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Walther von der Vogelweide

Walther von der Vogelweide (c. 1170 – c. 1230) was a Minnesänger who composed and performed love-songs and political songs ("Sprüche") in Middle High German. Walther has been described as the greatest German lyrical poet before Goethe;[1] his hundred or so love-songs are widely regarded as the pinnacle of Minnesang, the medieval German love lyric, and his innovations breathed new life into the tradition of courtly love. He was also the first political poet to write in German, with a considerable body of encomium, satire, invective, and moralising.

Portrait of Walther von der Vogelweide from the Codex Manesse (Folio 124r)

Little is known about Walther's life. He was a travelling singer who performed for patrons at various princely courts in the states of the Holy Roman Empire. He is particularly associated with the Babenberg court in Vienna. Later in life he was given a small fief by the future Holy Roman Emperor, Frederick II.

His work was widely celebrated in his time and in succeeding generations—for the Meistersingers he was a songwriter to emulate—and this is reflected in the exceptional preservation of his work in 32 manuscripts from all parts of the High German area. The largest single collection is found in the Codex Manesse, which includes around 90% of his known songs. However, most Minnesang manuscripts preserve only the texts, and only a handful of Walther's melodies survive.

Notable songs include the love-song "Under der linden", the contemplative "Elegy", and the religious Palästinalied, for which the melody has survived.

Life history edit

For all his fame, Walther's name is not found in contemporary records, with the exception of a solitary mention in the travelling accounts of Bishop Wolfger of Erla of the Passau diocese: "Walthero cantori de Vogelweide pro pellicio v solidos longos" ('To Walther the singer of the Vogelweide five shillings for a fur coat.') The main sources of information about him are his own poems and occasional references by contemporary Minnesingers.[2] He was a knight, but probably not a wealthy or landed one. His surname, von der Vogelweide, suggests that he had no grant of land, since die Vogelweide ('the bird-pasture') seems to refer to a general geographic feature, not a specific place. He probably was knighted for military bravery and was a retainer in a wealthy, noble household before beginning his travels.

Birthplace edit

Life[3]
c. 1170 Birth
c. 1190 Start of professional life
Until 1198 For Duke Frederick I of Austria
1198 Leaves Vienna court
1198-1201 For King Philip of Swabia
1200 At Leopold VI's investiture in Vienna?
1201 For Landgrave Hermann of Thuringia
1203 At the wedding of Leopold in Vienna?
1204/05 In Thuringia
1212 At the Hoftag of Emperor Otto IV in Frankfurt
1212/13 (or until 1216?) For Otto IV
1212/13 For Margrave Dietrich of Meißen
From late 1213
(1214?, 1216?)
For King Frederick II (from 1220 Emperor)
From 1213/14 until April 1217 at the latest For Hermann of Thuringia
1215/16? At the court of Duke Bernard II of Carinthia
1216/17 Vienna
1219 Vienna
1220 At the Hoftag of Frederick II in Frankfurt
1220 Receives fief from Frederick II
After 1220 At the court of count Diether II of Katzenellenbogen
from 1220 (1224?)
until 1225
For the Imperial Vicar Archbishop Engelbert of Cologne
1224 (or 1225?) At the Hoftag in Nürnberg
c. 1230 Death

Walther's birthplace remains unknown, and given the lack of documentary evidence, it will probably never be known exactly. There is little chance of deriving it from his name; in his day there were many so-called Vogelweiden in the vicinity of castles and towns, where hawks were caught for hawking or songbirds for people's homes. For this reason, it must be assumed that the singer did not obtain his name primarily for superregional communication, because it could not be used for an unambiguous assignment. Other persons of the high nobility and poets who traveled with their masters used the unambiguous name of their ownership or their place of origin; therefore, the name was meaningful only in the near vicinity, where only one Vogelweide existed or it was understood as a metaphoric surname of the singer. Pen-names were usual for poets of the 12th and 13th century, whereas Minnesingers in principle were known by their noble family name which was used to sign documents.

In 1974, Helmut Hörner identified a farmhouse mentioned in 1556 as "Vogelweidhof" in the urbarium of the domain Rappottenstein. At this time it belonged to the Amt Traunstein, now within the municipality Schönbach in the Lower Austrian Waldviertel. Its existence had already been mentioned without comment in 1911 by Alois Plesser, who also did not know its precise location. Hörner proved that the still-existing farmhouse Weid is indeed the mentioned Vogelweidhof and collected arguments for Walther being born in the Waldviertel ("Forest Quarter"). He published this in his 1974 book 800 Jahre Traunstein (800 years Traunstein), pointing out that Walther says "Ze ôsterriche lernt ich singen unde sagen" ("In Austria [at this time only Lower Austria and Vienna], I learned to sing and to speak"). A tradition says that Walther, one of the ten Old Masters, was a Landherr (land owner) from Bohemia, which does not contradict his possible origin in the Waldviertel, because in mediaeval times the Waldviertel was from time to time denoted as versus Boemiam. Powerful support for this theory was given in 1977[4] and 1981[5] by Bernd Thum (University Karlsruhe, Germany), which makes an origin in the Waldviertel very plausible. Thum began with an analysis of the content of Walther's work, especially of his crusade appeal, also known as "old age elegy", and concluded that Walther's birthplace was far away from all travelling routes of this time and within a region where land was still cleared. This is because the singer pours out his sorrows "Bereitet ist daz velt, verhouwen ist der walt" and suggests he no longer knows his people and land, applicable to the Waldviertel.

Additionally in 1987, Walter Klomfar and the librarian Charlotte Ziegler came to the conclusion that Walther might have been born in the Waldviertel. The starting point for their study is also the above-mentioned words of Walther. These were placed into doubt by research, but strictly speaking do not mention his birthplace. Klomfar points to a historical map which was drawn by monks of the Zwettl monastery in the 17th century, on the occasion of a legal dispute. This map shows a village Walthers and a field marked "Vogelwaidt" (near Allentsteig) and a related house belonging to the village. The village became deserted, but a well marked on the map could be excavated and reconstructed to prove the accuracy of the map. Klomfar was also able to partly reconstruct land ownership in this region and prove the existence of the (not rare) Christian name Walther.

Contrary to this theory, Franz Pfeiffer assumed that the singer was born in the Wipptal in South Tyrol, where, not far from the small town of Sterzing on the Eisack, a wood—called the Vorder- and Hintervogelweide—exists. This would, however, contradict the fact that Walther was not able to visit his homeland for many decades. At this time Tyrol was the home of several well-known Minnesingers. The court of Vienna, under Duke Frederick I of the house of Babenberg, had become a centre of poetry and art.[2]

 
Monument for Walther von der Vogelweide in the Marketplace of Weißensee (Thüringen)

Reinmar the Old edit

Here it was that the young poet learned his craft under the renowned master Reinmar the Old, whose death he afterwards lamented in two of his most beautiful lyrics; and in the open-handed duke, he found his first patron. This happy period of his life, during which he produced the most charming and spontaneous of his love-lyrics, came to an end with the death of Duke Frederick in 1198. Henceforward Walther was a wanderer from court to court, singing for his lodging and his bread, and ever hoping that some patron would arise to save him from this "juggler's life" (gougel-fuore) and the shame of ever playing the guest. He had few if any possessions and depended on others for his food and lodging. His criticism of men and manners was scathing; and even when this did not touch his princely patrons, their underlings often took measures to rid themselves of so uncomfortable a censor.[2]

Politics edit

 
Statue of Walther von der Vogelweide by Heinrich Scholz, in Duchcov (Czechia), where a park is named after him.

