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Robert the Devil

Robert the Devil (Latin: Robertus Diabolus) is a legend of medieval origin about a Norman knight who discovers he is the son of Satan. His mother, despairing of heaven's aid in order to obtain a son, had asked for help from the devil. Robert's satanic instincts propel him into a violent and sinful life, but he eventually overcomes them to achieve repentance.

Robert commits one of his crimes (left) and is knighted (right); 15th-century illustration from the Chronique de Normandie

The story originated in France in the 13th century and has since provided the basis for many literary and dramatic works, most notably the Meyerbeer opera Robert le diable.

Literature and legend

Story

The 19th-century Italian writer Arturo Graf gives this version of the legend in his 1889 book Il Diavolo:

There was once a duchess of Normandy who was tormented with a desire to have children and yet could have none. Weary of recommending herself to God, who will not listen to her, she betakes herself to the Devil, and her wish is speedily satisfied. A son is born to her, a veritable firebrand. As an infant, he bites his nurse and tears out her hair; as a lad, he knifes his teachers; at the age of twenty, he becomes a bandit chief. He is dubbed knight, in the belief that thus the wicked instincts raging within him may be overcome; but thereafter he is worse than he was before. No one surpasses him in strength or in courage. In a tourney he overthrows and slays thirty opponents; then he goes roaming about the world; then he returns to his native land, and begins once more to play the bandit, robbing, burning, murdering, ravishing. One day, after cutting the throats of all the nuns of a certain abbey, he remembers his mother and goes in search of her. Soon as they spy him, the servants take to their heels, scattering in all directions; not one tarries to ask him whence he comes or what he desires. Then, for the first time in his life, Robert is astounded at the horror which he inspires in his fellow-beings; for the first time, he becomes conscious of his own monstrous wickedness, and he feels how his heart is pierced by the sharp tooth of remorse. But why is he wickeder than other men? Why was he born thus? Who made him what he is? An ardent longing seizes him to unravel this mystery. He hastens to his mother, and with drawn sword he adjures her to unveil to him the secret of his birth. Learning this, he becomes frantic with terror, shame, and grief. But his sturdy nature is not weakened; he does not yield to despair; instead, the hope of a laborious redemption, of a marvelous victory, urges and spurs on his proud spirit. He will learn to conquer Hell, to subdue himself, to thwart the designs of that accursed fiend who created him to serve his own ends, who has made of him a docile instrument of destruction and of sin. And he makes no delay. He goes to Rome, casts himself at the feet of the pope, makes confession to a holy hermit, submits himself to the harshest kind of penance, and swears that henceforth he will taste no food that he has not first wrested from the jaws of a dog. On two separate occasions, when Rome was besieged by the Saracens, he fights incognito for the Emperor and gains the victory for the Christians. Recognized at last, he refuses all rewards and honors, the imperial crown, even the monarch's own daughter, goes away to dwell with his hermit in the wilderness, and dies a saint, blessed by both God and men. In other accounts, he finally weds the beautiful princess who is deeply in love with him.[1]

Literary history

 
Louis Guéymard in the Meyerbeer opera

The oldest-known account of this legend is a Latin prose narrative by a Dominican friar, Etienne de Bourbon (c. 1250), in which no information on Robert's family is given. Then it appears in a French metrical romance of the 13th century, in which Robert is described as the son of the duchess of Normandy.[2] An English translation by Samuel N. Rosenberg of the 13th-century French romance was published in 2018 by Penn State University Press. It appears also in a "dit" of somewhat later date, and in a miracle play of the 14th century. A French prose version was also prefixed to the old Croniques de Normandie (probably of the 13th century). But the legend owes its popularity to the story-books, of which the earliest known appeared at Lyons in 1496, and again at Paris in 1497, under the title La Vie du terrible Robert le dyable.[3] Since the 16th century the legend was often printed together with that of Richard sans Peur (Richard I, Duke of Normandy); it was published in completely recast form in 1769 under the title Histoire de Robert le Diable, duc de Normandie, et de Richard Sans Peur, son fils.

