Poésies du troubadour Peire Raimon de Toulouse: Texte et traduction by Peire Raimon

(20 User reviews)   6834
Peire Raimon, of Toulouse, 1180?-1225? Peire Raimon, of Toulouse, 1180?-1225?
French
Ever wonder what people were really thinking 800 years ago? This book is your ticket. It’s not a dusty history lesson; it’s the actual voice of a man named Peire Raimon, a troubadour from Toulouse, singing about love, politics, and the messy business of being alive in the Middle Ages. The poems are beautiful and strange, and the facing-page translation means you don’t need to know Old Occitan to feel their power. The real mystery here isn't in a plot—it's in trying to connect with a person across a vast gulf of time. It feels less like reading poetry and more like finding a message in a bottle.
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This book is a collection of songs and poems written by Peire Raimon, a real troubadour who lived in southern France around the year 1200. There's no single story. Instead, you get snapshots of his world: passionate love songs dedicated to noblewomen, sharp political commentary, and personal reflections on faith and art. The original Old Occitan text is on one page, with a modern French translation right beside it, letting you see the raw material and the interpreted meaning together.

Why You Should Read It

Reading this feels incredibly intimate. You're not getting a historian's summary of the period; you're getting the un-filtered thoughts of someone who was there. His love poems (cansos) are full of the idealized, often frustrating, rules of courtly love. But it's his political poems (sirventes) that really crackle with life—you can hear his anger, his loyalties, and his anxiety about the changing world during the Albigensian Crusade. It shatters the stereotype of the 'Dark Ages' as a time without complex emotion or critical thinking.

Final Verdict

Perfect for anyone curious about medieval life beyond kings and battles, or for poetry lovers looking for something truly different. It’s also a fantastic resource for writers or world-builders who want to add authentic texture to their work. If you think history is about dates and treaties, this book will change your mind—it’s about people, and Peire Raimon’s voice, preserved in these pages, is vivid, clever, and surprisingly relatable.



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Joseph Perez
1 year ago

Based on the summary, I decided to read it and the storytelling feels authentic and emotionally grounded. A true masterpiece.

Deborah Walker
9 months ago

Solid story.

Joseph Harris
1 year ago

Having read this twice, the narrative structure is incredibly compelling. A true masterpiece.

Jennifer Allen
9 months ago

Beautifully written.

Dorothy Taylor
5 months ago

Having read this twice, the arguments are well-supported by credible references. Absolutely essential reading.

5
5 out of 5 (20 User reviews )

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