Thus he was forced to leave the court of the generous duke Bernhard of Carinthia (1202–1256); after an experience of the tumultuous household of the landgrave of Thuringia, he warns those who have weak ears to give it a wide berth. After three years spent at the court of Dietrich I of Meissen (reigned 1195–1221), he complains that he had received for his services neither money nor praise.[2]

Generosity could be mentioned by Walther von der Vogelweide. He received a diamond from the high noble Diether III von Katzenelnbogen around 1214:[6]

Ich bin dem Bogenaere (Katzenelnbogener) holt – gar ane gabe und ane solt: – … Den diemant den edelen stein – gap mir der schoensten ritter ein[7]

Walther was, in fact, a man of strong views; and it is this which gives him his main significance in history, as compared to his place in literature. From the moment when the death of the emperor Henry VI (1197) opened the fateful struggle between empire and papacy, Walther threw himself ardently into the fray on the side of German independence and unity. Although his religious poems sufficiently prove the sincerity of his Catholicism, he remained to the end of his days opposed to the extreme claims of the popes, whom he attacks with a bitterness which can be justified only by the strength of his patriotic feelings. His political poems begin with an appeal to Germany, written in 1198 at Vienna, against the disruptive ambitions of the princes: "Crown Philip with the Kaiser's crown And bid them vex thy peace no more."[2]

He was present in 1198 at Philip's coronation at Mainz, and supported him till his victory was assured. After Philip's murder in 1208, he "said and sang" in support of Otto of Brunswick against the papal candidate Frederick of Hohenstaufen; and only when Otto's usefulness to Germany had been shattered by the Battle of Bouvines (1214) did he turn to the rising star of Frederick, now the sole representative of German majesty against pope and princes.[2]

From the new emperor, Walther's genius and zeal for the empire finally received recognition: a small fief in Franconia was bestowed upon him, which—though he complained that its value was little—gave him the home and the fixed position he had so long desired. That Frederick gave him a further sign of favour by making him the tutor of his son Henry (VII), King of the Romans, is more than doubtful. The fact, in itself highly improbable, rests upon the evidence of only a single poem, the meaning of which can also be interpreted otherwise. Walther's restless spirit did not suffer him to remain long on his new property.[2]

Later years edit

 
Grave of Walther von der Vogelweide in the Lusamgärtchen, Würzburg, Germany. This 1930 tombstone replaced an earlier one removed in the 18th century.

In 1217 he was once more at Vienna, and again in 1219 after the return of Duke Leopold VI from the crusade. About 1224 he seems to have settled on his fief near Würzburg. He was active in urging the German princes to take part in the crusade of 1228, and may have accompanied the crusading army at least as far as his native Tirol. In a poem he pictures in words the changes that had taken place in the scenes of his childhood, changes which made his life there seem to have been only a dream. He died about 1230, and was buried at Würzburg, after leaving instructions — according to the story — that the birds were to be fed at his tomb daily. His original gravestone with its Latin inscription has disappeared; but in 1843 a new monument was erected over the spot, called the Lusamgärtchen ("Little Lusam Garden"), today sheltered by the two major churches of the city.[8]

The Manuscripts edit

Walther's work is exceptionally well preserved compared to that of his contemporaries, with over 30 complete manuscripts and fragments containing widely varying numbers of strophes under his name. The most extensive collections of his songs are in four of the main Minnesang manuscripts:[9]

  • MS A (the Kleine Heidelberger Liederhandschrift) has 151 strophes under Walther's name, along with others almost certainly written by Walther but included in the works of other Minnesänger (Hartmann von Aue, Liutold von Seven, Niune, Reinmar von Hagenau and Ulrich von Singenberg).[10]
  • MS B (the Weingarten Manuscript) has 112 strophes under Walther's name.[11]
  • MS C (the Große Heidelberger Liederhandschrift, the Manesse Codex) has by far the largest collection, with 440 strophes and the Leich, and additional strophes by Walther under the names of other poets (Hartmann von Aue, Heinrich von Morungen, Reinmar von Hagenau, Rudolf von Neuenburg, Rudolf von Rotenburg, Rubin and Walther von Mezze).[12]
  • MS E (the Würzburg Manuscript) has 212 strophes under Walther's name and some wrongly ascribed to Reinmar.

Manuscripts B and C have miniatures showing Walther in the pose described in the Reichston (L 8,4 C 2), "Ich saz ûf einem steine" ("I sat upon a stone").

In addition to these, there are many manuscripts with smaller amounts of material, sometimes as little as a single strophe.[13] In the surviving complete manuscripts, there are often missing pages in the sections devoted to Walther, which indicates lost material, as well blank space left by the scribes to make allowance for later additions.[9]

With the exception of MS M (the Carmina Burana), which may even have been compiled in Walther's lifetime, all the sources date from at least two generations after his death, and most are from the 14th or 15th centuries.[9][14]

Melodies edit

As with most Minnesänger of his era, few of Walther's melodies have survived. Certain or potential melodies to Walther's songs come from three sources: those documented in the 14th-century Münster Fragment (MS Z) under Walther's name,[15] melodies of the Meistersinger attributed to Walther, and, more speculatively, French and Provençal melodies of the trouvères and troubadours which fit Walther's songs and might therefore be the source of contrafactures. The latter are the only potential melodies to Walther's love songs, the remainder being for religious and political songs.

 
The melody of the Palästinalied from the Münster Fragment

Münster Fragment edit

  • The complete melody of the Palästinalied, "Nû alrêst lebe ich mir werde" (L14, 38; C 7)
  • Partial melodies for
    • The Second Philipps-Ton, "Philippe, künec hėre" (L16,36; C 8)
    • The König-Friedrichs-Ton, "Vil wol gelopter got, wie selten ich dich prîse" (L26,3; C 11)[16][17]

There are further melodies in two early manuscripts, M (the Carmina Burana) and N (Kremsmünster Stiftsbibliothek, Codex 127) but they are recorded in staffless neumes and cannot be reliably interpreted.[14][15]

Meistersang manuscripts edit

  • The Meistersingers' Hof- oder Wendelweise is Walther's Wiener Hofton, "Waz wunders in der werlde vert!" (L20,16; C 10)
  • The Meistersingers' Feiner Ton is Walther's Ottenton, "Herre bâbest, ich mac wol genesen" (L11,6; C 4) [16][18]

The ascription of other melodies to Walther in the Meistersang manuscripts (the Goldene Weise, the Kreuzton, and the Langer Ton) is regarded as erroneous.[16]

Possible contrafactures edit

The following songs by Walther share a strophic form with a French or Provençal song, and Walther's texts may therefore have been written for the Romance melodies, though there can be no certainty of the contrafacture:[18]

  • "Uns hât der winter geschadet über al" (L39,1;C 15): "Quant voi les prés fuourir et blanchoir" by Moniot de Paris
  • "Under der linden" (L39,11;C 16): the anonymous "En mai au douz tens novels"
  • "Muget ir schouwen waz dem meien" (L51,13; C 28): "Quant je voi l'erbe menue" by Gautier d'Espinal
  • "Diu welt was gelf, rôt unde blâ" (L75,25; C 52): "Amours et bone volonté" by Gautier d'Espinal
  • "Frô Welt, ir sult dem wirte sagen" (L100,24; C 70) "Onques mais nus hons de chanta" by Blondel de Nesle
  • "Wol mich der stunde, daz ich sie erkande" (L110,33; C 78): "Qan vei la flor" by Bernart de Ventadorn.

Lost manuscripts with melodies edit

There is evidence that the surviving volume of the Jenaer Liederhandschrift was originally accompanied by another with melodies for Walther's Leich and some Sprüche.[19] Further manuscript fragments containing melodies in the possession of Bernhard Joseph Docen (hence the "Docen fragments") were inspected by von der Hagen early in the 19th century, but are now lost.[9]

Legacy edit

Assessment edit

A contemporary assessment of Walther's songs comes from Gottfried von Strassburg, who, unlike modern commentators, was able to evaluate Walther's achievements as composer and performer, and who, writing in the first decade of the 13th century, proposed him as the "leader" of the Minnesänger after the death of Reinmar.