From France the legend spread to Spain, where it was very popular. In England, the subject was treated in the metrical romance, Sir Gowther, probably written around the end of the 14th century (though in this version the devil disguises himself as the mother's husband).[4] An English translation from the French chapbook was made by Wynkyn de Worde, Caxton's assistant, and published without date under the title Robert deuyll. Another version, not based on the preceding, was written by Thomas Lodge in his book on Robin the Divell, in which Robert is the "second Duke of Normandy" (London, 1591).[5] In the Netherlands, the romance of Robrecht den Duyvel was put on the index of forbidden books by the Bishop of Antwerp in 1621.

In Germany, the legend never attained much of a vogue; not until the 19th century did it pass into the Volksbücher, being introduced by Görres. It was treated in epic form by Victor von Strauß (1854), in dramatic form by Raupach (1835) and in comic travesty (after the 1831 Meyerbeer opera Robert le diable) by W. S. Gilbert in 1868.

The villain in Erich Kästner's 1931 children's story Pünktchen und Anton, a petty criminal and thief, is rather facetiously nicknamed "Robert the Devil".

Historicity

Various attempts have been made to identify Robert with a historical individual, generally a Norman aristocrat of the 11th century. F. J. Furnivall, following earlier writers, argued that Robert I, Duke of Normandy was the source of the story, writing that, "The original of Robert the Devil was Robert, father of William the Conqueror, and sixth Duke of Normandy. Part of the legends about him have been transferred to a different person, Robert, King of Sicily (and Jerusalem), Duke of Apulia etc., who tried to make peace between Edward III and the French king, and whom Froissart and others tell us of."[6]

Other scholars have dismissed this. Charles Homer Haskins says that it is nothing more than "an unwarranted confusion with this hero, or rather villain, of romance and grand opera".[7] Another Norman aristocrat, Robert of Bellême, has also been suggested as the original. According to William Hunt in the Dictionary of National Biography, various stories of his sadistic cruelty were circulated after his death. In Maine "his abiding works are pointed to as the works of Robert the Devil, a surname that has been transferred from him to the father of the Conqueror."[8]

A Norman castle near Rouen, known as Château de Robert le Diable, is associated with the legend. The Elizabethan statesman Robert Cecil was called "Robert the devil" by his enemies, but this was with reference to the existing legend.[9]

Folkloristic analysis

Scholars (e.g., Eilert Løseth [no],[10] Ernst Tegethoff [de],[11] Laura Hibbard Loomis,[12] Jack Zipes,[13] Waldemar Liungman [sv][14]) have noted similarities between the medieval tale of Robert le Diable and two folktales classified in the international Aarne-Thompson-Uther Index as types ATU 314, "Goldener", and ATU 502, "The Wild Man as Helper", in their common second part: the hero leaves home and goes to work in a lowly position in another kingdom (usually, as a gardener); later, he rides into battle to save the kingdom from a foreign enemy, and is injured during a battle; his wound or bandaged injury is used to identify him.[15][16][17]

