Joseph of Exeter

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Joseph of Exeter was a twelfth-century

Gueldres, where he began his lifelong friendship with Guibert, who later became Abbot of Florennes
. Some of their correspondence still survives.

His most famous poem is

Antiocheis, of which only fragments survive.[3]
Several other poems, now lost, have been attributed to him, but there is no way of knowing if they were actually his work.

Notes

  1. ^ "Joseph of Exeter", in Douglas Gray, ed., The Oxford Companion to Chaucer (Oxford University Press, 2003 [online 2005]).
  2. .
  3. p. 210

References