Grove Music Online evaluates Walther's work as follows:

 
Monument to Walther von der Vogelweide in Bozen from 1889

He is regarded as one of the most outstanding and innovative authors of his generation... His poetic oeuvre is the most varied of his time,... and his poetry treats a number of subjects, adopting frequently contradictory positions. In his work he freed Minnesang from the traditional patterns of motifs and restricting social function and transformed it into genuinely experienced and yet universally valid love-poetry.[21]

Will Hasty's evaluation of the love songs is that:

Walther's main contribution to the German love lyric was to increase the range of roles that could be adopted by the singer and his beloved, and to lend the depiction of the experience of love new immediacy and vibrancy.[22]

Of the political works, Hasty concludes that:

In Walther's political and didactic poetry we again observe a consummately versatile poetic voice, one which finds new ways to give artistic expression to experience despite the constraints of the taste of audiences and patrons and by the authority of literary conventions.[23]

Reception edit

 
Walther is one of the contestants in this depiction in the Codex Manesse of the Sängerkrieg

Walther is one of the traditional competitors in the tale of the song contest at the Wartburg. He appears in medieval accounts and continues to be mentioned in more modern versions of the story such as that in Richard Wagner's Tannhäuser. He is also named by Walther von Stolzing, the hero of Wagner's Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, as his poetic model.[24]

Walter is mentioned in Samuel Beckett's short story "The Calmative": "Seeing a stone seat by the kerb I sat down and crossed my legs, like Walther."[25]

In 1975, the German poet Peter Rühmkorf published Walther von der Vogelweide, Klopstock und ich, in which he provided modernised and colloquial verse translations of 34 songs by Walther, accompanied by commentary.[26][27]

Historical fiction with Walther in a major role includes Eberhard Hilscher's 1976 work Der Morgenstern, oder die vier Verwandlungen eines Mannes genannt Walther von der Vogelweide ("The Morning-Star, or the Four Metamorphoses of a man called Walther von der Vogelweide"), and two novels about Frederick II, Waltraud Lewin's Federico (1984) and Horst Stern's Mann aus Apulien (1986).[28]

In 2013, the Galleria Lia Rumma in Naples exhibited a series of works by Anselm Kiefer (two large paintings and a group of books) relating to "Under der linden" under the title "Walther von der Vogelweide für Lia".[29][30]

Commemoration edit

In 1889, a statue of Walther was unveiled in a square in Bolzano (see above), which was subsequently renamed the Walther von der Vogelweide-Platz. Under fascist rule, the statue was moved to a less prominent site, but it was restored to its original location in 1981.[24][31]

There are two statues of Walther in fountains in Würzburg, one near the Würzburg Residence and another in the Walther-Schule.[32] There are also statues in: Weißensee (Thuringia); Sankt Veit an der Glan and Innsbruck in Austria; and Duchcov in the Czech Republic.

Apart from his grave in Würzburg, there are also memorials in: the Knüll-Storkenberg nature reserve, Halle (Westfalia); Herlheim (Franconia); the Walhalla memorial[33] near Regensburg; Lajen, South Tyrol,[34] Zwettl,[35] Gmunden and the ruined Mödling Castle, all in Austria.

There are schools named after him in Bozen,[36] Aschbach-Markt[37] and Würzburg.[32]

Editions edit

 
Lachmann, Karl, "Die Gedichte Walthers von der Vogelweide", Berlin 1827, p. 39.

There have been more scholarly editions of Walther's works than of any other medieval German poet's, a reflection of both his importance to literary history and the complex manuscript tradition.[38] The following highly selective list includes only the seminal 19th Century edition of Lachmann and the most important recent editions. A history of the main editions will be found in the introduction to the Lachmann/Cormeau/Bein edition.

Consistent reference to Walther's songs is made by means of "Lachmann numbers", which are formed of an "L" (for "Lachmann") followed by the page and line number in Lachmann's edition of 1827.[39] Thus "Under der linden", which starts on line 11 on page 39 of that edition (shown in the page image, right) is referred to as L39,11, and the second line of the first strophe is L39,12, etc.[40] All serious editions and translations of Walther's songs either give the Lachmann numbers alongside the text or provide a concordance of Lachmann numbers for the poems in the edition or translation.

  • Lachmann, Karl, ed. (1827). Die Gedichte Walthers von der Vogelweide. Berlin: G. Reimer. The first scholarly edition and continually revised since 1827. However, the revised editions edited by Carl von Kraus between 1936 and 1959 are now considered out of keeping with modern editorial principles.[41] The most recent update, now the standard edition of Walther's works, is:
    • Lachmann, Karl; Cormeau, Christoph; Bein, Thomas, eds. (2023). Walther von der Vogelweide. Leich, Lieder, Sangsprüche (16th ed.). De Gruyter. doi:10.1515/9783110980608. ISBN 9783110980608.
  • von der Hagen, Friedrich Heinrich, ed. (1838). Minnesinger. Deutsche Liederdichter des 12., 13., und 14. Jahrhunderts. Vol. 1. Leipzig: Barth. pp. 222–279. Retrieved 19 July 2017. Includes all Walther's songs known at the time.
  • Paul, Hermann; Ranawake, Silvia, eds. (1997). Walther von der Vogelweide. Gedichte. Altdeutsche Textbibliothek 1. Vol. I Der Spruchdichter (11th ed.). Berlin: De Gruyter. ISBN 3-484-20110-X.
  • Schweikle, Günther; Bauschke-Hartung, Ricarda, eds. (2009). Walther von der Vogelweide: Werke. Gesamtausgabe. Mittelhochdeutsch/Neuhochdeutsch. Reclams Universal-Bibliothek 819. Vol. 1: Spruchlyrik (3rd ed.). Stuttgart: Reclam. ISBN 978-3150008195.
  • Schweikle, Günther; Bauschke-Hartung, Ricarda, eds. (2011). Walther von der Vogelweide: Werke. Gesamtausgabe. Mittelhochdeutsch/Neuhochdeutsch. Reclams Universal-Bibliothek 820. Vol. 2: Liedlyrik (2nd ed.). Stuttgart: Reclam. ISBN 978-3150008201.

Translations edit

Modern German edit

  • Simrock, Karl (1833). Gedichte Walthers von der Vogelweide, übersetzt von Karl Simrock, und erläuterert von Wilhelm Wackernagel. Berlin. Verse translation.
    • The 1894 edition
    • The 1906 edition, lacking the commentary.
  • Zooman, Richard (1907). Walther von der Vogelweide. Gedichte. Berlin: Wilhelm Borngräber. Translation only, but with Lachmann numbers.
  • Spechtler, Franz Viktor (2003). Walther von der Vogelweide. Sämtliche Gedichte. Klagenfurt: Wieser. ISBN 978-3-85129-390-6.
  • Kasten, Ingrid, ed. (2005). Deutsche Lyrik des frühen und hohen Mittelalters. Texte und Kommentare. Translated by Kuhn, Margherita (2nd ed.). Frankfurt am Main: Deutscher Klassiker Verlag. ISBN 978-3-618-68006-2. Includes many of Walther's songs.
  • Wapnewski, Peter (2008). Walther von der Vogelweide, Gedichte: Mittelhochdeutscher Text und Übertragung. Frankfurt am Main: Fischer Taschenbuch. ISBN 978-3596900589.
  • Brunner, Horst (2012). Walther von der Vogelweide, Gedichte: Auswahl. Mittelhochdeutsch/Neuhochdeutsch. Stuttgart: Reclam. ISBN 978-3150108802.
  • Schweikle's two-volume edition, listed above, includes parallel translation.

English edit

  • Phillips, Walter Alison (1896). Selected poems of Walther von der Vogelweide the minnesinger. London: Smith, Elder. Translation only.
  • Zeydel, Edwin H.; Morgan, Bayard Quincy (1952). Poems of Walther von der Vogelweide - Thirty New English Renderings in the Original Forms, with the Middle High German texts, Selected Modern German Translations. Ithaca, NY: Thrift.
  • Richey, Margaret Fitzgerald (1967). Selected poems of Walther von der Vogelweide, edited with introduction, notes and vocabulary (4th ed.). Oxford: Basil Blackwell. ISBN 9780631018209.
  • Goldin, Frederick (2003). Walther von der Vogelweide: The Single-Stanza Lyrics. Edited and Translated with Introduction and Commentary. Routledge Medieval Texts (Book 2). New York: Routledge. ISBN 041594337X. Parallel text; contains only the political songs.