See also

References

  1. ^ Arturo Graf Edward Noble Stone (trans), The Story of the Devil, Macmillan, New York, 1931, pp.119-21
  2. ^ Laura A. Hibbard, Medieval Romance in England: A Study of the Sources and Analogues of the Non-Cyclic Metrical Romances (New York: Oxford University Press, 1924), p. 50. Samuel N. Rosenberg, "Robert the Devil: The First Modern English Translation of Robert le Diable, an Anonymous French Romance of the Thirteenth Century" (University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2018).
  3. ^ Gaucher, Élisabeth (1998). "La Vie du terrible Robert le dyable". In: Cahiers de recherches médiévales Vol. 5. pp. 153-164.
  4. ^ Corinne Saunders, Rape and Ravishment in the Literature of Medieval England, D.S. Brewer, Rochester, NY. 2001. p.223; E. M. Bradstock, 'Sir Gowther: Secular Hagiography or Hagiographical Romance or Neither?', AUMLA: Journal of the Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association 59 (1983), 26-47.
  5. ^ C. S. Lewis, "English Literature in the Sixteenth Century, Excluding Drama", p. 424 Oxford History of English Literature (Oxford: Oxford UP, 1954)
  6. ^ F. J. Furnivall (ed), Robert Laneham's Letter: Describing a Part of the Entertainment Unto Queen Elizabeth at the Castle of Kenilworth in 1575, Chatto and Windus, London, 1907, p.cxxxix.
  7. ^ Charles Homer Haskins, The Normans in European History, Constable, London, 1916, p.52.
  8. ^ Freesman, William Rufus, i. 181-3, quoted in Dictionary of National Biography, 1885, volume 04, p.182.
  9. ^ P. M. Handover, The Second Cecil:The Rise to Power, 1563-1604 of Sir Robert Cecil, Late First Earl of Salisbury, Eyre & Spottiswoode, London, 1959, p.119.
  10. ^ Løseth, Eilert. Robert le Diable: roman d'aventures. Paris: Firmin Didot, 1903. p. XXII (footnote nr. 4).
  11. ^ Tegethoff, Ernst. Französische Volksmärchen. Erster Band. Aus neueren Sammlungen. Jena: Eugen Diederichs. 1923. p. 306 (note to tale nr. 5).
  12. ^ Loomis, Laura Alandis Hibbard. Mediaeval Romance In England: a Study of the Sources And Analogues of the Noncyclic Metrical Romances. New ed., with supplementary bibliographical index (1926-1959). New York: B. Franklin, 1924. pp. 52-55.
  13. ^ Zipes, Jack. "Irons Hans". In: Jack Zipes (ed.). The Oxford Companion to Fairy Tales. Oxford University Press, 2002. p. 251. ISBN 0-19-860115-8.
  14. ^ Liungman, Waldemar. Die Schwedischen Volksmärchen: Herkunft und Geschichte. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 2022 [1961]. p. 61. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783112618004
  15. ^ Berlioz, Jacques. "Robert der Teufel" [Robert the Devil]. In: Enzyklopädie des Märchens Band 11: Prüfung – Schimäremärchen. Edited by Rudolf Wilhelm Brednich; Hermann Bausinger; Wolfgang Brückner; Helge Gerndt; Lutz Röhrich; Klaus Roth. De Gruyter, 2016 [2004]. pp. 737-738. ISBN 978-3-11-017565-3. https://www-degruyter-com.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/database/EMO/entry/emo.11.128/html. Accessed 2023-01-14.
  16. ^ Resoort, R.J. "Robrecht de Duivel". In: W. P. Gerritsen; A. G. van Melle (eds.). Van Aiol tot de Zwaanridder: personages uit de middeleeuwse verhaalkunst en hun voortleven in literatuur, theater en beeldende kunst. SUN, Nijmegen et cop., 1993. p. 280.
  17. ^ Robrecht de duyvel. Ed. Rob Resoort. Muiderberg: 1980. pp. 9-11.

