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Middle High German literature

Middle High German literature refers to literature written in German between the middle of the 11th century and the middle of the 14th. In the second half of the 12th century, there was a sudden intensification of activity, leading to a 60-year "golden age" of medieval German literature referred to as the mittelhochdeutsche Blütezeit (c. 1170 – c. 1230). This was the period of the blossoming of Minnesang, MHG lyric poetry, initially influenced by the French and Provençal tradition of courtly love song. The same sixty years saw the composition of the most important courtly romances. again drawing on French models such as Chrétien de Troyes, many of them relating Arthurian material. The third literary movement of these years was a new revamping of the heroic tradition, in which the ancient Germanic oral tradition can still be discerned, but tamed and Christianized and adapted for the court.

Historical overview edit

The vernacular literature of the Old High German period, written in abbeys and monasteries, had been encouraged by the Carolingian dynasty in order to support the work of the church in recently Christianized lands. This eventually lost its urgency under the subsequent Ottonian and Salian emperors, and official promotion of the written vernacular lapsed. The result was a period of around 150 years, c. 900 – c. 1050, when there was almost no new writing in German.[1][2]

By the middle of the 11th century, there was an increasing preference for German over Latin in writing in the courts, and Henry the Lion was just the first of the princes, in 1144, to establish his own court chancery.[3][4] At the same time there was a growing audience among the nobility for literature in the vernacular (as was already happening in France and England).[5][6]

 
Walther von der Vogelweide from the Codex Manesse (Folio 124r). The pose refers to a song in which he asks how to reconcile worldly success and God's blessing.

The earliest works of this period, such as the Ezzolied and Annolied, were still the product of clerical authors with a biblical subject, but now directed towards a lay audience at the noble courts, rather than the clerical audience of the Old High German compositions.[6]

By the middle of the 12th century, though, more secular works such as the Kaiserchronik ("The Imperial Chronicle") and the Alexanderlied introduced more worldly subject matter, though still within the religious world-view.[7] In the same period, the love lyrics of the Danubian poets mark the start of the Minnesang tradition.[8]

Under Frederick Barbarossa (ruled 1155–1190), political stability and increasing wealth encouraged the nobility to "assert its identity in activities that enhanced its visibility and prestige", among which were the patronage of vernacular literature, sponsoring new compositions, and the performance and copying of existing works.[4] This new, largely secular literature introduced "new ways of thinking, feeling, imagining", seen in the courtly concerns with romantic love, the challenges and obligations of knighthood, and a striving for personal honour.[9][10] Religious concerns were not lost, but the issue was now how to reconcile worldly and divine obligations.[11]

From around 1170 Old French romances and the songs of the Provençal troubadours and French trouvères inspired MHG adaptations, which even from the start showed great independence from their sources.[12] The following decades were a "golden age" (German Blütezeit), a sixty-year period which saw the creation of works recognized by both contemporaries and later generations as classics: the courtly romances of Hartmann von Aue, Gottfried von Strassburg and Wolfram von Eschenbach, and the songs of the Minnesänger, most notable among them Walther von der Vogelweide.[13][14]

Also among these classics is the heroic epic the Nibelungenlied, which drew for form and subject matter on Germanic oral tradition rather than Romance models.[15] Other types of narrative with connections to oral tradition in the broader MHG period are the earlier Spielmannsepen ("minstrel epics") and the later epics surrounding the legendary figure of Dietrich von Bern.[16]

In the later MHG period from about 1230 (sometimes termed "post-Classical"),[17] poets built on the achievements of the Blütezeit and expanded the scope of German literature in form and subject matter. New genres included a new style of short tale (German Märe).[18] Neidhart broadened the scope of the love-lyric with peasant characters and a satirical tone,[19] while political uncertainty prompted a rise in didactic and political songs from the Spruchdichter in the footsteps of Walther.[20] With the writings of the mystics, which for the first time included a number of female writers, this period also saw the first developments in literary prose.[21]

By the mid-14th century, however, with courtly culture in decline, the genres which had dominated MHG literature ceased to attract writers, and a new literature, centred on the towns and their urban patriciate, started to develop.[22] Even in the following period, however, the old stories were copied and adapted for new audiences, with the result that many MHG works survive in the 15th century and even later copies, while the Meistersinger continued to develop the work of the Sangspruchdichter and were still using melodies of Walther's for new songs.[23][24]

Poets edit

There is little biographical evidence about the MHG poets.[25] The epic poets generally name themselves in their works, and the Minnesänger are identified in the manuscript collections, but works based on oral tradition are typically anonymous. [26]

 
"To the singer Walther von der Vogelweide 5 solidi for a fur coat" (from an itinerary account of the bishop of Passau).

For the higher status Minnesänger there is often documentary evidence, such as the account of the death of Friedrich von Hausen on the Third crusade, mourned by the whole army.[27] However, even a poet as famous as Walther von der Vogelweide is mentioned in only a single official document,[28] and we know little about the narrative poets apart from what they say about themselves in their works and remarks by later writers.[29]

Given the time it would take to write such works, the epic poets would necessarily have been dependent on long-term patronage, and the many incomplete works may indicate a loss of patronage.[30] Most Minnesänger were of high noble rank (including the Holy Roman Emperor, Henry VI) requiring no patronage. For them song would have been an occasional pastime, to enhance their prestige, and their œuvre is correspondingly small.[31] The large number of songs and the increasing artistry from Minnesänger such as Reinmar, Walther and Neidhart, on the other hand, suggest professional court musicians from the ranks of the unfree nobles (ministeriales). Much lower on the social scale were the Spruchdichter with their didactic and political songs — wandering minstrels who had limited legal rights.[32][33]

Manuscripts and patrons edit

 
The Minnesänger Reinmar von Zweter dictates to a scribe (Codex Manesse, fol. 323r)
 
The first page of Hartmann von Aue's Iwein in the 14th century Florence manuscript (D), fol. 142r

MHG literature is preserved in parchment and, towards the end of the period, paper manuscripts,[34] However, there are no MHG literary manuscripts which show the hand of the original author[35] — in fact, it is clear that many authors, even if they could read, were unable to write.[36]

Although readers might learn to form the letters of the alphabet with a stylus on a wax tablet, only those trained to handle parchment, quills, and ink would regularly produce written documents; composition by dictation to a trained scribe was the form in which much ‘writing’ was done (much as business letters were once dictated to typists).[37]

Each manuscript was written by a scribe (or several) in the scriptorium of a monastery or the chancery of a noble court, and might be several generations from any "original".[38][39]

Most manuscripts are, in fact, of significantly later date than the work they record.[40] An extreme case is the Ambraser Heldenbuch, compiled 1504–1516, which includes texts of Hartmann von Aue's Erec and the Nibelungenlied, composed in c. 1185 and c. 1200, respectively.[41] However, many manuscripts (perhaps 75%) survive only in fragments and an unknown number of works have been completely lost.[42] Even literary fame is no guarantee of survival: Erec was highly influential and widely quoted, but it survives only in the Ambraser Heldenbuch and a few earlier fragments.[43] Bligger von Steinach's narrative verse is praised by Gottfried von Strassburg and Rudolf von Ems, but none of it survives.[44]

Manuscripts were expensive, both in terms of material and labour of copying, even without the sponsorship of creative work or the costs of decoration and illumination found in the most elaborate manuscripts. For new work:

Patrons obtained sources from which the poets worked, they granted the poets time and freedom from other responsibilities to enable them to compose, and they made available the resources to have the poets’ work preserved in writing.[45]

This meant that only the church, the aristocracy, or, by the second half of the 13th century, the wealthiest urban patriciate had the means to sponsor literary work.[46]