Dictionary edit

  • Meeßen, Dörte (2023). Walther von der Vogelweide Wörterbuch. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter. doi:10.1515/9783110776508. ISBN 978-3-11-077650-8.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Brunner 2012, p. back cover.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Phillips 1911, p. 299.
  3. ^ Scholz 2005, Chapter 4.
  4. ^ Thum 1977, pp. 229f..
  5. ^ Thum 1981.
  6. ^ Stoess.
  7. ^ Paul 1945, p. 102.
  8. ^ Phillips 1911, pp. 299–300.
  9. ^ a b c d Scholz 2005, Chapter 1.2.
  10. ^ Lachmann, Cormeau & Bein 2013, p. XXVI.
  11. ^ Lachmann, Cormeau & Bein 2013, p. XXVIII.
  12. ^ Lachmann, Cormeau & Bein 2013, p. XXIX–XXX.
  13. ^ Lachmann, Cormeau & Bein 2013, p. XXVI–XLV has a complete and up-to-date list (the most recent manuscript discovery dates from the 1980s).
  14. ^ a b Hahn 1989, p. 668.
  15. ^ a b Brunner 2013, p. L.
  16. ^ a b c Scholz 2005, Chapter 1.5.
  17. ^ Brunner 2013, p. LI.
  18. ^ a b Brunner 2013, p. LII.
  19. ^ Lachmann, Cormeau & Bein 2013, p. XXXV.
  20. ^ Hatto 1960, p. 107.
  21. ^ Klaper.
  22. ^ Hasty 2006, p. 113.
  23. ^ Hasty 2006, p. 117.
  24. ^ a b Brunner et al. 1996, pp. 235.
  25. ^ Beckett 1946.
  26. ^ Rühmkorf 1975.
  27. ^ Wapnewski 1976.
  28. ^ Brunner et al. 1996, pp. 249–50.
  29. ^ Artsy 2013.
  30. ^ Art in Progress 2013.
  31. ^ Obermair 2015.
  32. ^ a b WürzburgWiki.
  33. ^ Purucker.
  34. ^ Burgenverzeichnis Südtirols.
  35. ^ Alamy.
  36. ^ Gymnasium Walther von der Vogelweide Bozen.
  37. ^ Volksschule Aschbach Markt.
  38. ^ Lachmann, Cormeau & Bein 2013, p. XCII.
  39. ^ Klinck 2004, p. 163.
  40. ^ Brunner et al. 1996, p. 39.
  41. ^ Lachmann, Cormeau & Bein 2013, p. LXXXVI.

Sources edit

  • Alamy. "Stock Photo - Zwettl: Memorial stone at the alleged birthplace of Walter von der Vogelweide". Alamy. Retrieved 27 August 2017.
  • Art in Progress (20 November 2013). "Anselm Kiefer: Walther von der Vogelweide für Lia". Art in Progress. Retrieved 19 August 2017.
  • Artsy (2013). "ANSELM KIEFER "Walther von der Vogelweide für Lia"". Artsy. Retrieved 19 August 2017.
  • Beckett, Samuel (1946). "The Calmative". Stories and Texts for Nothing.
  • Brunner, Horst (2013). "Die Melodien Walthers". In Lachmann, Karl; Cormeau, Christoph; Bein, Thomas (eds.). Walther von der Vogelweide. Leich, Lieder, Sangsprüche (15th ed.). De Gruyter. pp. XLVI–LIV. ISBN 978-3-11-017657-5.
  • Brunner, Horst; Hahn, Gerhard; Müller, Ulrich; Spechtler, Franz Viktor (1996). Walther von der Vogelweide. Epoche — Werk — Wirkung. Munich: Beck. ISBN 3-406-39779-4.
  • Burgenverzeichnis Südtirols. . Burgenverzeichnis Südtirols. Archived from the original on 1 December 2015. Retrieved 27 August 2017.
  • Gymnasium Walther von der Vogelweide Bozen. "Home Page". Retrieved 27 August 2017.
  • Hahn G (1989). "Walther von der Vogelweide". In Ruh K, Keil G, Schröder W (eds.). Die deutsche Literatur des Mittelalters. Verfasserlexikon. Vol. 10. Berlin, New York: Walter De Gruyter. pp. 666–697. ISBN 978-3-11-022248-7.
  • Hasty, Will (2006). "Walther von der Vogelweide". In Hasty, Will (ed.). German Literature of the High Middle Ages. Camden House History of German Literature, 3. Rochester, New York; Woodbridge Suffolk: Camden House. pp. 109–120. ISBN 1-57113-173-6.
  • Hatto, A.T. (1960). Gottfried von Strassburg. Tristan. translated entire for the first time. London: Penguin. ISBN 0-14-044098-4.
  • Hörner, Helmut (2006). "Stammt Walther von der Vogelweide wirklich aus dem Waldviertel?". Das Waldviertel (in German). 55 (1): 13–21.
  • Klaper, Michael. "Walther von der Vogelweide". Grove Music Online. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
  • Klinck, Anne L. (2004). Anthology of Ancient Medieval Woman's Song. New York, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 1-4039-6310-X.
  • Paul, Hermann, ed. (1945). Die Gedichte Walthers von der Vogelweide. Besorgt von Albert Leitzmann (in German) (6th ed.). Halle: Niemeyer Verlag. p. 102.
  • Obermair, Hannes (2015). "Walthers Dichterexil vor 80 Jahren" (PDF). Das Exponat des Monats des Stadtarchivs Bozen. No. 46. Stadtarchiv Bozen (published October 2015). Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainPhillips, Walter Alison (1911). "Walther von der Vogelweide". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 299–300.
  • Purucker, Erwin. "Die Walhalla". panoptikum.net. Retrieved 27 August 2017.
  • Rühmkorf, Peter (1975). Walther von der Vogelweide, Klopstock und ich. Reinbek: Rowohlt. ISBN 9783499250651.
  • Scholz, Manfred Günter (2005). Walther von der Vogelweide. Sammlung Metzler, 316 (2nd ed.). Stuttgart: Metzler. ISBN 978-3-476-12316-9.
  • Schumacher, Meinolf (2000). "Die Welt im Dialog mit dem 'alternden Sänger'? Walthers Absagelied 'Frô Welt, ir sult dem wirte sagen' (L. 100,24)". Wirkendes Wort (in German). 50: 169–188. PDF
  • Stoess, Wolfgang. "Was von Katzenelnbogen übrig blieb [What remained of Katzenelnbogen]". Graf v. Katzenelnbogen (in German).
  • Thum, Bernd (1977). "Die sogenannte 'Alterselegie' Walthers von der Vogelweide und die Krise des Landesausbaus im 13. Jahrhundert unter besonderer Berücksichtigung des Donauraums". In Kaiser, Gert (ed.). Literatur - Publikum - Historischer Kontext. Beiträge zur älteren deutschen Literaturgeschichte (in German). Vol. 1. Bern. pp. 229 et seq. ISBN 978-3-261-02923-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Thum, Bernd (1981). "Walther von der Vogelweide und das werdende Land Österreich". In Wolfram, Herwig; Brunner, Karl (eds.). Die Kuenringer. Das Werden des Landes Österreich. Stift Zwettl. 16. Mai - 26. Oktober 1981. Katalog des Niederösterreichischen Landesmuseums (in German). Amt der Niederösterreichischen Landesregierung. pp. 487–495.
  • Volksschule Aschbach Markt. "Eine Chronik der Volksschule Aschbach Markt". Retrieved 27 August 2017.
  • Wapnewski, Peter (5 March 1976). "Zwischen Freund Hein und Heine". Die Zeit. Hamburg. Retrieved 19 August 2017.
  • WürzburgWiki. "Walther-Schule". Retrieved 27 August 2017.

Further reading edit

  • Jones, George F. (1968). Walther von der Vogelweide. Twayne's World Authors, 46. New York: Twayne.
  • Sayce, Olive (1981). Mediaeval German Lyric, 1150–1300: The Development of Its Themes and Forms in Their European Context. Oxford: Oxford University. ISBN 978-0198157724.

