The Count of
Provence
must eat the last, allow
That, disinherited, he's not worth a sow,
Despite how he yet defends himself, I vow
He'll eat the heart, to bear what makes him bow.
That, disinherited, he's not worth a sow,
Despite how he yet defends himself, I vow
He'll eat the heart, to bear what makes him bow.
Troubador Verse
He entered the service of Charles of Anjou, and probably accompanied him (1265) on his Naples expedition; in 1266 he was a prisoner in Naples.
The last documentary mention of him is in 1269, and he is supposed to have died in Provence.
'. . . . and the spirit all pre-occupied with self,
surged towards him from the place where it first was,
saying: 'O Mantuan, I am Sordello, of your city. '
Dante - Purgatorio VI:72-75
Planher vuelh En Blacatz en aquest leugier so
I wish to mourn Blacatz, now, in skilful song,
With dark, grieving heart, and mortal reason,
Since I lose in him so noble, fair a companion,
And all his worthiness swift to death is gone;
Now I've no hope at all, so mortal the harm,
Of any remedy, no ounce of hope, not one;
Rend his heart: let these barons eat it to a man,
Those without heart since from it heart is won.
Let the Emperor of Rome, who has most need,
Eat first of the heart, if he'd take the Milanese
By force of conquest, they checked him indeed,
He's disinherited, despite his German breed;
Then let the King of France be the next to eat:
And win that Castile he did so rashly cede;
Yet let him not, if his mother be displeased,
For he'll do nothing now, if she's not agreed.
The King of England too, who lacks all valour,
I'd wish to see him eat, gain courage, power,
So that land he dishonoured, he may recover,
Taken by France's King, who knows his blather.
Let Castile's King eat for himself, and another,
Of two kingdoms, king, and yet worth neither;
If he eats, let him do so beneath the cover,
If he's found out, he'll be beaten, by his mother.
Aragon's King, I would that he'd do the same,
Since by so doing he'd free himself from shame,
Who suffers Marseille, Millau; his mortal fame
Wins him no honour, for all he may do or claim.
I'd have the King of Navarre eat then, in name
A king though more a count, so dull his game.
What grief when God seeks to glorify the lame,
Those that lack heart and prove but weak and tame.
The Count of Toulouse, as well, must eat and how,
Knowing what he had, knowing what he has now,
If a second heart can't help his cause somehow,
His own won't help him win what's lost, I trow.
The Count of Provence must eat the last, allow
That, disinherited, he's not worth a sow,
Despite how he yet defends himself, I vow
He'll eat the heart, to bear what makes him bow.
For my song, the barons wish me ill, truly,
Yet know I'll value them as they value me.
Bel Restaur, if I only have your mercy,
I scorn men for whom I prove ill company.
Notes: Blacatz, Blacas de Blacas III (1165-1237), was feudal lord of Aups and a troubadour.
The Roman Emperor is Frederick II of Sicily. The King of France is Louis IX. The King of Castile is Ferdinand III of Castile and Leon. The King of England is Henry III. The King of Aragon is James I, cousin of Count Raymond Berenger IV. The King of Navarre is Thibaut IV of Champagne, the poet king. The Count of Toulouse is Raymond VII. The Count of Provence is Raymond Berenger.
Amilau, or Millau in Aveyron, on the banks of the Tarn, was the major source of earthenware in the Roman Empire, and site of one of the major bridges over the Tarn. Subject to the King of Aragon from 1172, it was taken by Raymond VI of Toulouse in 1222, and James I of Aragon finally ceded his rights to the town in 1258 to France. Marseille which established itself as a republic during the period was at the centre of conflict for decades. In 1246 it finally passed to Charles of Anjou, Count of Provence.
'. . . . and the spirit all pre-occupied with self,
surged towards him from the place where it first was,
saying: 'O Mantuan, I am Sordello, of your city. '
Dante - Purgatorio VI:72-75
Planher vuelh En Blacatz en aquest leugier so
I wish to mourn Blacatz, now, in skilful song,
With dark, grieving heart, and mortal reason,
Since I lose in him so noble, fair a companion,
And all his worthiness swift to death is gone;
Now I've no hope at all, so mortal the harm,
Of any remedy, no ounce of hope, not one;
Rend his heart: let these barons eat it to a man,
Those without heart since from it heart is won.
Let the Emperor of Rome, who has most need,
Eat first of the heart, if he'd take the Milanese
By force of conquest, they checked him indeed,
He's disinherited, despite his German breed;
Then let the King of France be the next to eat:
And win that Castile he did so rashly cede;
Yet let him not, if his mother be displeased,
For he'll do nothing now, if she's not agreed.
The King of England too, who lacks all valour,
I'd wish to see him eat, gain courage, power,
So that land he dishonoured, he may recover,
Taken by France's King, who knows his blather.
Let Castile's King eat for himself, and another,
Of two kingdoms, king, and yet worth neither;
If he eats, let him do so beneath the cover,
If he's found out, he'll be beaten, by his mother.
Aragon's King, I would that he'd do the same,
Since by so doing he'd free himself from shame,
Who suffers Marseille, Millau; his mortal fame
Wins him no honour, for all he may do or claim.
I'd have the King of Navarre eat then, in name
A king though more a count, so dull his game.
What grief when God seeks to glorify the lame,
Those that lack heart and prove but weak and tame.
The Count of Toulouse, as well, must eat and how,
Knowing what he had, knowing what he has now,
If a second heart can't help his cause somehow,
His own won't help him win what's lost, I trow.
The Count of Provence must eat the last, allow
That, disinherited, he's not worth a sow,
Despite how he yet defends himself, I vow
He'll eat the heart, to bear what makes him bow.
For my song, the barons wish me ill, truly,
Yet know I'll value them as they value me.
Bel Restaur, if I only have your mercy,
I scorn men for whom I prove ill company.
Notes: Blacatz, Blacas de Blacas III (1165-1237), was feudal lord of Aups and a troubadour.
The Roman Emperor is Frederick II of Sicily. The King of France is Louis IX. The King of Castile is Ferdinand III of Castile and Leon. The King of England is Henry III. The King of Aragon is James I, cousin of Count Raymond Berenger IV. The King of Navarre is Thibaut IV of Champagne, the poet king. The Count of Toulouse is Raymond VII. The Count of Provence is Raymond Berenger.
Amilau, or Millau in Aveyron, on the banks of the Tarn, was the major source of earthenware in the Roman Empire, and site of one of the major bridges over the Tarn. Subject to the King of Aragon from 1172, it was taken by Raymond VI of Toulouse in 1222, and James I of Aragon finally ceded his rights to the town in 1258 to France. Marseille which established itself as a republic during the period was at the centre of conflict for decades. In 1246 it finally passed to Charles of Anjou, Count of Provence.