film "Confession", a 12th-century
Latin poem
attributed to the
Archpoet Confession (Bakunin), an 1851
autobiographical work by
Mikhail Bakunin...
- Irae
Pange Lingua Adam of
Saint Victor St
Ambrose St
Thomas Aquinas The
Archpoet St
Bernard of
Cluny St
Bonaventure St
Columba Dante Alighieri St Hildegard...
-
Marcabru fl. c. 1129–c1150
Occitan Troubadour Four works; 42
poems total Archpoet (Archipoeta) c. 1130 – c. 1165
Western European probably French or German...
- also had a re****tion as a
place to have a "good time," as
witness the
Archpoet's famous comments of 1163. In the
following centuries Pavia was an important...