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- Q3642110 description "French troubadour".
- Q3642110 description "French troubadour".
- Q3642110 subject Q16792400.
- Q3642110 subject Q18758745.
- Q3642110 subject Q20853990.
- Q3642110 subject Q7921449.
- Q3642110 subject Q8873760.
- Q3642110 abstract "Bonfilh or Bonfils (meaning "godson") was a Jewish troubadour from Narbonne. He is the only known Jew who wrote in the troubadour language, Old Occitan, and style. His only known work is a partimen (debate) with Guiraut Riquier, Auzit ay dir, Bofil, que saps trobar ("I hear tell, Bonfilh, that you know how to compose"). It has been suggested that Bonhilh may have been a poetic invention of Guiraut and not a historical person, or that he was the same person as the Jewish poet Abraham Bedersi. There is a lacuna in the only surviving manuscript version of this song that lasts from the middle of the third stanza through to the middle of the fifth. The seventh stanza is also missing the ending of its final line. Each stanza has eight lines, but the last two are tornadas of four each.The poem starts off amicably, but ends on bad terms, with Guiraut resorting to antisemitism (he names Bonfilh as having hurt Jesus). Riquier poses a polylemma for his debate partner: does Bonfilh sing out of fear, because a lady makes him do it, "to ply the joglar's trade" (that is, for money), or to advance his fame? Bonfilh's responds that it is out of joy and for his lady that he sings. He also reproaches Guiraut for using the formal second-person pronoun vos with his lady, while he, Bonfilh, uses the familiar and intimate tu. This is unusual, however, as the troubadours universally use vos with ladies (even those of low rank, as in pastorelas). It is not a Jewish custom, as the fourteenth-century Roman de la Reine Esther by Crescas Caslari puts vos in the mouth of the king, Assuérus, when addressing Esther. Both Guiratu and Bonfilh submit their partimen to Bertran d'Opian (fl. 1229–42), a knight of Narbonne, for judgement. He was known to Guiraut.".
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q1370497.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q16792400.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q186370.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q18758745.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q20853990.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q2281681.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q2634688.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q2779185.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q3173303.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q3377811.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q4668765.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q6087386.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q6555.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q6806840.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q732413.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q7325.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q761529.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q7921449.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q841192.
- Q3642110 wikiPageWikiLink Q8873760.
- Q3642110 name "Bonfilh".
- Q3642110 shortDescription "French troubadour".
- Q3642110 type Person.
- Q3642110 type Agent.
- Q3642110 type Person.
- Q3642110 type Agent.
- Q3642110 type NaturalPerson.
- Q3642110 type Thing.
- Q3642110 type Q215627.
- Q3642110 type Q5.
- Q3642110 type Person.
- Q3642110 comment "Bonfilh or Bonfils (meaning "godson") was a Jewish troubadour from Narbonne. He is the only known Jew who wrote in the troubadour language, Old Occitan, and style. His only known work is a partimen (debate) with Guiraut Riquier, Auzit ay dir, Bofil, que saps trobar ("I hear tell, Bonfilh, that you know how to compose"). It has been suggested that Bonhilh may have been a poetic invention of Guiraut and not a historical person, or that he was the same person as the Jewish poet Abraham Bedersi.".
- Q3642110 label "Bonfilh".
- Q3642110 name "Bonfilh".