Patrons are not mentioned in love lyrics, but several are named in narrative works and Spruchdichtung. Hermann I, Landgrave of Thuringia, for example, sponsored Wolfram von Eschenbach's Willehalm, Herbort von Fritzlar's Liet von Troje, and the completion of Heinrich von Veldeke's Eneas.[47] In several of his works Konrad von Würzburg refers to patrons, and these include "members of the nobility, high-ranking cathedral clergy, and wealthy citizens who played important roles in the political and administrative life of the cities."[48]

Audience and readership edit

In the main, MHG literature was written for oral delivery and public performance.[49] First, literacy at the noble courts was limited: while the noble ladies will have had some education as will younger sons intended for the church, most knights were unable to read.[50][51] Second, the provision of public performance served to enhance the prestige of the patron.[52]

Nonetheless, there is extensive evidence for private reading of narrative works — for example, in manuscripts the presence of textual patterning such as acrostics, which would not be apparent to listeners.[53] The conclusion is that MHG narrative verse was intended both for readers and listeners, and Dennis Green identifies this as a trend which began around the start of the 13th century, with women readers as a particular constituency[54] It is also reflected in the increasing number of manuscripts from the mid-13th century.[53]

However, narrative works with strophic form were or, at least, could also be sung.[55] Sharing its strophic form with the songs of Der von Kürenberg, the Nibelungenlied could have been sung,[55] and in all, melodies are known for eight of the thirteen different strophic forms found in heroic verse.[53] And while there is no evidence that the rhyming couplets of the courtly romance were sung, they were probably delivered in a recitative style.[56]

As song genres, Minnesang and Spruchdichtung were necessarily designed for performance before an audience, and this is particularly clear from the references to dance.[56] But even the lyric genres may have had readers. Certainly, the poets themselves, even if illiterate like Ulrich von Liechtenstein, kept written copies of their own works, which may have been copied for readers.[57] In any case, the song collections of the 14th century, particularly the massive and expensively illustrated Manesse Codex, are unlikely to have been intended solely, if at all, for performers.[58][59]

Genres edit

Verse narrative edit

Religious narrative edit

The Ezzolied (before 1064),[60] the first literary work of the MHG period, is a strophic work of salvation history from the Creation to the Crucifixion.[61] The other poems from the first century of this period are likewise designed to present biblical material to a lay audience, and range from "biblical ballads" — short poems on individual biblical episodes — to longer retellings of complete Old Testament books.[62] Many of these are collected in manuscript compilations, of which the most notable is the Vorau manuscript, with a dozen Biblical pieces. This includes poems by Ava, the earliest known female poet writing in German.[63][64]

Historical narrative edit

The earliest historical poems are closely related to the biblical verse, as they view events from a Christian perspective. The Annolied ("Song of Anno") (c. 1077) combines salvation history, world history from the Babylonians onwards, and the life of Archbishop Anno II of Cologne.[65] The Kaiserchronik (completed after 1146, and also in the Vorau manuscript)[66] is the first historiographic work in any European vernacular.[67][68] In a purely chronological narrative it tells the story of selected Roman emperors and their Frankish successors, but judges each emperor according to Christian standards, and includes material from the Annolied.[69]

A more secular approach to historical figures is presented in the Alexanderlied of Pfaffe Lamprecht (c. 1150) and the Rolandslied of Pfaffe Konrad,(c. 1170), both of which concentrate on the legendary feats of these two heroes. These are two of the earliest German narratives to derive from French rather than Latin sources.[70]

The 13th century was the golden age of German verse chronicles, starting with the Gandersheimer Reimchronik (1216).[70] Rudolf von Ems's Weltchronik (unfinished at his death in 1254) was immensely popular, surviving in over 80 manuscripts.[71] The Christherre-Chronik (likewise unfinished) and the Weltchronik of Jans der Enikel also enjoyed a broad readership.[72] These three works were all vast narrative texts with expansive illustration programmes, in the 14th century they were combined and further expanded by the scribes of the Heinrich von München workshop. Later chronicles are generally in prose.[73]

"Minstrel epics" edit

The so-called "Minstrel epics" (Spielmannsepik, Spielmannsdichtung) — a traditional term, now agreed to be inaccurate and misleading[74][75] — are a disparate group of five shorter pre-courtly narratives (Herzog Ernst, König Rother, Orendel, Oswald, and Salman und Morolf). They were probably written in the second half of the 12th century, though the manuscripts are of later date.[66][9] They have in common that they are thought to have been based on oral tradition. All involve a knight meeting challenges on a journey to the fabulous East to achieve some goal:[76] Herzog Ernst is exiled by the emperor for murdering an evil counsellor;[77] for the other heroes the challenge is to win a bride in foreign lands.[9][78]

Romance edit

From the mid 12th century the courtly romance, written in rhyming couplets, was the dominant narrative genre in MHG literature. Between c. 1185 and c. 1210 Hartmann von Aue, Wolfram von Eschenbach and Gottfried von Strassburg produced romances that were influential at the time and are recognized as classics. All were based on Old French sources, though heavily adapted and re-interpreted.[79]

The earliest German romance is Heinrich von Veldeke's Eneas, based on the anonymous Roman d'Enéas, itself an adaptation of Virgil's Aeneid, but the main subject matter was the Matter of Britain, tales centered around the court of King Arthur. These drew mainly on the romances of Chrétien de Troyes: Hartmann's Erec (the first Arthurian romance in German) and Iwein, Wolfram's Parzival, and Gottfried's Tristan.[80]

The central concern of these Arthurian romances is a knight's pursuit of aventiure (literally "adventure") — encounters which allow him to prove his valour and moral worth — and minne ("love").[81][82] In contrast to the heroic epic and Minnesang, however, the knight's lady has a more active role in inspiring the knight to prove himself and his love is always rewarded.[15] Only the adulterous relationship at the centre of Tristan challenges this pattern.

After the classical period, further developments saw an expansion in the range of themes to encompass other legendary material and stories of lovers' separation by poets such as Konrad von Würzburg and Rudolf von Ems[83]

Some of these works were very widely read — there are more than eighty manuscripts of Parzival, for example[84] — but by the mid 14th century, though the most popular works continued to be copied, no new romances were being written.[85]

Heroic Epic edit

Heroic poetry begins to be composed in writing in Germany with the Nibelungenlied (c. 1200), which updated the heroic legends about with elements of the popular literary genre of its time, German courtly romance.[86] The epics written after the Nibelungenlied maintain this hybrid nature. For this reason Middle High German heroic poetry is also called "late heroic poetry" (späte Heldendichtung).[87] The genre developed out of an oral tradition and only became a full genre with many texts in the course of the 13th century - only the Nibelungenlied dates to the main flourishing of courtly literature.[88] A direct reaction to the heroic nihilism of the Nibelungenlied is found in the Kudrun (1230?), in which material also found in Old English and Old Norse about the heroine Hildr serves as the prologue to the - likely invented - story of her daughter, Kudrun.[89][90] The anonymous authorship of the Middle High Germans heroic poems forms an important distinction from other poetic genres, such as romance, but is shared with some other genres, such as Spielmannsdichtung.[91]

From the 13th to 16th centuries, many heroic traditions enter writing in Germany and enjoy great popularity.[92] From 1230 onward, several heroic epics, of which 14 are known to us, were written concerning the hero Dietrich von Bern, forming a literary cycle comparable to that around King Arthur (the Matter of Britain) or Charlemagne (the Matter of France).[93] These texts are typically divided into "historical" and "fantastical" epics, depending on whether they concern Dietrich's battles with Ermenrich (Ermanaric) and exile at the court of Etzel (Attila) or his battles with mostly supernatural opponents such as dwarfs, dragons, and giants.[94] Closely connected to the Dietrich epics, the combined epics Ortnit and Wolfdietrich (both c. 1230) have unclear connections to the Migration Period and may be inventions of the thirteenth century, although Merovingian origins are also suggested for Wolfdietrich.[95][96]

Almost all of the texts originate in the Bavarian-speaking areas of Bavaria and Austria, with several texts about Dietrich von Bern having origins in Tirol; a few others seem to have originated in the Alemannic dialect area in modern south-west Germany and Switzerland.[97] Most texts are anonymous, and many are written in rhyming stanzas that were meant to be sung.[91]

Shorter narratives edit

In the post-classical period a major development is of new short narrative forms in rhyming couplets, with few clear boundaries between genres and little connection with previous writing except in the religious sphere.[98][99]

Lyric Poetry edit

 
Lyrics by Hartmann von Aue in the Weingarten Manuscript (c.1310), fol 20v.