External links edit

Bibliography edit

Manuscripts edit

  • Handschriftencensus: Walther von der Vogelweide
  • Kleine Heidelberger Liederhandschrift (A): Description — Digital facsimile (University Library, Heidelberg)
  • Weingarten Manuscript (B): Description — Digital facsimile (Württembergische Landesbibliothek, Stuttgart)
  • Große Heidelberger Liederhandschrift (Manesse Codex)] (C): Description — Digital facsimile (University Library, Heidelberg)
  • Würzburg Manuscript] (E): Description — Digital facsimile (University Library, Munich)
  • Carmina Burana MS (M): Description — Digital facsimile (University Library, Munich)
  • Kremsmünster, Stiftsbibl., Cod. 127 (N): Description
  • Münster Fragment (Z): Description — Digital facsimile (University Library, Jena)

The Songs edit

Texts edit

  • Bibliotheca Augustana
  • puella bella seven songs (within a study on female beauty in Minnesang)
  • Poemhunter English verse translations of 16 songs
  • Graeme Dunphy: English verse translations of two songs
  • My Poetic Side: English verse translations of four songs

Music edit

  • Discogs: Walther Von Der Vogelweide Discography
  • The Salzburger Ensemble für Alte Musik:
    • "Under der linden"
    • Palästinalied