robert, devil, other, uses, disambiguation, latin, robertus, diabolus, legend, medieval, origin, about, norman, knight, discovers, satan, mother, despairing, heaven, order, obtain, asked, help, from, devil, robert, satanic, instincts, propel, into, violent, si. For other uses see Robert the Devil disambiguation Robert the Devil Latin Robertus Diabolus is a legend of medieval origin about a Norman knight who discovers he is the son of Satan His mother despairing of heaven s aid in order to obtain a son had asked for help from the devil Robert s satanic instincts propel him into a violent and sinful life but he eventually overcomes them to achieve repentance Robert commits one of his crimes left and is knighted right 15th century illustration from the Chronique de Normandie The story originated in France in the 13th century and has since provided the basis for many literary and dramatic works most notably the Meyerbeer opera Robert le diable Contents 1 Literature and legend 1 1 Story 1 2 Literary history 2 Historicity 3 Folkloristic analysis 4 See also 5 ReferencesLiterature and legend EditStory EditThe 19th century Italian writer Arturo Graf gives this version of the legend in his 1889 book Il Diavolo There was once a duchess of Normandy who was tormented with a desire to have children and yet could have none Weary of recommending herself to God who will not listen to her she betakes herself to the Devil and her wish is speedily satisfied A son is born to her a veritable firebrand As an infant he bites his nurse and tears out her hair as a lad he knifes his teachers at the age of twenty he becomes a bandit chief He is dubbed knight in the belief that thus the wicked instincts raging within him may be overcome but thereafter he is worse than he was before No one surpasses him in strength or in courage In a tourney he overthrows and slays thirty opponents then he goes roaming about the world then he returns to his native land and begins once more to play the bandit robbing burning murdering ravishing One day after cutting the throats of all the nuns of a certain abbey he remembers his mother and goes in search of her Soon as they spy him the servants take to their heels scattering in all directions not one tarries to ask him whence he comes or what he desires Then for the first time in his life Robert is astounded at the horror which he inspires in his fellow beings for the first time he becomes conscious of his own monstrous wickedness and he feels how his heart is pierced by the sharp tooth of remorse But why is he wickeder than other men Why was he born thus Who made him what he is An ardent longing seizes him to unravel this mystery He hastens to his mother and with drawn sword he adjures her to unveil to him the secret of his birth Learning this he becomes frantic with terror shame and grief But his sturdy nature is not weakened he does not yield to despair instead the hope of a laborious redemption of a marvelous victory urges and spurs on his proud spirit He will learn to conquer Hell to subdue himself to thwart the designs of that accursed fiend who created him to serve his own ends who has made of him a docile instrument of destruction and of sin And he makes no delay He goes to Rome casts himself at the feet of the pope makes confession to a holy hermit submits himself to the harshest kind of penance and swears that henceforth he will taste no food that he has not first wrested from the jaws of a dog On two separate occasions when Rome was besieged by the Saracens he fights incognito for the Emperor and gains the victory for the Christians Recognized at last he refuses all rewards and honors the imperial crown even the monarch s own daughter goes away to dwell with his hermit in the wilderness and dies a saint blessed by both God and men In other accounts he finally weds the beautiful princess who is deeply in love with him 1 Literary history Edit Louis Gueymard in the Meyerbeer opera The oldest known account of this legend is a Latin prose narrative by a Dominican friar Etienne de Bourbon c 1250 in which no information on Robert s family is given Then it appears in a French metrical romance of the 13th century in which Robert is described as the son of the duchess of Normandy 2 An English translation by Samuel N Rosenberg of the 13th century French romance was published in 2018 by Penn State University Press It appears also in a dit of somewhat later date and in a miracle play of the 14th century A French prose version was also prefixed to the old Croniques de Normandie probably of the 13th century But the legend owes its popularity to the story books of which the earliest known appeared at Lyons in 1496 and again at Paris in 1497 under the title La Vie du terrible Robert le dyable 3 Since the 16th century the legend was often printed together with that of Richard sans Peur Richard I Duke of Normandy it was published in completely recast form in 1769 under the title Histoire de Robert le Diable duc de Normandie et de Richard Sans Peur son fils From France the legend spread to Spain where it was very popular In England the subject was treated in the metrical romance Sir Gowther probably written around the end of the 14th century though in this version the devil disguises himself as the mother s husband 4 An English translation from the French chapbook was made by Wynkyn de Worde Caxton s assistant and published without date under the title Robert deuyll Another version not based on the preceding was written by Thomas Lodge in his book on Robin the Divell in which Robert is the second Duke of Normandy London 1591 5 In the Netherlands the romance of Robrecht den Duyvel was put on the