Minnesang edit

Minnesang is the MHG love song genre. The lyrics are preserved mainly in 14th century manuscript song collections, such as the illuminated Codex Manesse (c. 1300), which has songs by 138 named Minnesänger.[100] Few melodies survive, however, particularly from the first 70 years of Minnesang.[101][102]

The central theme is the love of a knight for a noble and idealised lady, expressed mostly from the knight's point of view. The knight's love is unreciprocated and his service is its own reward (hohe minne, literally "high love").[17][103] However, there are many Minnesang sub-genres, some of which depict a reciprocated or even consummated relationship, often with a female perspective.[104]

The earliest songs (from c. 1160) drew on native German tradition,[105] but from around 1180, Minnesang came under the influence of the Provençal troubadours and the French trouvères, with effects on both form and subject matter.[106] By 1200 the Minnesänger had absorbed the Romance influences and started to rework forms and themes independently,[107] leading to a period of "classical Minnesang" represented by the songs of Albrecht von Johansdorf (fl. c. 1200), Heinrich von Morungen (d. c. 1200), and Reinmar von Hagenau (d. c. 1208).[17][108]

The largest surviving œuvre is that of Walther von der Vogelweide (c. 1170c. 1230), a "massive corpus of great diversity", which introduces an insistence on reciprocity of feeling.[109][110] Another innovator, again with a substantial œuvre, is Neidhart (d. c. 1240), whose songs introduce the peasant girl as the object of the knight's attentions, and for which, exceptionally, a large number of melodies survive.[19]

The prolific later Minnesang, from c. 1230, is marked by increasingly elaborate formal developments but no great thematic progression.[17] After 1300, Minnesang began to give way to Meistersang and folk-song.[111] Frauenlob (d. 1318) can be seen as the last Minnesänger or the first Meistersinger.[112]

Spruchdichtung edit

 
Jenaer Liederhandschrift, fol. 111v. Meister Boppe's song O hoer vnde starker almechtiger got

Spruchdichtung is the MHG genre of didactic song, written by non-noble itinerant musicians. Many worked under professional rather than personal names: Heinrich von Meissen is known as Frauenlob ("praise of women"), Rumelant von Sachsen's name means "quit the country", Der Kanzler is "the chancellor".[113]

While there is a small amount of such verse from the 12th century, it was Walther who raised the status of Spruchdichtung and expanded its range of subject matter to include "religion, ethical conduct, praise or lament for individuals, the conditions of the professional poets’ life, the state of society, or political matters."[114] Many of the melodies have been preserved, notably in the Jena Manuscript, which has notation for over 90 didactic songs.[115] Meistersang is the later development of the genre.[23]

Prose edit

Prose romance edit

While prose romances started to appear in France during the 13th century, German romance remained in verse. An exception is the Prosa-Lancelot c. 1250, a cycle of three romances translated fairly faithfully (rather than adapted as the verse romances were) from the Old French Lancelot en prose.[116][117][81]

Mystical literature edit

Middle High German mysticism, often called "Rhineland mysticism," is a key prose genre. Three fourteenth-century Dominican authors are particularly important: Meister Eckhart, Henry Suso (also known as Heinrich Seuse), and Johannes Tauler. Female religious writers also made significant contributions, particularly Mechthild von Magdeburg (The Flowing Light of the Godhead) and Margareta Ebner.[118]

Key authors and works edit

Early MHG 1050–1170 edit

Classical MHG 1170–1230 edit

Late MHG 1230–1350 edit

Important collective manuscripts edit

Collective manuscripts (German, Sammelhandschriften), which combine works from a variety of different authors and genres, are a major source of MHG texts.[119] The following are some of the most significant such manuscripts:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ de Boor 1971, p. 133.
  2. ^ Vollmann-Profe 1986, p. 15.
  3. ^ Bumke 2000, p. 40.
  4. ^ a b Jones & Jones 2019, p. 282.
  5. ^ Johnson 1999, pp. 8–9.
  6. ^ a b Jones & Jones 2019, p. 11.
  7. ^ Palmer 1997, pp. 43–45.
  8. ^ Palmer 1997, p. 65.
  9. ^ a b c Hasty 2006, p. 4.
  10. ^ Jones & Jones 2019, pp. 306–307.
  11. ^ Hasty 2006, pp. 3–6.
  12. ^ Jones & Jones 2019, pp. 307, 426.
  13. ^ Johnson 1999, p. 345.
  14. ^ Jones & Jones 2019, p. 16.
  15. ^ a b Jones & Jones 2019, p. 306.
  16. ^ Palmer 1997, p. 81.
  17. ^ a b c d Jones & Jones 2019, p. 428.
  18. ^ Palmer 1997, p. 77.
  19. ^ a b Palmer 1997, p. 71.
  20. ^ Harris 2006, p. 130.
  21. ^ Poor 2006, p. 185.
  22. ^ Jones & Jones 2019, p. 12.
  23. ^ a b Palmer 1997, p. 84.
  24. ^ Brunner 2013, p. LI.
  25. ^ Hasty 2006, p. 12.
  26. ^ Bumke 2005, p. 678.
  27. ^ de Boor 1974, p. 256.
  28. ^ Bumke 2000, p. 124.
  29. ^ Bumke 2005, p. 638.
  30. ^ Bumke 2005, p. 680.
  31. ^ Bumke 2000, p. 44.
  32. ^ Hasty 2006, p. 13.
  33. ^ Bumke 2000, p. 46.
  34. ^ Schneider 2014, p. 110.
  35. ^ Bumke 2005, p. 720.
  36. ^ Wendehorst 2014, pp. 25–26.
  37. ^ Jones & Jones 2019, p. 267.
  38. ^ Brunner 2013a, p. 19.
  39. ^ Jones & Jones 2019, p. 297.
  40. ^ Jones & Jones 2019, p. 8.
  41. ^ Janota 1989.
  42. ^ Schneider 2014, p. 186.
  43. ^ Bumke 2008, pp. 9–10.
  44. ^ Kolb 1989.
  45. ^ Jones & Jones, p. 303.
  46. ^ Jones & Jones 2019, p. 304.
  47. ^ Palmer 1997, pp. 45–47.
  48. ^ Jones & Jones 2019, p. 325.
  49. ^ Klein 2015, p. 15.
  50. ^ Johnson 1999, p. 7.
  51. ^ Green 1994, p. 213.
  52. ^ Gibbs & Johnson 2002, p. 102.
  53. ^ a b c Klein 2015, p. 20.
  54. ^ Green 1994, pp. 213, 290.
  55. ^ a b Jones & Jones, p. 246.
  56. ^ a b Klein 1999, p. 20.
  57. ^ Bumke 2005, pp. 769–775.
  58. ^ Hasty 2006, p. 236.
  59. ^ Jammers 1963, p. 1.
  60. ^ Murdoch 1007, p. 38.
  61. ^ Vollmann-Profe, p. 33.
  62. ^ Vollmann-Profe 1986, pp. 83–86.
  63. ^ Gentry 2002, pp. 88–90.
  64. ^ Gibbs & Johnson 2002, p. 75.
  65. ^ Gibbs & Johnson 2000, p. 92.
  66. ^ a b Palmer 1997, p. 43.
  67. ^ Vollmann-Profe 1986, p. 109.
  68. ^ Palmer 1997, p. 45.
  69. ^ Gibbs & Johnson 2000, p. 92–93.
  70. ^ a b Gibbs & Johnson 2000, p. 93–94.
  71. ^ Gibbs & Johnson 2000, p. 340–341.
  72. ^ Dobozy 2002, p. 384.
  73. ^ Gibbs & Johnson 2000, p. 419–420.
  74. ^ Vollmann-Profe 1986, pp. 213–214.
  75. ^ Bumke 2000, p. 74.
  76. ^ Vollmann-Profe 1986, pp. 215.
  77. ^ Bumke 2000, p. 76.
  78. ^ Vollman-Profe 1986, p. 217.
  79. ^ Gibbs & Johnson 2002, p. 135.
  80. ^ Jones & Jones 2019, p. 308.
  81. ^ a b Jones & Jones 2019, p. 309.
  82. ^ Palmer 1997, p. 54.
  83. ^ Jones & Jones 2019, p. 309–310.
  84. ^ Jones & Jones 2019, p. 376.
  85. ^ Cramer 2000, pp. 27, 69.
  86. ^ Millet 2008, pp. 178–179.
  87. ^ Lienert 2015, p. 13-14.
  88. ^ Bumke 2000, pp. 195–196, 260–261.
  89. ^ Lienert 2015, pp. 81.
  90. ^ Millet 2008, pp. 242–251.
  91. ^ a b Lienert 2015, pp. 16–17.
  92. ^ Millet 2008, p. 328.
  93. ^ Millet 2008, pp. 328–329.
  94. ^ Heinzle 1999, pp. 32–33.
  95. ^ Millet 2008, pp. 382–383, 393–394.
  96. ^ Lienert 2015, pp. 150, 154.
  97. ^ Bumke 2000, p. 262.
  98. ^ Heinzle 1984, p. 174.
  99. ^ Jones & Jones 2019, p. 312.
  100. ^ Palmer 1997, p. 64.
  101. ^ Hasty 2006, p. 152.
  102. ^ Palmer 1997, p. 67.
  103. ^ Palmer 1997, p. 69.
  104. ^ Schweikle 1995, pp. 121ff..
  105. ^ Classen 2002, p. 127.
  106. ^ Hasty 2006, p. 142.
  107. ^ Bumke 1991, pp. 97–98.
  108. ^ Gibbs & Johnson 2002, pp. 247ff..
  109. ^ Gibbs & Johnson 2000, p. 267.
  110. ^ Palmer 1997, pp. 70–71.
  111. ^ Schweikle 1995, p. 212.
  112. ^ Schweikle 1995, p. 100.
  113. ^ Heinzle 1984, p. 126.
  114. ^ Jones & Jones 2019, pp. 310, 473.
  115. ^ Harris 2006, p. 124.
  116. ^ Andersen 2002, p. 471.
  117. ^ Palmer 1997, p. 58.
  118. ^ Poor 2006.
  119. ^ a b c d Klein 2015, p. 122.
  120. ^ Klein 2015, p. 118.
  121. ^ Gibbs & Johnson 2006, pp. 75–78.
  122. ^ a b c d Gibbs & Johnson 2006, pp. 225.
  123. ^ a b Klein 2015, p. 121.
  124. ^ Klein 2015, p. 121–122.
  125. ^ Gibbs & Johnson 2006, pp. 343.
  126. ^ Klein 2015, p. 177.

