Ysengrimus is a Latin fabliau and mock epic, containing a series of anthropomorphic fables thought to have been written in 1148 or 1149 CE by the poet Nivardus. Its chief character is Isengrim, the Wolf. The plot describes how the trickster figure Reynard, the Fox, overcomes Isengrim's various schemes.

Ysengrimus, from a 12th-century MS in the Bibliothèque nationale de France.

Author

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The text is written anonymously in the manuscripts containing the entire work. Florilegia[clarification needed] and medieval catalogs give the author's name variously as "Magister Nivardus", "Balduinus Cecus" (Baldwin the Blind), and "Bernard".[1] Little is known about Nivardus. It is believed that he lived in the 12th century, and was closely connected to the city of Ghent.[2]

The poem

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The Ysengrimus draws on earlier traditions of beast fable in Latin, such as the 11th-century Ecbasis captivi.[3] In the Ecbasis, the now traditional opposition of wolf and fox appears. The Ysengrimus is the most extensive anthropomorphic beast fable extant in Latin, and it marks the first appearance in Latin literature of the traditional names "Reinardus" and "Ysengrimus". The poem runs to 6,574 lines of elegiac couplets.[4] The Ysengrimus is divided into seven books, which contain twelve or fourteen tales; opinions differ on how to divide them. Other beast fables were written by other medieval Latin authors, including Odo of Cheriton; the Ysengrimus is the most extensive collection of this material either in Latin or in any vernacular.

The poem mixes medieval and classical Latin imitations and parts of it are written in a curious, difficult style featuring obscure verb forms such as deponent imperatives. These stylistic curiosities reflect neither deliberate obscurantism nor lack of poetic talent, rather, they serve as means of characterization. The poet places them on the lips of the trickster Reinardus, who is intended to be deceptive, and whose statements contain deliberate ambiguity. Ysengrimus is made to speak in a similar style when he is lying. But when he has been deceived into a predicament, he speaks plainly.

 
Fox (left) versus wolf (right), in a miniature (BnF, Paris, MS fr. 1581f. 6v) from Renart le Nouvel by Jacquemart Giélée (1290/1300)

In the opening episode of Ysengrimus, the wolf manages to successfully deceive the fox with one of his schemes; this is Ysengrimus's only triumph, and throughout the remaining episodes Ysengrimus is constantly being tricked or humiliated by Reinardus. The poem contains the well-known story in which Reinardus deceives Ysengrimus to go ice fishing using his tail as a net, only to get it frozen into the lake. When Reinardus mockingly urges Ysengrimus to get up quickly, Ysengrimus says:

Captus ad hec captor: "Nescis quid, perfide, dicas. Clunibus impendet Scotia tota meis."
(The prisoner said this to his captor: "You don't know what you're saying, deceiver. I have all of Scotland hanging from my buttocks.")

Interpretation

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Ysengrimus is usually held to be an allegory for the corrupt monks of the Roman Catholic Church. His greed is what typically causes him to be led astray. He is given to say that he will absolve the sins of the other characters.[5] Reinardus, by contrast, represents the poor and the lowly; he triumphs over Ysengrimus with his wits.

Nivardus deals with a subject that received extensive treatment in European popular culture during the Middle Ages and the early modern period. The characters, Ysengrimus and Reinardus, were clearly well-developed by the time he wrote his epic. Later treatments, however, usually featured Reynardus and relegated Ysengrimus the wolf to the menagerie of stock characters that served as Reynardus's supporting cast. They went on to appear in most Western European vernaculars, including French, Dutch, and English. A version of the Reynard stories was one of the first English printed books, made by William Caxton.

References

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  1. ^ Full discussion of authorship at Mann, 1987, 156-81.
  2. ^ Garland, Henry; Garland, Mary (1997), "Nivardus of Ghent", The Oxford Companion to German Literature, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/acref/9780198158967.001.0001, ISBN 978-0-19-815896-7, retrieved 2022-12-10
  3. ^ "Ecbasis captivi | Latin beast epic | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2022-12-10.
  4. ^ "Actaeon's Dogs in Ovid's Metamorphoses, and the Wolf Pack in Ysengrimus". scholar.googleusercontent.com. Retrieved 2023-04-09.
  5. ^ Nivardus of Ghent (1987). Ysengrimus. Translated by Mann, Jill. Leiden: Brill. p. 73. ISBN 9004081038. Retrieved 11 June 2019.

Further reading

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  • Harrington, K.P., and Pucci, Joseph. Medieval Latin (2d. edition, Univ. Chicago, 1997) ISBN 0-226-31713-7
  • Mann, Jill, "Beast epic and fable"; in Medieval Latin, an Introduction and Bibliographical Guide, Frank A. C. Mantello and Arthur G. Rigg, editors. (Catholic University of America, 1996) ISBN 0-8132-0842-4
  • Voigt, Ernst, Ysengrimus (Halle, 1884)
  • J. M. Ziolkowski, Talking Animals: Medieval Latin Beast Poetry 750-1150, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1993.
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