index of forbidden books by the Bishop of Antwerp in 1621 In Germany the legend never attained much of a vogue not until the 19th century did it pass into the Volksbucher being introduced by Gorres It was treated in epic form by Victor von Strauss 1854 in dramatic form by Raupach 1835 and in comic travesty after the 1831 Meyerbeer opera Robert le diable by W S Gilbert in 1868 The villain in Erich Kastner s 1931 children s story Punktchen und Anton a petty criminal and thief is rather facetiously nicknamed Robert the Devil Historicity EditVarious attempts have been made to identify Robert with a historical individual generally a Norman aristocrat of the 11th century F J Furnivall following earlier writers argued that Robert I Duke of Normandy was the source of the story writing that The original of Robert the Devil was Robert father of William the Conqueror and sixth Duke of Normandy Part of the legends about him have been transferred to a different person Robert King of Sicily and Jerusalem Duke of Apulia etc who tried to make peace between Edward III and the French king and whom Froissart and others tell us of 6 Other scholars have dismissed this Charles Homer Haskins says that it is nothing more than an unwarranted confusion with this hero or rather villain of romance and grand opera 7 Another Norman aristocrat Robert of Belleme has also been suggested as the original According to William Hunt in the Dictionary of National Biography various stories of his sadistic cruelty were circulated after his death In Maine his abiding works are pointed to as the works of Robert the Devil a surname that has been transferred from him to the father of the Conqueror 8 A Norman castle near Rouen known as Chateau de Robert le Diable is associated with the legend The Elizabethan statesman Robert Cecil was called Robert the devil by his enemies but this was with reference to the existing legend 9 Folkloristic analysis EditScholars e g Eilert Loseth no 10 Ernst Tegethoff de 11 Laura Hibbard Loomis 12 Jack Zipes 13 Waldemar Liungman sv 14 have noted similarities between the medieval tale of Robert le Diable and two folktales classified in the international Aarne Thompson Uther Index as types ATU 314 Goldener and ATU 502 The Wild Man as Helper in their common second part the hero leaves home and goes to work in a lowly position in another kingdom usually as a gardener later he rides into battle to save the kingdom from a foreign enemy and is injured during a battle his wound or bandaged injury is used to identify him 15 16 17 See also EditDon Juan Mordred The Devil s AdvocateReferences Edit Arturo Graf Edward Noble Stone trans The Story of the Devil Macmillan New York 1931 pp 119 21 Laura A Hibbard Medieval Romance in England A Study of the Sources and Analogues of the Non Cyclic Metrical Romances New York Oxford University Press 1924 p 50 Samuel N Rosenberg Robert the Devil The First Modern English Translation of Robert le Diable an Anonymous French Romance of the Thirteenth Century University Park PA Pennsylvania State University Press 2018 Gaucher Elisabeth 1998 La Vie du terrible Robert le dyable In Cahiers de recherches medievales Vol 5 pp 153 164 Corinne Saunders Rape and Ravishment in the Literature of Medieval England D S Brewer Rochester NY 2001 p 223 E M Bradstock Sir Gowther Secular Hagiography or Hagiographical Romance or Neither AUMLA Journal of the Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association 59 1983 26 47 C S Lewis English Literature in the Sixteenth Century Excluding Drama p 424 Oxford History of English Literature Oxford Oxford UP 1954 F J Furnivall ed Robert Laneham s Letter Describing a Part of the Entertainment Unto Queen Elizabeth at the Castle of Kenilworth in 1575 Chatto and Windus London 1907 p cxxxix Charles Homer Haskins The Normans in European History Constable London 1916 p 52 Freesman William Rufus i 181 3 quoted in Dictionary of National Biography 1885 volume 04 p 182 P M Handover The Second Cecil The Rise to Power 1563 1604 of Sir Robert Cecil Late First Earl of Salisbury Eyre amp Spottiswoode London 1959 p 119 Loseth Eilert Robert le Diable roman d aventures Paris Firmin Didot 1903 p XXII footnote nr 4 Tegethoff Ernst Franzosische Volksmarchen Erster Band Aus neueren Sammlungen Jena Eugen Diederichs 1923 p 306 note to tale nr 5 Loomis Laura Alandis Hibbard Mediaeval Romance In England a Study of the Sources And Analogues of the Noncyclic Metrical Romances New ed with supplementary bibliographical index 1926 1959 New York B Franklin 1924 pp 52 55 Zipes Jack Irons Hans In Jack Zipes ed The Oxford Companion to Fairy Tales Oxford University Press 2002 p 251 ISBN 0 19 860115 8 Liungman Waldemar Die Schwedischen Volksmarchen Herkunft und Geschichte Berlin Boston De Gruyter 2022 1961 p 61 https doi org 10 1515 9783112618004 Berlioz Jacques Robert der Teufel Robert the Devil In Enzyklopadie des Marchens Band 11 Prufung Schimaremarchen Edited by Rudolf Wilhelm Brednich Hermann Bausinger Wolfgang Bruckner Helge Gerndt Lutz Rohrich Klaus Roth De Gruyter 2016 2004 pp 737 738 ISBN 978 3 11 017565 3 https www degruyter com wikipedialibrary idm oclc org database EMO entry emo 11 128 html Accessed 2023 01 14 Resoort R J Robrecht de Duivel In W P Gerritsen A G van Melle eds Van Aiol tot de Zwaanridder personages uit de middeleeuwse verhaalkunst en hun voortleven in literatuur theater en beeldende kunst SUN Nijmegen et cop 1993 p 280 Robrecht de duyvel Ed Rob Resoort Muiderberg 1980 pp 9 11 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert the Devil amp oldid 1133903948, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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