Sources edit

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External links edit

  • Bibliotheca Augustana — Extensive collection of MHG texts, arranged by century.
  • Wimmer, Albert. "Anthology of Medieval German Literature".. An extensive online anthology with translations into Modern German.

middle, high, german, literature, refers, literature, written, german, between, middle, 11th, century, middle, 14th, second, half, 12th, century, there, sudden, intensification, activity, leading, year, golden, medieval, german, literature, referred, mittelhoc. Middle High German literature refers to literature written in German between the middle of the 11th century and the middle of the 14th In the second half of the 12th century there was a sudden intensification of activity leading to a 60 year golden age of medieval German literature referred to as the mittelhochdeutsche Blutezeit c 1170 c 1230 This was the period of the blossoming of Minnesang MHG lyric poetry initially influenced by the French and Provencal tradition of courtly love song The same sixty years saw the composition of the most important courtly romances again drawing on French models such as Chretien de Troyes many of them relating Arthurian material The third literary movement of these years was a new revamping of the heroic tradition in which the ancient Germanic oral tradition can still be discerned but tamed and Christianized and adapted for the court Contents 1 Historical overview 2 Poets 3 Manuscripts and patrons 4 Audience and readership 5 Genres 5 1 Verse narrative 5 1 1 Religious narrative 5 1 2 Historical narrative 5 1 3 Minstrel epics 5 1 4 Romance 5 1 5 Heroic Epic 5 1 6 Shorter narratives 5 2 Lyric Poetry 5 2 1 Minnesang 5 2 2 Spruchdichtung 5 3 Prose 5 3 1 Prose romance 5 3 2 Mystical literature 6 Key authors and works 6 1 Early MHG 1050 1170 6 2 Classical MHG 1170 1230 6 3 Late MHG 1230 1350 7 Important collective manuscripts 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksHistorical overview editThe vernacular literature of the Old High German period written in abbeys and monasteries had been encouraged by the Carolingian dynasty in order to support the work of the church in recently Christianized lands This eventually lost its urgency under the subsequent Ottonian and Salian emperors and official promotion of the written vernacular lapsed The result was a period of around 150 years c 900 c 1050 when there was almost no new writing in German 1 2 By the middle of the 11th century there was an increasing preference for German over Latin in writing in the courts and Henry the Lion was just the first of the princes in 1144 to establish his own court chancery 3 4 At the same time there was a growing audience among the nobility for literature in the vernacular as was already happening in France and England 5 6 nbsp Walther von der Vogelweide from the Codex Manesse Folio 124r The pose refers to a song in which he asks how to reconcile worldly success and God s blessing The earliest works of this period such as the Ezzolied and Annolied were still the product of clerical authors with a biblical subject but now directed towards a lay audience at the noble courts rather than the clerical audience of the Old High German compositions 6 By the middle of the 12th century though more secular works such as the Kaiserchronik The Imperial Chronicle and the Alexanderlied introduced more worldly subject matter though still within the religious world view 7 In the same period the love lyrics of the Danubian poets mark the start of the Minnesang tradition 8 Under Frederick Barbarossa ruled 1155 1190 political stability and increasing wealth encouraged the nobility to assert its identity in activities that enhanced its visibility and prestige among which were the patronage of vernacular literature sponsoring new compositions and the performance and copying of existing works 4 This new largely secular literature introduced new ways of thinking feeling imagining seen in the courtly concerns with romantic love the challenges and obligations of knighthood and a striving for personal honour 9 10 Religious concerns were not lost but the issue was now how to reconcile worldly and divine obligations 11 From around 1170 Old French romances and the songs of the Provencal troubadours and French trouveres inspired MHG adaptations which even from the start showed great independence from their sources 12 The following decades were a golden age German Blutezeit a sixty year period which saw the creation of works recognized by both contemporaries and later generations as classics the courtly romances of Hartmann von Aue Gottfried von Strassburg and Wolfram von Eschenbach and the songs of the Minnesanger most notable among them Walther von der Vogelweide 13 14 Also among these classics is the heroic epic the Nibelungenlied which drew for form and subject matter on Germanic oral tradition rather than Romance models 15 Other types of narrative with connections to oral tradition in the broader MHG period are the earlier Spielmannsepen minstrel epics and the later epics surrounding the legendary figure of Dietrich von Bern 16 In the later MHG period from about 1230 sometimes termed post Classical 17 poets built on the achievements of the Blutezeit and expanded the scope of German literature in form and subject matter New genres included a new style of short tale German Mare 18 Neidhart broadened the scope of the love lyric with peasant characters and a satirical tone 19 while political uncertainty prompted a rise in didactic and political songs from the Spruchdichter in the footsteps of Walther 20 With the writings of the mystics which for the first time included a number of female writers this period also saw the first developments in literary prose 21 By the mid 14th century however with courtly culture in decline the genres which had dominated MHG literature ceased to attract writers and a new literature centred on the towns and their urban patriciate started to develop 22 Even in the following period however the old stories were copied and adapted for new audiences with the result that many MHG works survive in the 15th century and even later copies while the Meistersinger continued to develop the work of the Sangspruchdichter and were still using melodies of Walther s for new songs 23 24 Poets editThere is little biographical evidence about the MHG poets 25 The epic poets generally name themselves in their works and the Minnesanger are identified in the manuscript collections but works based on oral tradition are typically anonymous 26 nbsp To the singer Walther von der Vogelweide 5 solidi for a fur coat from an itinerary account of the bishop of Passau For the higher status Minnesanger there is often documentary evidence such as the account of the death of Friedrich von Hausen on the Third crusade mourned by the whole army 27 However even a poet as famous as Walther von der Vogelweide is mentioned in only a single official document 28 and we know little about the narrative poets apart from what they say about themselves in their works and remarks by later writers 29 Given the time it would take to write such works the epic poets would necessarily have been dependent on long term patronage and the many incomplete works may indicate a loss of patronage 30 Most Minnesanger