walther, vogelweide, vogelweide, redirects, here, other, uses, vogelweide, disambiguation, 1170, 1230, minnesänger, composed, performed, love, songs, political, songs, sprüche, middle, high, german, walther, been, described, greatest, german, lyrical, poet, be. Vogelweide redirects here For other uses see Vogelweide disambiguation Walther von der Vogelweide c 1170 c 1230 was a Minnesanger who composed and performed love songs and political songs Spruche in Middle High German Walther has been described as the greatest German lyrical poet before Goethe 1 his hundred or so love songs are widely regarded as the pinnacle of Minnesang the medieval German love lyric and his innovations breathed new life into the tradition of courtly love He was also the first political poet to write in German with a considerable body of encomium satire invective and moralising Portrait of Walther von der Vogelweide from the Codex Manesse Folio 124r Little is known about Walther s life He was a travelling singer who performed for patrons at various princely courts in the states of the Holy Roman Empire He is particularly associated with the Babenberg court in Vienna Later in life he was given a small fief by the future Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II His work was widely celebrated in his time and in succeeding generations for the Meistersingers he was a songwriter to emulate and this is reflected in the exceptional preservation of his work in 32 manuscripts from all parts of the High German area The largest single collection is found in the Codex Manesse which includes around 90 of his known songs However most Minnesang manuscripts preserve only the texts and only a handful of Walther s melodies survive Notable songs include the love song Under der linden the contemplative Elegy and the religious Palastinalied for which the melody has survived Contents 1 Life history 1 1 Birthplace 1 2 Reinmar the Old 1 3 Politics 1 4 Later years 2 The Manuscripts 3 Melodies 3 1 Munster Fragment 3 2 Meistersang manuscripts 3 3 Possible contrafactures 3 4 Lost manuscripts with melodies 4 Legacy 4 1 Assessment 4 2 Reception 4 3 Commemoration 5 Editions 6 Translations 6 1 Modern German 6 2 English 7 Dictionary 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External links 12 1 Bibliography 12 2 Manuscripts 12 3 The Songs 12 3 1 Texts 12 3 2 MusicLife history editThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article is largely based on an article in the out of copyright Encyclopaedia Britannica Eleventh Edition which was produced in 1911 It should be brought up to date to reflect subsequent history or scholarship including the references if any When you have completed the review replace this notice with a simple note on this article s talk page August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message For all his fame Walther s name is not found in contemporary records with the exception of a solitary mention in the travelling accounts of Bishop Wolfger of Erla of the Passau diocese Walthero cantori de Vogelweide pro pellicio v solidos longos To Walther the singer of the Vogelweide five shillings for a fur coat The main sources of information about him are his own poems and occasional references by contemporary Minnesingers 2 He was a knight but probably not a wealthy or landed one His surname von der Vogelweide suggests that he had no grant of land since die Vogelweide the bird pasture seems to refer to a general geographic feature not a specific place He probably was knighted for military bravery and was a retainer in a wealthy noble household before beginning his travels Birthplace edit Life 3 c 1170 Birthc 1190 Start of professional lifeUntil 1198 For Duke Frederick I of Austria1198 Leaves Vienna court1198 1201 For King Philip of Swabia1200 At Leopold VI s investiture in Vienna 1201 For Landgrave Hermann of Thuringia1203 At the wedding of Leopold in Vienna 1204 05 In Thuringia1212 At the Hoftag of Emperor Otto IV in Frankfurt1212 13 or until 1216 For Otto IV1212 13 For Margrave Dietrich of MeissenFrom late 1213 1214 1216 For King Frederick II from 1220 Emperor From 1213 14 until April 1217 at the latest For Hermann of Thuringia1215 16 At the court of Duke Bernard II of Carinthia1216 17 Vienna1219 Vienna1220 At the Hoftag of Frederick II in Frankfurt1220 Receives fief from Frederick IIAfter 1220 At the court of count Diether II of Katzenellenbogenfrom 1220 1224 until 1225 For the Imperial Vicar Archbishop Engelbert of Cologne1224 or 1225 At the Hoftag in Nurnbergc 1230 DeathWalther s birthplace remains unknown and given the lack of documentary evidence it will probably never be known exactly There is little chance of deriving it from his name in his day there were many so called Vogelweiden in the vicinity of castles and towns where hawks were caught for hawking or songbirds for people s homes For this reason it must be assumed that the singer did not obtain his name primarily for superregional communication because it could not be used for an unambiguous assignment Other persons of the high nobility and poets who traveled with their masters used the unambiguous name of their ownership or their place of origin therefore the name was meaningful only in the near vicinity where only one Vogelweide existed or it was understood as a metaphoric surname of the singer Pen names were usual for poets of the 12th and 13th century whereas Minnesingers in principle were known by their noble family name which was used to sign documents In 1974 Helmut Horner identified a farmhouse mentioned in 1556 as Vogelweidhof in the urbarium of the domain Rappottenstein At this time it belonged to the Amt Traunstein now within the municipality Schonbach in the Lower Austrian Waldviertel Its existence had already been mentioned without comment in 1911 by Alois Plesser who also did not know its precise location Horner proved that the still existing farmhouse Weid is indeed the mentioned Vogelweidhof and collected arguments for Walther being born in the Waldviertel Forest Quarter He published this in his 1974 book 800 Jahre Traunstein 800 years Traunstein pointing out that Walther says Ze osterriche lernt ich singen unde sagen In Austria at this time only Lower Austria and Vienna I learned to sing and to speak A tradition says that Walther one of the ten Old Masters was a Landherr land owner from Bohemia which does not contradict his possible origin in the Waldviertel because in mediaeval times the Waldviertel was from time to time denoted as versus Boemiam Powerful support for this theory was given in 1977 4 and 1981 5 by Bernd Thum University Karlsruhe Germany which makes an origin in the Waldviertel very plausible Thum began with an analysis of the content of Walther s work especially of his crusade appeal also known as old age elegy and concluded that Walther s birthplace was far away from all travelling routes of this time and within a region where land was still cleared This is because the singer pours out his sorrows Bereitet ist daz velt verhouwen ist der walt and suggests he no longer knows his people and land applicable to the Waldviertel Additionally in 1987 Walter Klomfar and the librarian Charlotte Ziegler came to the conclusion that Walther might have been born in the Waldviertel The starting point for their study is also the above mentioned words of Walther These were placed into doubt by research but strictly speaking do not mention his birthplace Klomfar points to a historical map which was drawn by monks of the Zwettl monastery in the 17th century on the occasion of a legal dispute This map shows a village Walthers and a field marked Vogelwaidt near Allentsteig and a related house belonging to the village The village became deserted but a well marked on the map could be excavated and reconstructed to prove the accuracy of the map Klomfar was also able to partly reconstruct land ownership in this region and prove the existence of the not rare Christian name Walther Contrary to this theory Franz Pfeiffer assumed that the singer was born in the Wipptal in South Tyrol where not far from the small town of Sterzing on the Eisack a wood called the Vorder and Hintervogelweide exists This would however contradict the fact that Walther was not able to visit his homeland for many decades At this time Tyrol was the home of several well known Minnesingers The court of Vienna under Duke Frederick I of the house of Babenberg had become a centre of poetry and art 2 nbsp Monument for Walther von der Vogelweide in the Marketplace of Weissensee Thuringen Reinmar the Old edit Here it was that the young poet learned his craft under the renowned master Reinmar the Old whose death he afterwards lamented in two of his most beautiful lyrics and in the open handed duke he found his first patron This happy period of his life during which he produced the most charming and spontaneous of his love lyrics came to an end with the death of Duke Frederick in 1198 Henceforward Walther was a wanderer from court to court singing for his lodging and his bread and ever hoping that some patron would arise to save him from this juggler s life gougel fuore and the shame of ever playing the guest He had few if any possessions and depended on others for his food and lodging His criticism of men and manners was scathing and even when this did not touch his princely patrons their underlings often took measures to rid themselves of so uncomfortable a censor 2 Politics edit nbsp Statue of Walther von der Vogelweide by Heinrich Scholz in Duchcov Czechia where a park is named after him Thus he was forced to leave the court of the generous duke Bernhard of Carinthia 1202 1256 after an experience of the tumultuous household of the landgrave of Thuringia he warns those who have weak ears to give it a wide berth After three years spent at the court of Dietrich I of Meissen reigned 1195 1221 he complains that he had received for his services neither money nor praise 2 Generosity could be mentioned by Walther von der Vogelweide He received a diamond from the high noble Diether III von Katzenelnbogen around 1214 6 Ich bin dem Bogenaere Katzenelnbogener holt gar ane gabe und ane solt Den diemant den edelen stein gap mir der schoensten ritter ein 7 Walther was in fact a man of strong views and it is this which gives him his main significance in history as compared to his place in literature From the moment when the death of the emperor Henry VI 1197 opened the fateful struggle between empire and papacy Walther threw himself ardently into the fray on the side of German independence and unity Although his religious poems sufficiently prove the sincerity of his Catholicism he remained to the end of his days opposed to the extreme claims of the popes whom he attacks with a bitterness which can be justified only by the strength of his patriotic feelings His political poems begin with an appeal to Germany written in 1198 at Vienna against the disruptive ambitions of the princes Crown Philip with the Kaiser s crown And bid them vex thy peace no more 2 He was present in 1198 at Philip s coronation at Mainz and supported him till his victory was assured After Philip s murder in 1208 he said and sang in support of Otto of Brunswick against the papal candidate Frederick of Hohenstaufen and only when Otto s usefulness to Germany had been shattered by the Battle of Bouvines 1214 did he turn to the rising star of Frederick now the sole representative of German majesty against pope and princes 2 From the new emperor Walther s genius and zeal for the empire