Blondel de Nesle

aliases
Blondel
Blondel de Nesle - either Jean I of Nesle (c. 1155 – 1202) or his son Jean II of Nesle (died 1241) - was a French trouvère.

The name 'Blondel de Nesle' is attached to twenty-four or twenty-five works. He was identified in 1942, by Holger Dyggve, as Jean II of Nesle (near Amiens), who was nicknamed 'Blondel' for his long blond hair. He married at the time of his father's death in 1202, and that same year, went on the Fourth Crusade; he later fought in the Albigensian Crusade. However, in 1994, Yvan Lepage suggested that the poet may have been Jean I, father of Jean II, who was Lord of Nesle from 1180 to 1202; this Jean took part in the Third Crusade, which may explain the subsequent legend linking him with Richard I of England.

If the works are correctly identified and dated, he was a significant influence on his European contemporaries, who made much use of his melodies. (The melody of "L'amours dont sui espris" is used in Carmina Burana, for the song "Procurans Odium"). His works are fa…more

No photos have been uploaded yet.

Books with Blondel de Nesle

The Lute Player

by
3.82 avg rating — 652 ratings — published 1951
add/edit characters
Rate this book
Clear rating
A Search for the King

by
3.49 avg rating — 326 ratings — published 1950
add/edit characters
Rate this book
Clear rating