were of high noble rank including the Holy Roman Emperor Henry VI requiring no patronage For them song would have been an occasional pastime to enhance their prestige and their œuvre is correspondingly small 31 The large number of songs and the increasing artistry from Minnesanger such as Reinmar Walther and Neidhart on the other hand suggest professional court musicians from the ranks of the unfree nobles ministeriales Much lower on the social scale were the Spruchdichter with their didactic and political songs wandering minstrels who had limited legal rights 32 33 Manuscripts and patrons edit nbsp The Minnesanger Reinmar von Zweter dictates to a scribe Codex Manesse fol 323r nbsp The first page of Hartmann von Aue s Iwein in the 14th century Florence manuscript D fol 142r MHG literature is preserved in parchment and towards the end of the period paper manuscripts 34 However there are no MHG literary manuscripts which show the hand of the original author 35 in fact it is clear that many authors even if they could read were unable to write 36 Although readers might learn to form the letters of the alphabet with a stylus on a wax tablet only those trained to handle parchment quills and ink would regularly produce written documents composition by dictation to a trained scribe was the form in which much writing was done much as business letters were once dictated to typists 37 Each manuscript was written by a scribe or several in the scriptorium of a monastery or the chancery of a noble court and might be several generations from any original 38 39 Most manuscripts are in fact of significantly later date than the work they record 40 An extreme case is the Ambraser Heldenbuch compiled 1504 1516 which includes texts of Hartmann von Aue s Erec and the Nibelungenlied composed in c 1185 and c 1200 respectively 41 However many manuscripts perhaps 75 survive only in fragments and an unknown number of works have been completely lost 42 Even literary fame is no guarantee of survival Erec was highly influential and widely quoted but it survives only in the Ambraser Heldenbuch and a few earlier fragments 43 Bligger von Steinach s narrative verse is praised by Gottfried von Strassburg and Rudolf von Ems but none of it survives 44 Manuscripts were expensive both in terms of material and labour of copying even without the sponsorship of creative work or the costs of decoration and illumination found in the most elaborate manuscripts For new work Patrons obtained sources from which the poets worked they granted the poets time and freedom from other responsibilities to enable them to compose and they made available the resources to have the poets work preserved in writing 45 This meant that only the church the aristocracy or by the second half of the 13th century the wealthiest urban patriciate had the means to sponsor literary work 46 Patrons are not mentioned in love lyrics but several are named in narrative works and Spruchdichtung Hermann I Landgrave of Thuringia for example sponsored Wolfram von Eschenbach s Willehalm Herbort von Fritzlar s Liet von Troje and the completion of Heinrich von Veldeke s Eneas 47 In several of his works Konrad von Wurzburg refers to patrons and these include members of the nobility high ranking cathedral clergy and wealthy citizens who played important roles in the political and administrative life of the cities 48 Audience and readership editIn the main MHG literature was written for oral delivery and public performance 49 First literacy at the noble courts was limited while the noble ladies will have had some education as will younger sons intended for the church most knights were unable to read 50 51 Second the provision of public performance served to enhance the prestige of the patron 52 Nonetheless there is extensive evidence for private reading of narrative works for example in manuscripts the presence of textual patterning such as acrostics which would not be apparent to listeners 53 The conclusion is that MHG narrative verse was intended both for readers and listeners and Dennis Green identifies this as a trend which began around the start of the 13th century with women readers as a particular constituency 54 It is also reflected in the increasing number of manuscripts from the mid 13th century 53 However narrative works with strophic form were or at least could also be sung 55 Sharing its strophic form with the songs of Der von Kurenberg the Nibelungenlied could have been sung 55 and in all melodies are known for eight of the thirteen different strophic forms found in heroic verse 53 And while there is no evidence that the rhyming couplets of the courtly romance were sung they were probably delivered in a recitative style 56 As song genres Minnesang and Spruchdichtung were necessarily designed for performance before an audience and this is particularly clear from the references to dance 56 But even the lyric genres may have had readers Certainly the poets themselves even if illiterate like Ulrich von Liechtenstein kept written copies of their own works which may have been copied for readers 57 In any case the song collections of the 14th century particularly the massive and expensively illustrated Manesse Codex are unlikely to have been intended solely if at all for performers 58 59 Genres editVerse narrative edit Religious narrative edit The Ezzolied before 1064 60 the first literary work of the MHG period is a strophic work of salvation history from the Creation to the Crucifixion 61 The other poems from the first century of this period are likewise designed to present biblical material to a lay audience and range from biblical ballads short poems on individual biblical episodes to longer retellings of complete Old Testament books 62 Many of these are collected in manuscript compilations of which the most notable is the Vorau manuscript with a dozen Biblical pieces This includes poems by Ava the earliest known female poet writing in German 63 64 Historical narrative edit The earliest historical poems are closely related to the biblical verse as they view events from a Christian perspective The Annolied Song of Anno c 1077 combines salvation history world history from the Babylonians onwards and the life of Archbishop Anno II of Cologne 65 The Kaiserchronik completed after 1146 and also in the Vorau manuscript 66 is the first historiographic work in any European vernacular 67 68 In a purely chronological narrative it tells the story of selected Roman emperors and their Frankish successors but judges each emperor according to Christian standards and includes material from the Annolied 69 A more secular approach to historical figures is presented in the Alexanderlied of Pfaffe Lamprecht c 1150 and the Rolandslied of Pfaffe Konrad c 1170 both of which concentrate on the legendary feats of these two heroes These are two of the earliest German narratives to derive from French rather than Latin sources 70 The 13th century was the golden age of German verse chronicles starting with the Gandersheimer Reimchronik 1216 70 Rudolf von Ems s Weltchronik unfinished at his death in 1254 was immensely popular surviving in over 80 manuscripts 71 The Christherre Chronik likewise unfinished and the Weltchronik of Jans der Enikel also enjoyed a broad readership 72 These three works were all vast narrative texts with