Elias Cairel

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Elias Cairel from a 13th-century chansonnier

Elias Cairel (or Cayrel; fl. 1204–1222) was a

coblas capfinidas
.

Elias' vida survives in three manuscripts with a variant in a fourth designed to refute the other three.[1] According to his biographer he was gold- and silversmith and an armourer who turned to minstrelsy.[1] His singing, composition, fiddling, and speaking were reputed as "bad", but his biographer says ben escrivia motz e sons: "well he wrote words and songs", implying a distinction between his composing and his writing.[2] He supposedly returned from Romania to die in Sarlat.[1]

Elias composed his only tenso with the trobairitz Ysabella, who may have been either a high-ranking noblewoman of Italy or Greece, or perhaps just a local girl of Périgord who Elias knew in his youth. She is also the addressee of two other poems. Elias also addressed one poem to Ruiz Díaz de Coneros (Roiz Dies), a Spanish patron, and another to Conon de Béthune (Coino), a trouvère.[3] Elias may have been present at the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa in 1212.[3]

In his Toz m'era de chantar gequiz, the

Este
.


Works

  • Abril ni mai non aten de far vers
  • Era no vei puoi ni comba
  • Estat ai dos ans (addressed to Ysabella)
  • Freit ni ven, no·m posc destreigner
  • Lo rossinhols chanta tan dousamen
  • Mout mi platz lo doutz temps d'abril (addressed to Ysabella)
  • N'Elyas Cairel, de l'amor (with Ysabella)
  • Per mantener joi e chant e solatz
  • Pois chai la fuoilla del garric
  • Qan la freidors irais l'aura dousana
  • Qui saubes dar tant bon conseil denan
  • Si cum cel qe sos compaignos
  • So qe·m sol dar alegranssa
  • Totz mos cors e mos sens (addressed to Ruiz)

Sources and further reading

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Egan, 31.
  2. ^ Aubrey, 28–29.
  3. ^ a b Riquer, 1144–45.

External links