Bernart Arnaut d'Armagnac

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Bernart Arnaut d'Armagnac (died 1226), also Bernard Arnaud, was a

Bernard de Fézensaguet
.

Sometime before 1217, Bernart Arnaut had a literary correspondence with the

patriarchal move to subsume a woman's identity in her man, then Lombarda's response will be seen as an assertion of her individualism. Bernart also refers to Jordan III of L'Isle-Jourdain
in his poem.

Bibliography

  • Joseph Anglade, Les troubadours de Toulouse (Toulouse: Privat, 1928) pp. 121–123
  • Matilda Tomaryn Bruckner, Laurie Shepard, and Sarah White, Songs of the Women Troubadours (New York: Garland Publishing, 1995) pp. 70–73, 169–70
  • Sarah Kay, "Derivation, derived rhyme and the trobairitz" in The voice of the trobairitz: perspectives on the women troubadours, ed. William D. Paden (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1989) pp. 157–182
  • Tilde Sankovitch, "Lombarda's reluctant mirror: speculum of another poet", in The Voice of the Trobairitz: Perspectives on the Women Troubadours, ed. William D. Paden (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1989) pp. 183–193

Notes

  1. ^ Joseph Vaissète, Histoire générale de Languedoc, vol. 5, p. 598. Bruckner, Shepard, and White, p. 170.