expansive illustration programmes in the 14th century they were combined and further expanded by the scribes of the Heinrich von Munchen workshop Later chronicles are generally in prose 73 Minstrel epics edit Main article Spielmannsdichtung The so called Minstrel epics Spielmannsepik Spielmannsdichtung a traditional term now agreed to be inaccurate and misleading 74 75 are a disparate group of five shorter pre courtly narratives Herzog Ernst Konig Rother Orendel Oswald and Salman und Morolf They were probably written in the second half of the 12th century though the manuscripts are of later date 66 9 They have in common that they are thought to have been based on oral tradition All involve a knight meeting challenges on a journey to the fabulous East to achieve some goal 76 Herzog Ernst is exiled by the emperor for murdering an evil counsellor 77 for the other heroes the challenge is to win a bride in foreign lands 9 78 Romance edit Main article German courtly romance From the mid 12th century the courtly romance written in rhyming couplets was the dominant narrative genre in MHG literature Between c 1185 and c 1210 Hartmann von Aue Wolfram von Eschenbach and Gottfried von Strassburg produced romances that were influential at the time and are recognized as classics All were based on Old French sources though heavily adapted and re interpreted 79 The earliest German romance is Heinrich von Veldeke s Eneas based on the anonymous Roman d Eneas itself an adaptation of Virgil s Aeneid but the main subject matter was the Matter of Britain tales centered around the court of King Arthur These drew mainly on the romances of Chretien de Troyes Hartmann s Erec the first Arthurian romance in German and Iwein Wolfram s Parzival and Gottfried s Tristan 80 The central concern of these Arthurian romances is a knight s pursuit of aventiure literally adventure encounters which allow him to prove his valour and moral worth and minne love 81 82 In contrast to the heroic epic and Minnesang however the knight s lady has a more active role in inspiring the knight to prove himself and his love is always rewarded 15 Only the adulterous relationship at the centre of Tristan challenges this pattern After the classical period further developments saw an expansion in the range of themes to encompass other legendary material and stories of lovers separation by poets such as Konrad von Wurzburg and Rudolf von Ems 83 Some of these works were very widely read there are more than eighty manuscripts of Parzival for example 84 but by the mid 14th century though the most popular works continued to be copied no new romances were being written 85 Heroic Epic edit Main article Germanic heroic legend Heroic poetry begins to be composed in writing in Germany with the Nibelungenlied c 1200 which updated the heroic legends about with elements of the popular literary genre of its time German courtly romance 86 The epics written after the Nibelungenlied maintain this hybrid nature For this reason Middle High German heroic poetry is also called late heroic poetry spate Heldendichtung 87 The genre developed out of an oral tradition and only became a full genre with many texts in the course of the 13th century only the Nibelungenlied dates to the main flourishing of courtly literature 88 A direct reaction to the heroic nihilism of the Nibelungenlied is found in the Kudrun 1230 in which material also found in Old English and Old Norse about the heroine Hildr serves as the prologue to the likely invented story of her daughter Kudrun 89 90 The anonymous authorship of the Middle High Germans heroic poems forms an important distinction from other poetic genres such as romance but is shared with some other genres such as Spielmannsdichtung 91 From the 13th to 16th centuries many heroic traditions enter writing in Germany and enjoy great popularity 92 From 1230 onward several heroic epics of which 14 are known to us were written concerning the hero Dietrich von Bern forming a literary cycle comparable to that around King Arthur the Matter of Britain or Charlemagne the Matter of France 93 These texts are typically divided into historical and fantastical epics depending on whether they concern Dietrich s battles with Ermenrich Ermanaric and exile at the court of Etzel Attila or his battles with mostly supernatural opponents such as dwarfs dragons and giants 94 Closely connected to the Dietrich epics the combined epics Ortnit and Wolfdietrich both c 1230 have unclear connections to the Migration Period and may be inventions of the thirteenth century although Merovingian origins are also suggested for Wolfdietrich 95 96 Almost all of the texts originate in the Bavarian speaking areas of Bavaria and Austria with several texts about Dietrich von Bern having origins in Tirol a few others seem to have originated in the Alemannic dialect area in modern south west Germany and Switzerland 97 Most texts are anonymous and many are written in rhyming stanzas that were meant to be sung 91 Shorter narratives edit In the post classical period a major development is of new short narrative forms in rhyming couplets with few clear boundaries between genres and little connection with previous writing except in the religious sphere 98 99 Lyric Poetry edit nbsp Lyrics by Hartmann von Aue in the Weingarten Manuscript c 1310 fol 20v Minnesang edit Main article Minnesang Minnesang is the MHG love song genre The lyrics are preserved mainly in 14th century manuscript song collections such as the illuminated Codex Manesse c 1300 which has songs by 138 named Minnesanger 100 Few melodies survive however particularly from the first 70 years of Minnesang 101 102 The central theme is the love of a knight for a noble and idealised lady expressed mostly from the knight s point of view The knight s love is unreciprocated and his service is its own reward hohe minne literally high love 17 103 However there are many Minnesang sub genres some of which depict a reciprocated or even consummated relationship often with a female perspective 104 The earliest songs from c 1160 drew on native German tradition 105 but from around 1180 Minnesang came under the influence of the Provencal troubadours and the French trouveres with effects on both form and subject matter 106 By 1200 the Minnesanger had absorbed the Romance influences and started to rework forms and themes independently 107 leading to a period of classical Minnesang represented by the songs of Albrecht von Johansdorf fl c 1200 Heinrich von Morungen d c 1200 and Reinmar von Hagenau d c 1208 17 108 The largest surviving œuvre is that of Walther von der Vogelweide c 1170 c 1230 a massive corpus of great diversity which introduces an insistence on reciprocity of feeling 109 110 Another innovator again with a substantial œuvre is Neidhart d c 1240 whose songs introduce the peasant girl as the object of the knight s attentions and for which exceptionally a large number of melodies survive 19 The prolific later Minnesang from c 1230 is marked by increasingly elaborate formal developments but no great thematic progression 17 After 1300 Minnesang began to give way to Meistersang and folk song 111 Frauenlob d 1318 can be seen as the last Minnesanger or the first Meistersinger 112 Spruchdichtung edit nbsp Jenaer Liederhandschrift fol 111v Meister Boppe s song O hoer vnde starker