Medieval France. An Encyclopedia

(Darren Dugan) #1

Mirot, Léon. “Jean sans Peur de 1398 a 1405 d’après les comptes de sa chambre aux deniers.”
Annuaire-Bulletin de la Société de l’Histoire de France (1938): 129–245.
Pocquet du Haut-Jusse, Barthélémy. “Jean sans Peur: programme, moyens et résultats.” Revue de
l’Université de Bruxelles 7 (1954–55):385–404.
.“Jean sans Peur: son but et sa méthode.” Annales de Bourgogne 14(1942):181–96.
Vaughan, Richard. John the Fearless: The Growth of Burgundy. New York: Barnes and Noble,
1966.


JOINVILLE, JEAN DE


(1225–1317). Joinville’s Vie de saint Louis, a French prose memoir by a powerful
aristocrat, is one of our most valuable accounts of noble society in the 13th century.
Joinville’s father was seneschal of Champagne, an office he inherited. In 1248, he
decided to take part in the Seventh Crusade and thus met St. Louis, becoming a close
friend. The two endured captivity together, then Joinville served as royal steward at Acre
(1250–54) before returning to France. Joinville began his memoirs of the king in 1272,
just after Louis’s death, but undertook the second part (composed 1298–1309) when
Jeanne of Navarre, wife of Philip IV, requested it.
Joinville’s narrative has many virtues. As an important noble, he advised the king
during the crusade; as a warrior, he fought in it. Although a close friend, Joinville, unlike
other biographers of Louis, respected but was not overawed by the king and sometimes
disapproved of his actions, particularly when Louis’s saintliness conflicted with what
Joinville perceived to be his duties as king, aristocrat, and layman. Louis’s decision to go
on crusade in 1270 was one such occasion, but there were others. Joinville felt free at the
time to speak his mind and records a number of salty interchanges between himself and
his ruler. He was also candid about his own prejudices; he defended aristocratic
privileges and was contemptuous of bourgeois upstarts. His observations are vivid, and
his frankness makes the Vie delightful reading.
Joinville’s work was overshadowed in his own day by Guillaume de Nangis’s
biography of Louis; of the three extant manuscripts, only one is medieval, a copy of the
presentation manuscript of 1309.
Leah Shopkow
[See also: BIOGRAPHY; HISTORIOGRAPHY]
Joinville, Jean de. La vie de saint Louis, ed. Noel L.Corbett. Sherbrooke: Naaman, 1977.
——and Villehardouin. Chronicles of the Crusades, trans. Margaret R.B.Shaw. Harmondsworth:
Penguin, 1963.
Billson, Marcus K. “Joinville’s Histoire de Saint-Louis: Hagiography, History and Memoir.”
American Benedictine Review 31 (1980):418–42.
Perret, Michèle. “‘A la fin de sa vie ne fuz-je mie’: Joinville’s Vie de Saint-Louis.” Revue des
sciences humaines 183 (1981): 16–37.


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