finally received recognition a small fief in Franconia was bestowed upon him which though he complained that its value was little gave him the home and the fixed position he had so long desired That Frederick gave him a further sign of favour by making him the tutor of his son Henry VII King of the Romans is more than doubtful The fact in itself highly improbable rests upon the evidence of only a single poem the meaning of which can also be interpreted otherwise Walther s restless spirit did not suffer him to remain long on his new property 2 Later years edit nbsp Grave of Walther von der Vogelweide in the Lusamgartchen Wurzburg Germany This 1930 tombstone replaced an earlier one removed in the 18th century In 1217 he was once more at Vienna and again in 1219 after the return of Duke Leopold VI from the crusade About 1224 he seems to have settled on his fief near Wurzburg He was active in urging the German princes to take part in the crusade of 1228 and may have accompanied the crusading army at least as far as his native Tirol In a poem he pictures in words the changes that had taken place in the scenes of his childhood changes which made his life there seem to have been only a dream He died about 1230 and was buried at Wurzburg after leaving instructions according to the story that the birds were to be fed at his tomb daily His original gravestone with its Latin inscription has disappeared but in 1843 a new monument was erected over the spot called the Lusamgartchen Little Lusam Garden today sheltered by the two major churches of the city 8 The Manuscripts editWalther s work is exceptionally well preserved compared to that of his contemporaries with over 30 complete manuscripts and fragments containing widely varying numbers of strophes under his name The most extensive collections of his songs are in four of the main Minnesang manuscripts 9 MS A the Kleine Heidelberger Liederhandschrift has 151 strophes under Walther s name along with others almost certainly written by Walther but included in the works of other Minnesanger Hartmann von Aue Liutold von Seven Niune Reinmar von Hagenau and Ulrich von Singenberg 10 MS B the Weingarten Manuscript has 112 strophes under Walther s name 11 MS C the Grosse Heidelberger Liederhandschrift the Manesse Codex has by far the largest collection with 440 strophes and the Leich and additional strophes by Walther under the names of other poets Hartmann von Aue Heinrich von Morungen Reinmar von Hagenau Rudolf von Neuenburg Rudolf von Rotenburg Rubin and Walther von Mezze 12 MS E the Wurzburg Manuscript has 212 strophes under Walther s name and some wrongly ascribed to Reinmar Manuscripts B and C have miniatures showing Walther in the pose described in the Reichston L 8 4 C 2 Ich saz uf einem steine I sat upon a stone In addition to these there are many manuscripts with smaller amounts of material sometimes as little as a single strophe 13 In the surviving complete manuscripts there are often missing pages in the sections devoted to Walther which indicates lost material as well blank space left by the scribes to make allowance for later additions 9 With the exception of MS M the Carmina Burana which may even have been compiled in Walther s lifetime all the sources date from at least two generations after his death and most are from the 14th or 15th centuries 9 14 Melodies editAs with most Minnesanger of his era few of Walther s melodies have survived Certain or potential melodies to Walther s songs come from three sources those documented in the 14th century Munster Fragment MS Z under Walther s name 15 melodies of the Meistersinger attributed to Walther and more speculatively French and Provencal melodies of the trouveres and troubadours which fit Walther s songs and might therefore be the source of contrafactures The latter are the only potential melodies to Walther s love songs the remainder being for religious and political songs nbsp The melody of the Palastinalied from the Munster FragmentMunster Fragment edit The complete melody of the Palastinalied Nu alrest lebe ich mir werde L14 38 C 7 Partial melodies for The Second Philipps Ton Philippe kunec here L16 36 C 8 The Konig Friedrichs Ton Vil wol gelopter got wie selten ich dich prise L26 3 C 11 16 17 There are further melodies in two early manuscripts M the Carmina Burana and N Kremsmunster Stiftsbibliothek Codex 127 but they are recorded in staffless neumes and cannot be reliably interpreted 14 15 Meistersang manuscripts edit The Meistersingers Hof oder Wendelweise is Walther s Wiener Hofton Waz wunders in der werlde vert L20 16 C 10 The Meistersingers Feiner Ton is Walther s Ottenton Herre babest ich mac wol genesen L11 6 C 4 16 18 The ascription of other melodies to Walther in the Meistersang manuscripts the Goldene Weise the Kreuzton and the Langer Ton is regarded as erroneous 16 Possible contrafactures edit The following songs by Walther share a strophic form with a French or Provencal song and Walther s texts may therefore have been written for the Romance melodies though there can be no certainty of the contrafacture 18 Uns hat der winter geschadet uber al L39 1 C 15 Quant voi les pres fuourir et blanchoir by Moniot de Paris Under der linden L39 11 C 16 the anonymous En mai au douz tens novels Muget ir schouwen waz dem meien L51 13 C 28 Quant je voi l erbe menue by Gautier d Espinal Diu welt was gelf rot unde bla L75 25 C 52 Amours et bone volonte by Gautier d Espinal Fro Welt ir sult dem wirte sagen L100 24 C 70 Onques mais nus hons de chanta by Blondel de Nesle Wol mich der stunde daz ich sie erkande L110 33 C 78 Qan vei la flor by Bernart de Ventadorn Lost manuscripts with melodies edit There is evidence that the surviving volume of the Jenaer Liederhandschrift was originally accompanied by another with melodies for Walther s Leich and some Spruche 19 Further manuscript fragments containing melodies in the possession of Bernhard Joseph Docen hence the Docen fragments were inspected by von der Hagen early in the 19th century but are now lost 9 Legacy editAssessment edit A contemporary assessment of Walther s songs comes from Gottfried von Strassburg who unlike modern commentators was able to evaluate Walther s achievements as composer and performer and who writing in the first decade of the 13th century proposed him as the leader of the Minnesanger after the death of Reinmar diu von der vogelweide hi wie diu ueber heide mit hoher stimme schellet waz wunders si stellet wie spaehes organieret wies ir sanc wandelieret ich meine aber in dem done da her von zytherone da diu gotinne minne gebiutet uf und inne diust da ze hove kameraerin the Nightingale of Vogelweide How she carols over the heath in her high clear voice What marvels she performs How deftly she sings in organon How she varies her singing from one compass to another in that mode I mean which has come down to us from Cythaeron on whose slopes and in whose caves the Goddess of Love holds sway She is Mistress of the Chamber there at court Tristan ll 4801 11 Trans A T Hatto 20 Grove Music Online evaluates Walther s work as follows nbsp Monument to Walther von der Vogelweide in Bozen from 1889He is regarded as one of the most outstanding and innovative authors of his generation His poetic oeuvre is the most varied of his time and his poetry treats a number of subjects adopting frequently contradictory positions In his work he freed Minnesang from the traditional patterns of motifs and restricting social function and transformed it into genuinely experienced and yet universally valid love poetry 21 Will Hasty s evaluation of the love songs is that Walther s main contribution to the German love lyric was to increase the range of roles that could be adopted by the singer and his beloved and to lend the depiction of the experience of love new immediacy and vibrancy 22 Of the political works Hasty concludes that In Walther s political and didactic poetry we again observe a consummately versatile poetic voice one which finds new ways to give artistic expression to experience despite the constraints of the taste of audiences and patrons and by the authority of literary conventions 23 Reception edit nbsp Walther is one of the contestants in this depiction in the Codex Manesse of the SangerkriegWalther is one of the traditional competitors in the tale of the song contest at the Wartburg He appears in medieval accounts and continues to be mentioned in more modern versions of the story such as that in Richard Wagner s Tannhauser He is also named by Walther von Stolzing the hero of Wagner s Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg as his poetic model 24 Walter is mentioned in Samuel Beckett s short story The Calmative Seeing a stone seat by the kerb I sat down and crossed my legs like Walther 25 In 1975 the German poet Peter Ruhmkorf published Walther von der Vogelweide Klopstock und ich in which he provided modernised and colloquial verse translations of 34 songs by Walther accompanied by commentary 26 27 Historical fiction with Walther in a major role includes Eberhard Hilscher s 1976 work Der Morgenstern oder die vier Verwandlungen eines Mannes genannt Walther von der Vogelweide The Morning Star or the Four Metamorphoses of a man called Walther von der Vogelweide and two novels about Frederick II Waltraud Lewin s Federico 1984 and Horst Stern s Mann aus Apulien 1986 28 In 2013 the Galleria Lia Rumma in Naples exhibited a series of works by Anselm Kiefer two large paintings and a group of books relating to Under der linden under the title Walther von der Vogelweide fur Lia 29 30 Commemoration edit In 1889 a statue of Walther was unveiled in a square in Bolzano see above which was subsequently renamed the Walther von der Vogelweide Platz Under fascist rule the statue was moved to a less prominent site but it was restored to its original location in 1981 24 31 There are two statues of Walther in fountains in Wurzburg one near the Wurzburg Residence and another in the Walther Schule 32 There are also statues in Weissensee Thuringia Sankt Veit an der Glan and Innsbruck in Austria and Duchcov in the Czech Republic Statues nbsp Statue at Weissensee Thuringia nbsp The Franconia Fountain Wurzburg Germany nbsp Fountain in the Walther Schule Wurzburg nbsp Fountain on main square in Sankt Veit an der Glan Austria nbsp Statue in Duchcov Czech Republic nbsp Statue in the Waltherpark Innsbruck AustriaApart from his grave in Wurzburg there are also memorials in the Knull Storkenberg nature reserve Halle Westfalia Herlheim Franconia the Walhalla memorial 33 near Regensburg Lajen South Tyrol 34 Zwettl 35 Gmunden and the ruined Modling Castle all in Austria Memorials nbsp Memorial in Halle Westfalia nbsp Memorial in Herlheim nbsp Memorial of Walther s stay at Modling Castle nbsp Memorial in Gmunden AustriaThere are schools named after him in Bozen 36 Aschbach Markt 37 and Wurzburg 32 Editions edit nbsp Lachmann Karl Die Gedichte Walthers von der Vogelweide Berlin 1827 p 39 There have been more scholarly editions of Walther s works than of any other medieval German poet s a reflection of both his importance to literary history and the complex manuscript tradition 38 The following highly selective list includes only the seminal 19th Century edition of Lachmann and the most important recent editions A history of the main editions will be found in the introduction to the Lachmann Cormeau Bein edition Consistent reference to Walther s songs is made by means of Lachmann numbers which are formed of an L for Lachmann followed by the page and