almechtiger got Main article Spruchdichtung Spruchdichtung is the MHG genre of didactic song written by non noble itinerant musicians Many worked under professional rather than personal names Heinrich von Meissen is known as Frauenlob praise of women Rumelant von Sachsen s name means quit the country Der Kanzler is the chancellor 113 While there is a small amount of such verse from the 12th century it was Walther who raised the status of Spruchdichtung and expanded its range of subject matter to include religion ethical conduct praise or lament for individuals the conditions of the professional poets life the state of society or political matters 114 Many of the melodies have been preserved notably in the Jena Manuscript which has notation for over 90 didactic songs 115 Meistersang is the later development of the genre 23 Prose edit Prose romance edit While prose romances started to appear in France during the 13th century German romance remained in verse An exception is the Prosa Lancelot c 1250 a cycle of three romances translated fairly faithfully rather than adapted as the verse romances were from the Old French Lancelot en prose 116 117 81 Mystical literature edit Middle High German mysticism often called Rhineland mysticism is a key prose genre Three fourteenth century Dominican authors are particularly important Meister Eckhart Henry Suso also known as Heinrich Seuse and Johannes Tauler Female religious writers also made significant contributions particularly Mechthild von Magdeburg The Flowing Light of the Godhead and Margareta Ebner 118 Key authors and works editEarly MHG 1050 1170 edit Religious narrative Annolied Ava Ezzolied Die altdeutsche Genesis Die altdeutsche Exodus Historical narrative Pfaffe Lamprecht Alexander Kaiserchronik Popular narrative Konig Rother Herzog Ernst Graf Rudolf Reinhart Fuchs Orendel Danubian lyric Der von Kurenberg Meinloh von Sevelingen Dietmar von Aist Classical MHG 1170 1230 edit Heroic epic Nibelungenlied Pfaffe Konrad Rolandslied Courtly romance Heinrich von Veldeke Eneit Hartmann von Aue Erec Iwein Gottfried von Strassburg Tristan Wolfram von Eschenbach Parzival Willehalm Minnesang Friedrich von Hausen Henry VI Holy Roman Emperor Heinrich von Veldeke Albrecht von Johansdorf Hartmann von Aue Heinrich von Morungen Reinmar von Hagenau Walther von der Vogelweide Wolfram von Eschenbach Late MHG 1230 1350 edit Narrative verse in various genres Kudrun Ulrich von Lichtenstein Frauendienst Konrad von Wurzburg Der Welt Lohn Engelhard Herzmare Trojanerkrieg Rudolf von Ems Der guote Gerhart Weltchronik Der Stricker Wernher der Gartenaere Meier Helmbrecht The Dietrich von Bern cycle Ortnit Wolfdietrich Minnesang amp Spruchdichtung Heinrich von Meissen Frauenlob Hugo von Montfort Konrad von Wurzburg Neidhart Der Tannhauser Ulrich von Liechtenstein Johannes Hadlaub Religious writing Meister Eckhart Mechthild von MagdeburgImportant collective manuscripts editCollective manuscripts German Sammelhandschriften which combine works from a variety of different authors and genres are a major source of MHG texts 119 The following are some of the most significant such manuscripts Vorau Manuscript late 12th century biblical and historical narratives religious lyrics 120 121 Kleine Heidelberger Liederhandschrift c 1275 Minnesang 119 122 Riedegg Manuscript c 1300 Arthurian romance short narrative Minnesang Dietrich epics 123 Codex Manesse Grosse Heidelberger Liederhandschrift c 1300 Minnesang 124 122 Weingarten Manuscript first quarter of the 14th Century Minnesang 119 122 Jenaer Liederhandschrift c 1330 mainly Spruchdichtung with melodies 119 122 Michael de Leone Hausbuch c 1350 short narratives Minnesang 123 125 Ambraser Heldenbuch 1504 1516 Arthurian romances heroic epics Dietrich epics short narratives 126 See also editOld High German literature Baroque German literature History of the German languageReferences edit de Boor 1971 p 133 Vollmann Profe 1986 p 15 Bumke 2000 p 40 a b Jones amp Jones 2019 p 282 Johnson 1999 pp 8 9 a b Jones amp Jones 2019 p 11 Palmer 1997 pp 43 45 Palmer 1997 p 65 a b c Hasty 2006 p 4 Jones amp Jones 2019 pp 306 307 Hasty 2006 pp 3 6 Jones amp Jones 2019 pp 307 426 Johnson 1999 p 345 Jones amp Jones 2019 p 16 a b Jones amp Jones 2019 p 306 Palmer 1997 p 81 a b c d Jones amp Jones 2019 p 428 Palmer 1997 p 77 a b Palmer 1997 p 71 Harris 2006 p 130 Poor 2006 p 185 Jones amp Jones 2019 p 12 a b Palmer 1997 p 84 Brunner 2013 p LI sfn error no target CITEREFBrunner2013 help Hasty 2006 p 12 Bumke 2005 p 678 de Boor 1974 p 256 Bumke 2000 p 124 Bumke 2005 p 638 Bumke 2005 p 680 Bumke 2000 p 44 Hasty 2006 p 13 Bumke 2000 p 46 Schneider 2014 p 110 Bumke 2005 p 720 Wendehorst 2014 pp 25 26 sfn error no target CITEREFWendehorst2014 help Jones amp Jones 2019 p 267 Brunner 2013a p 19 Jones amp Jones 2019 p 297 Jones amp Jones 2019 p 8 Janota 1989 Schneider 2014 p 186 Bumke 2008 pp 9 10 sfn error no target CITEREFBumke2008 help Kolb 1989 Jones amp Jones p 303 sfn error no target CITEREFJonesJones help Jones amp Jones 2019 p 304 Palmer 1997 pp 45 47 Jones amp Jones 2019 p 325 Klein 2015 p 15 Johnson 1999 p 7 Green 1994 p 213 Gibbs amp Johnson 2002 p 102 a b c Klein 2015 p 20 Green 1994 pp 213 290 a b Jones amp Jones p 246 sfn error no target CITEREFJonesJones help a b Klein 1999 p 20 sfn error no target CITEREFKlein1999 help Bumke 2005 pp 769 775 Hasty 2006 p 236 Jammers 1963 p 1 Murdoch 1007 p 38 sfn error no target CITEREFMurdoch1007 help Vollmann Profe p 33 sfn error no target CITEREFVollmann Profe help Vollmann Profe 1986 pp 83 86 Gentry 2002 pp 88 90 Gibbs amp Johnson 2002 p 75 Gibbs amp Johnson 2000 p 92 sfn error no target CITEREFGibbsJohnson2000 help a b Palmer 1997 p 43 Vollmann Profe 1986 p 109 Palmer 1997 p 45 Gibbs amp Johnson 2000 p 92 93 sfn error no target CITEREFGibbsJohnson2000 help a b Gibbs amp Johnson 2000 p 93 94 sfn error no target CITEREFGibbsJohnson2000 help Gibbs amp Johnson 2000 p 340 341 sfn error no target CITEREFGibbsJohnson2000 help Dobozy 2002 p 384 Gibbs amp Johnson 2000 p 419 420 sfn error no target CITEREFGibbsJohnson2000 help Vollmann Profe 1986 pp 213 214 Bumke 2000 p 74 Vollmann Profe 1986 pp 215 Bumke 2000 p 76 Vollman Profe 1986 p 217 sfn error no target CITEREFVollman Profe1986 help Gibbs amp Johnson 2002 p 135 Jones amp Jones 2019 p 308 a b Jones amp Jones 2019 p 309 Palmer 1997 p 54 Jones amp Jones 2019 p 309 310 Jones amp Jones 2019 p 376 Cramer 2000 pp 27 69 Millet 2008 pp 178 179 Lienert 2015 p 13 14 Bumke 2000 pp 195 196 260 261 Lienert 2015 pp 81 Millet 2008 pp 242 251 a b Lienert 2015 pp 16 17 Millet 2008 p 328 Millet 2008 pp 328 329 Heinzle 1999 pp 32 33 Millet 2008 pp 382 383 393 394 Lienert 2015 pp 150 154 Bumke 2000 p 262 Heinzle 1984 p 174 Jones amp Jones 2019 p 312 Palmer 1997 p 64 Hasty 2006 p 152 Palmer 1997 p 67 Palmer 1997 p 69 Schweikle 1995 pp 121ff Classen 2002 p 127 Hasty 2006 p 142 Bumke 1991 pp 97 98 Gibbs amp Johnson 2002 pp 247ff Gibbs amp Johnson 2000 p 267 sfn error no target CITEREFGibbsJohnson2000 help Palmer 1997 pp 70 71 Schweikle 1995 p 212 Schweikle 1995 p 100 Heinzle 1984 p 126 Jones amp Jones 2019 pp 310 473 Harris 2006 p 124 Andersen 2002 p 471 Palmer 1997 p 58 Poor 2006 a b c d Klein 2015 p 122 Klein 2015 p 118 Gibbs amp Johnson 2006 pp 75 78 sfn error no target CITEREFGibbsJohnson2006 help a b c d Gibbs amp