line number in Lachmann s edition of 1827 39 Thus Under der linden which starts on line 11 on page 39 of that edition shown in the page image right is referred to as L39 11 and the second line of the first strophe is L39 12 etc 40 All serious editions and translations of Walther s songs either give the Lachmann numbers alongside the text or provide a concordance of Lachmann numbers for the poems in the edition or translation Lachmann Karl ed 1827 Die Gedichte Walthers von der Vogelweide Berlin G Reimer The first scholarly edition and continually revised since 1827 However the revised editions edited by Carl von Kraus between 1936 and 1959 are now considered out of keeping with modern editorial principles 41 The most recent update now the standard edition of Walther s works is Lachmann Karl Cormeau Christoph Bein Thomas eds 2023 Walther von der Vogelweide Leich Lieder Sangspruche 16th ed De Gruyter doi 10 1515 9783110980608 ISBN 9783110980608 von der Hagen Friedrich Heinrich ed 1838 Minnesinger Deutsche Liederdichter des 12 13 und 14 Jahrhunderts Vol 1 Leipzig Barth pp 222 279 Retrieved 19 July 2017 Includes all Walther s songs known at the time Paul Hermann Ranawake Silvia eds 1997 Walther von der Vogelweide Gedichte Altdeutsche Textbibliothek 1 Vol I Der Spruchdichter 11th ed Berlin De Gruyter ISBN 3 484 20110 X Schweikle Gunther Bauschke Hartung Ricarda eds 2009 Walther von der Vogelweide Werke Gesamtausgabe Mittelhochdeutsch Neuhochdeutsch Reclams Universal Bibliothek 819 Vol 1 Spruchlyrik 3rd ed Stuttgart Reclam ISBN 978 3150008195 Schweikle Gunther Bauschke Hartung Ricarda eds 2011 Walther von der Vogelweide Werke Gesamtausgabe Mittelhochdeutsch Neuhochdeutsch Reclams Universal Bibliothek 820 Vol 2 Liedlyrik 2nd ed Stuttgart Reclam ISBN 978 3150008201 Translations editModern German edit Simrock Karl 1833 Gedichte Walthers von der Vogelweide ubersetzt von Karl Simrock und erlauterert von Wilhelm Wackernagel Berlin Verse translation The 1894 edition The 1906 edition lacking the commentary Zooman Richard 1907 Walther von der Vogelweide Gedichte Berlin Wilhelm Borngraber Translation only but with Lachmann numbers Spechtler Franz Viktor 2003 Walther von der Vogelweide Samtliche Gedichte Klagenfurt Wieser ISBN 978 3 85129 390 6 Kasten Ingrid ed 2005 Deutsche Lyrik des fruhen und hohen Mittelalters Texte und Kommentare Translated by Kuhn Margherita 2nd ed Frankfurt am Main Deutscher Klassiker Verlag ISBN 978 3 618 68006 2 Includes many of Walther s songs Wapnewski Peter 2008 Walther von der Vogelweide Gedichte Mittelhochdeutscher Text und Ubertragung Frankfurt am Main Fischer Taschenbuch ISBN 978 3596900589 Brunner Horst 2012 Walther von der Vogelweide Gedichte Auswahl Mittelhochdeutsch Neuhochdeutsch Stuttgart Reclam ISBN 978 3150108802 Schweikle s two volume edition listed above includes parallel translation English edit Phillips Walter Alison 1896 Selected poems of Walther von der Vogelweide the minnesinger London Smith Elder Translation only Zeydel Edwin H Morgan Bayard Quincy 1952 Poems of Walther von der Vogelweide Thirty New English Renderings in the Original Forms with the Middle High German texts Selected Modern German Translations Ithaca NY Thrift Richey Margaret Fitzgerald 1967 Selected poems of Walther von der Vogelweide edited with introduction notes and vocabulary 4th ed Oxford Basil Blackwell ISBN 9780631018209 Goldin Frederick 2003 Walther von der Vogelweide The Single Stanza Lyrics Edited and Translated with Introduction and Commentary Routledge Medieval Texts Book 2 New York Routledge ISBN 041594337X Parallel text contains only the political songs Dictionary editMeessen Dorte 2023 Walther von der Vogelweide Worterbuch Berlin Boston De Gruyter doi 10 1515 9783110776508 ISBN 978 3 11 077650 8 See also editAlbrecht von Johansdorf Individual songs Ir sult sprechen willekomen Palastinalied Under der lindenReferences edit Brunner 2012 p back cover a b c d e f g Phillips 1911 p 299 Scholz 2005 Chapter 4 Thum 1977 pp 229f Thum 1981 Stoess Paul 1945 p 102 Phillips 1911 pp 299 300 a b c d Scholz 2005 Chapter 1 2 Lachmann Cormeau amp Bein 2013 p XXVI sfn error no target CITEREFLachmannCormeauBein2013 help Lachmann Cormeau amp Bein 2013 p XXVIII sfn error no target CITEREFLachmannCormeauBein2013 help Lachmann Cormeau amp Bein 2013 p XXIX XXX sfn error no target CITEREFLachmannCormeauBein2013 help Lachmann Cormeau amp Bein 2013 p XXVI XLV has a complete and up to date list the most recent manuscript discovery dates from the 1980s sfn error no target CITEREFLachmannCormeauBein2013 help a b Hahn 1989 p 668 a b Brunner 2013 p L a b c Scholz 2005 Chapter 1 5 Brunner 2013 p LI a b Brunner 2013 p LII Lachmann Cormeau amp Bein 2013 p XXXV sfn error no target CITEREFLachmannCormeauBein2013 help Hatto 1960 p 107 Klaper Hasty 2006 p 113 Hasty 2006 p 117 a b Brunner et al 1996 pp 235 Beckett 1946 Ruhmkorf 1975 Wapnewski 1976 Brunner et al 1996 pp 249 50 Artsy 2013 Art in Progress 2013 Obermair 2015 a b WurzburgWiki Purucker Burgenverzeichnis Sudtirols Alamy Gymnasium Walther von der Vogelweide Bozen Volksschule Aschbach Markt Lachmann Cormeau amp Bein 2013 p XCII sfn error no target CITEREFLachmannCormeauBein2013 help Klinck 2004 p 163 Brunner et al 1996 p 39 Lachmann Cormeau amp Bein 2013 p LXXXVI sfn error no target CITEREFLachmannCormeauBein2013 help Sources editAlamy Stock Photo Zwettl Memorial stone at the alleged birthplace of Walter von der Vogelweide Alamy Retrieved 27 August 2017 Art in Progress 20 November 2013 Anselm Kiefer Walther von der Vogelweide fur Lia Art in Progress Retrieved 19 August 2017 Artsy 2013 ANSELM KIEFER Walther von der Vogelweide fur Lia Artsy Retrieved 19 August 2017 Beckett Samuel 1946 The Calmative Stories and Texts for Nothing Brunner Horst 2013 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 Brunner Horst Hahn Gerhard Muller Ulrich Spechtler Franz Viktor 1996 Walther von der Vogelweide Epoche Werk Wirkung Munich Beck ISBN 3 406 39779 4 Burgenverzeichnis Sudtirols Vogelweidhof in Lajen Ried Burgenverzeichnis Sudtirols Archived from the original on 1 December 2015 Retrieved 27 August 2017 Gymnasium Walther von der Vogelweide Bozen Home Page Retrieved 27 August 2017 Hahn G 1989 Walther von der Vogelweide In Ruh K Keil G Schroder W eds Die deutsche Literatur des Mittelalters Verfasserlexikon Vol 10 Berlin New York Walter De Gruyter pp 666 697 ISBN 978 3 11 022248 7 Hasty Will 2006 Walther von der Vogelweide In Hasty Will ed German Literature of the High Middle Ages Camden House History of German Literature 3 Rochester New York Woodbridge Suffolk Camden House pp 109 120 ISBN 1 57113 173 6 Hatto A T 1960 Gottfried von Strassburg Tristan translated entire for the first time London Penguin ISBN 0 14 044098 4 Horner Helmut 2006 Stammt Walther von der Vogelweide wirklich aus dem Waldviertel Das Waldviertel in German 55 1 13 21 Klaper Michael Walther von der Vogelweide Grove Music Online Oxford University Press Retrieved 11 August 2017 Klinck Anne L 2004 Anthology of Ancient Medieval Woman s Song New York Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 1 4039 6310 X Paul Hermann ed 1945 Die Gedichte Walthers von der Vogelweide Besorgt von Albert Leitzmann in German 6th ed Halle Niemeyer Verlag p 102 Obermair Hannes 2015 Walthers Dichterexil vor 80 Jahren PDF Das Exponat des Monats des Stadtarchivs Bozen No 46 Stadtarchiv Bozen published October 2015 Retrieved 29 August 2017 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Phillips Walter Alison 1911 Walther von der Vogelweide In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 299 300 Purucker Erwin Die Walhalla panoptikum net Retrieved 27 August 2017 Ruhmkorf Peter 1975 Walther von der Vogelweide Klopstock und ich Reinbek Rowohlt ISBN 9783499250651 Scholz Manfred Gunter 2005 Walther von der Vogelweide Sammlung Metzler 316 2nd ed Stuttgart Metzler ISBN 978 3 476 12316 9 Schumacher Meinolf 2000 Die Welt im Dialog mit dem alternden Sanger Walthers Absagelied Fro Welt ir sult dem wirte sagen L 100 24 Wirkendes Wort in German 50 169 188 PDF Stoess Wolfgang Was von Katzenelnbogen ubrig blieb What remained of Katzenelnbogen Graf v Katzenelnbogen in German Thum Bernd 1977 Die sogenannte Alterselegie Walthers von der Vogelweide und die Krise des Landesausbaus im 13 Jahrhundert unter besonderer Berucksichtigung des Donauraums In Kaiser Gert ed Literatur Publikum Historischer Kontext Beitrage zur alteren deutschen Literaturgeschichte in German Vol 1 Bern pp 229 et seq ISBN 978 3 261 02923 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Thum Bernd 1981 Walther von der Vogelweide und das werdende Land Osterreich In Wolfram Herwig Brunner Karl eds Die Kuenringer Das Werden des Landes Osterreich Stift Zwettl 16 Mai 26 Oktober 1981 Katalog des Niederosterreichischen Landesmuseums in German Amt der Niederosterreichischen Landesregierung pp 487 495 Volksschule Aschbach Markt Eine Chronik der Volksschule Aschbach Markt Retrieved 27 August 2017 Wapnewski Peter 5 March 1976 Zwischen Freund Hein und Heine Die Zeit Hamburg Retrieved 19 August 2017 WurzburgWiki Walther Schule Retrieved 27 August 2017 Further reading editJones George F 1968 Walther von der Vogelweide Twayne s World Authors 46 New York Twayne Sayce Olive 1981 Mediaeval German Lyric 1150 1300 The Development of Its Themes and Forms in Their European Context Oxford Oxford University ISBN 978 0198157724 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Walther von der Vogelweide nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Walther von der Vogelweide nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Walther von der Vogelweide Bibliography edit Works by Walther von der Vogelweide at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Walther von der Vogelweide at Internet Archive Works by Walther von der Vogelweide at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Literature by and about Walther von der Vogelweide in the German National Library catalogue Works by and about Walther von der Vogelweide in the Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek German Digital Library Works by Walther von der Vogelweide at Projekt Gutenberg DE in German Free University of Berlin Annotated links at the Wayback Machine archived January 1 2016 Walther von der Vogelweide Repertorium Historical Sources of the German Middle Ages Geschichtsquellen des deutschen Mittelalters Manuscripts edit Handschriftencensus Walther von der Vogelweide Kleine Heidelberger Liederhandschrift A Description Digital facsimile University Library Heidelberg Weingarten Manuscript B Description Digital facsimile Wurttembergische Landesbibliothek Stuttgart Grosse Heidelberger Liederhandschrift Manesse Codex C Description Digital facsimile University Library Heidelberg Wurzburg Manuscript E Description Digital facsimile University Library Munich Carmina Burana MS M Description Digital facsimile University Library Munich Kremsmunster Stiftsbibl Cod 127 N Description Munster Fragment Z Description Digital facsimile University Library Jena The Songs edit Texts edit Bibliotheca Augustana puella bella seven songs within a study on female beauty in Minnesang Poemhunter English verse translations of 16 songs Graeme Dunphy English verse translations of two songs My Poetic Side English verse translations of four songsMusic edit Discogs Walther Von Der Vogelweide Discography The Salzburger Ensemble fur Alte Musik Under der linden Palastinalied Portals nbsp Classical music nbsp Biography nbsp Music nbsp Poetry Retrieved 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