Johnson 2006 pp 225 sfn error no target CITEREFGibbsJohnson2006 help a b Klein 2015 p 121 Klein 2015 p 121 122 Gibbs amp Johnson 2006 pp 343 sfn error no target CITEREFGibbsJohnson2006 help Klein 2015 p 177 Sources editAndersen Elizabeth A 2002 Continuation and Innovation in Narrative Literature of the Thirteenth Century In Gentry Francis ed A Companion to Middle High German Literature to the 14th Century Leiden Boston Koln Brill pp 431 474 ISBN 978 9004120945 Brunner Horst 2013a Geschichte der deutschen Literatur des Mittelalters und der Fruhen Neuzeit Stuttgart Reclam ISBN 978 3150176801 Brunner Horst 2013b Die Melodien Walthers In Lachmann Karl Cormeau Christoph Bein Thomas eds Walther von der Vogelweide Leich Lieder Sangspruche 15th ed De Gruyter pp XLVI LIV ISBN 978 3 11 017657 5 Bumke Joachim 2005 Hofische Kultur Literatur und Gesellschaft im hohen Mittelater 11 ed Munchen dtv ISBN 978 3423301701 Published in English as Bumke Joachim 1991 Courtly Culture Literature and Society in the High Middle Ages Translated by Dunlap Thomas Berkeley University of California ISBN 0520066340 Bumke Joachim 2000 Geschichte der deutschen Literatur im hohen Mittelalter 4th ed Munchen dtv ISBN 978 3423307789 Bumke Joachim 2006 Der Erec Hartmanns von Aue Eine Einfuhrung Berlin New York De Gruyter ISBN 978 3110189797 Classen Albrecht 2002 Courtly Love Lyric In Gentry Francis ed A Companion to Middle High German Literature to the 14th Century Leiden Boston Koln Brill pp 117 150 ISBN 978 9004120945 Cramer Thomas 2000 Geschichte der deutschen Literatur im spaten Mittelalter 3rd ed Munchen dtv ISBN 978 3423307796 de Boor Helmut 1971 Von Karl dem Grossen bis zum Beginn der hofischen Literatur 770 1170 Geschichte der deutschen Literatur Vol Band I Munchen C H Beck ISBN 3 406 00709 0 de Boor Helmut 1974 Die hofische Literatur Vorbereitung Blute Ausklang 1170 1250 Geschichte der deutschen Literatur Vol Band II Munchen C H Beck ISBN 3 406 00703 1 Gentry Francis ed 2002 A Companion to Middle High German Literature to the 14th Century Leiden Boston Koln Brill ISBN 978 9004120945 Dobozy Maria 2002 Vernacular Chronicles In Gentry Francis ed A Companion to Middle High German Literature to the 14th Century Leiden Boston Koln Brill pp 379 395 ISBN 978 9004120945 Gibbs Marion Johnson Sidney eds 2002 Medieval German Literature A Companion New York London Routledge ISBN 0 203 90660 8 Green D H 1994 Medieval listening and reading the primary reception of German literature 800 1300 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521444934 Harris Nigel 2006 Didactic Poetry In Hasty Will ed German Literature of the High Middle Ages The Camden House History of German Literature Vol 3 New York Woodbridge Camden House pp 123 140 ISBN 978 1571131737 Hasty Will ed 2006 German Literature of the High Middle Ages The Camden House History of German Literature Vol 3 New York Woodbridge Camden House ISBN 978 1571131737 Heinzle Joachim 1984 Wandlungen u Neuansatze im 13 Jahrhundert 1220 30 1280 90 Geschichte der deutschen Literatur von den Anfangen bis zum Beginn der Neuzeit Vol II Teil 2 Konigstein Taunus Athenaum ISBN 3761083084 Heinzle Joachim 1999 Einfuhrung in die mittelhochdeutsche Dietrichepik Berlin New York De Gruyter ISBN 3 11 015094 8 Jammers Ewald 1963 Ausgewahlte Melodien des Minnesangs Tubingen Niemeyer Janota J 1989 Ambraser Heldenbuch In Ruh K Keil G Schroder W eds Die deutsche Literatur des Mittelalters Verfasserlexikon Vol 1 Berlin New York Walter De Gruyter pp 323 327 ISBN 3 11 008778 2 Johnson L Peter 1999 Die hofische Literatur der Blutezeit 1160 70 1220 30 Geschichte der deutschen Literatur von den Anfangen bis zum Beginn der Neuzeit Vol II Teil 1 Tubingen Niemeyer ISBN 978 3 484 10703 8 Jones Howard Jones Martin 2019 The Oxford Guide to Middle High German Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199654611 Kartschoke Dieter 2000 Geschichte der deutschen Literatur im fruhen Mittelalter 3rd ed Munchen dtv ISBN 978 3423307772 Kolb H 1989 Bligger von Steinach In Ruh K Keil G Schroder W eds Die deutsche Literatur des Mittelalters Verfasserlexikon Vol 1 Berlin New York Walter De Gruyter p 896 ISBN 3 11 008778 2 Klein Dorothea 2015 Mittelalter Lehrbuch Germanistik 2nd ed Springer doi 10 1007 978 3 476 05413 5 ISBN 978 3 476 02596 8 Lienert Elisabeth 2015 Mittelhochdeutsche Heldenepik Berlin Erich Schmidt ISBN 978 3 503 15573 6 Millet Victor 2008 Germanische Heldendichtung im Mittelalter Berlin New York de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 020102 4 Murdoch Brian 1997 The Carolingian period and the early Middle Ages 750 1100 In Watanabe O Kelly H ed The Cambridge History of German Literature Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 1 39 doi 10 1017 CHOL9780521434171 002 ISBN 978 0521785730 Murdoch Brian O ed 2004 German Literature of the Early Middle Ages The Camden House History of German Literature Vol 2 New York Woodbridge Camden House ISBN 1 57113 240 6 Palmer Nigel F 1997 The high and later Middle Ages 1100 1450 In Watanabe O Kelly H ed The Cambridge History of German Literature Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 40 91 doi 10 1017 CHOL9780521434171 003 ISBN 978 0521785730 Poor Sara 2006 Early Mystical Writings In Hasty Will ed German Literature of the High Middle Ages The Camden House History of German Literature Vol 3 New York Woodbridge Camden House pp 185 200 ISBN 978 1571131737 Reinhart Max ed 2007 Early Modern German Literature 1350 1700 The Camden House History of German Literature Vol 4 New York Woodbridge Camden House ISBN 978 1571132475 Resler Michel 2006 Der Stricker In Hasty Will ed German Literature of the High Middle Ages The Camden House History of German Literature Vol 3 New York Woodbridge Camden House pp 215 223 ISBN 978 1571131737 Samples Susann 2006 The German Heroic Narratives In Hasty Will ed German Literature of the High Middle Ages The Camden House History of German Literature Vol 3 New York Woodbridge Camden House pp 161 183 ISBN 978 1571131737 Schneider Karin 2014 Palaographie und Handschriftenkunde fur Germanisten Eine Einfuhrung 3rd ed Berlin Boston ISBN 978 3 11 033704 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Schweikle Gunther 1995 Minnesang Sammlung Metzler Vol 244 2nd ed Stuttgart Weimar Metzler ISBN 978 3 476 12244 5 Vollmann Profe Gisela 1986 Wiederbeginn volksprachlicher Schriftlichkeit im hohen Mittelalter 1050 60 1160 70 Geschichte der deutschen Literatur von den Anfangen bis zum Beginn der Neuzeit Vol I Teil 2 Konigstein Taunus Athenaum ISBN 3 7610 8301 7 Wendehorst Alfred 1986 Wer konnte im Mittelalter lesen und schreiben Vortrage und Forschungen 30 1 33 doi 10 11588 vuf 1986 0 15806 Retrieved 12 January 2021 West Jonathan 2004 Late Old High German Prose In Murdoch Brian O ed German Literature of the Early Middle Ages The Camden House History of German Literature Vol 2 New York Woodbridge Camden House pp 227 246 ISBN 1 57113 240 6 External links editBibliotheca Augustana Extensive collection of MHG texts arranged by century Wimmer Albert Anthology of Medieval German Literature An extensive online anthology with translations into Modern German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Middle High German literature amp oldid 1158978044, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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