Simon D’Authie
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Simon d'Authie or d'Autie (born 1180/90; died after 1235) was a lawyer, priest and
Old French Old French (, , ; Modern French: ) was the language spoken in most of the northern half of France from approximately the 8th to the 14th centuries. Rather than a unified language, Old French was a linkage of Romance dialects, mutually intelligib ...
''
trouvère ''Trouvère'' (, ), sometimes spelled ''trouveur'' (, ), is the Northern French (''langue d'oïl'') form of the ''langue d'oc'' (Occitan) word ''trobador'', the precursor of the modern French word ''troubadour''. ''Trouvère'' refers to poet- ...
''. He was from Authie, and died at
Amiens Amiens (English: or ; ; pcd, Anmien, or ) is a city and commune in northern France, located north of Paris and south-west of Lille. It is the capital of the Somme department in the region of Hauts-de-France. In 2021, the population of ...
. Up to eleven songs are attributed to him, but only five are certain. He is also the respondent in three jeux-partis. From at least 1223 Simon served as a canon, and in 1228 as dean of the chapter, at
Amiens Cathedral , image = 0 Amiens - Cathédrale Notre-Dame (1).JPG , imagesize = 200px , img capt = Amiens Cathedral , pushpin map = France , pushpin label position = below , coordinates = , country ...
. He worked as a lawyer for the Abbey of Saint Vaast in a lawsuit against lay assessors (1222–26) and a case involving the chapter of
Arras Cathedral Arras Cathedral (French language, French: ''Cathédrale Notre-Dame-et-Saint-Vaast d'Arras'') is the Catholic Church architecture, church in the city of Arras, France. The cathedral is the seat of the Bishops of Arras. History The original cathedra ...
(1232). Simon was respondent in a ''
jeu-parti The ''jeu-parti'' (plural ''jeux-partis'', also known as ''parture'') is a genre of French lyric poetry composed between two ''trouvères''. It is a cognate of the Occitan partimen (also known as ''partia'' or ''joc partit''). In the classic type ...
'' with Gilles le Vinier ("Maistre Simon, d'un esample nouvel") and in another two with Hue le Maronnier ("Symon, le quel emploie" and "Symon, or me faites"). The latter two were judged by the ''trouvère''
Adam de Givenchi Adam de Givenchi (floruit, fl. 1230–1268) was a trouvère, probably from Givenchy and active in and around Arras. His surname is also spelled Givenci, Gevanche, or Gievenci. Adam appears in charters of May and July 1230 as a clerk (position), ...
. Both Gilles and Adam appear in the same documents relating to Amiens and Saint Vaast.


Songs


Chansons

Eleven songs are ascribed to Simon in the standard catalogue. They have varying levels of competing attributions in other sources. The assessment of probability of his authorship below takes into account whether the ascription is in witnesses from more than one manuscript family.


Almost certainly by Simon

Despite a competing attribution to Thibaut de Champagne in TrouvC, in which the composer attributions were added slightly later and which is notoriously unreliable,See Luca Gatti, 'Author Ascriptions and Genre Labels in ''C'' ', in ''A Medieval Songbook: Trouvère MS ''C", ed.
Elizabeth Eva Leach Elizabeth Eva Leach is a British musicologist and music theorist who specializes in medieval music, especially that of the fourteenth century. Life and career Leach is a professor of music at St Hugh's College, Oxford (a constituent college o ...
, Joseph W. Mason and Matthew P. Thomson (Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell and Brewer, 2022), 75–81.
the most secure attribution is for RS525 because it is attributed to Simon in witnesses from two different independent manuscript families: TrouvM and TrouvT on the one hand and three members of the KNPX group(all but TrouvX) on the other. *RS525 ''Tant ai Amours servie et honoree''. In six manuscripts.


Probably by Simon

Six songs have a high likelihood of being by Simon but lack corroborating witnesses outside their appearance in the collection of his attributed songs in MSS TrouvM and TrouvT, which are in the same family. For five of these songs, witnesses outside that family are anonymous; for RS487 there is additionally an attribution to a composer local to the Messine manuscript TrouvC,
Gautier d'Espinal Gautier d'Espinal (also d'Epinal, d’Épinal or d'Espinau) (died before July 1272).Theodore Karp, "Gautier d'Espinal". Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/10765 (accessed 24 Dec ...
. *RS487 ''Bone amour qui m'agree''. In five manuscripts. *RS623 ''Quant la saison comence''. In two manuscripts. *RS665 ''Fols est qui a ensient''. In four manuscripts. *RS1381=1385 ''Quant li dous estes define''. In three manuscripts. *RS1415 ''Quant je voi le gaut foillir''. In two manuscripts. *RS1802 ''Li noviaus tans qui fait paroir''. In two manuscripts.


Possibly by Simon

For RS1460 the two different manuscript families are internally consistent but split in their attribution, with the KNPX group attributing it consistently to
Richard de Fournival Richard de Fournival or Richart de Fornival (1201 – ?1260) was a medieval philosopher and trouvère perhaps best known for the '' Bestiaire d'amour'' ("The Bestiary of Love"). Life Richard de Fournival was born in Amiens on October 10, 1201. He ...
, who likely overlapped with Simon at
Amiens Cathedral , image = 0 Amiens - Cathédrale Notre-Dame (1).JPG , imagesize = 200px , img capt = Amiens Cathedral , pushpin map = France , pushpin label position = below , coordinates = , country ...
. While RS183 is only in the two main sources for Simon's work, TrouvT and TrouvM, the former includes it among the run of his songs, whereas the latter attributes it to
Gace Brulé Gace Brulé (''c.'' 1160 – ''after'' 1213) was a French nobleman and trouvère from Champagne. His name is simply a description of his blazonry. He owned land in Groslière and had dealings with the Knights Templar, and received a gift from t ...
and copies it with his songs. In both cases, the likelihood of ascription must rest on factors that make the competing attribution more or less likely. *RS183 ''Li biaus estes se resclaire''. In two manuscripts. *RS1460 ''On ne peut pas a deus seigneurs servir''. In seven manuscripts.


Unlikely to be by Simon

Two songs appear to be by someone else. RS327 is attributed not to Simon but to Sauval Cosset in the two central sources for Simon's work, TrouvT and TrouvM. It also appears in three members of the KNPX group (not in TrouvX) but its attribution there varies: TrouvK and TrouvP ascribe it to Simon, but TrouvN names Jehan l'Orgueneur; TrouvC transmits it anonymously. The very widely copied song, RS882, is absent from TrouvM, anonymous in three other sources, and ascribed to the Chastelain de Couci in the three members of the KNPX group that carry it (all but TrouvN). While these two songs are similar in strength of attribution to those in the category above, the presence of more than one competing name for the former and the reduction of the later's attribution to a single witness in a large group of copies make them perhaps slightly weaker. *RS327 ''Amours qui fait de moi tout son comant''. In six manuscripts. *RS882 ''Nouvele Amours ou j'ai mis mon penser''. In seven manuscripts.


Jeux-partis (debate songs)

Simon is the respondent in three jeux-partis. Two, RS289 and RS1818, are unica and are with Hue le Maronnier, about whom nothing more is known. The third, RS572, is in two manuscripts where it is ascribed to in one of which it is clearly ascribed to Gilles le Vinier. Little is known about how the composition of jeux-partis' stanzas and melody was divided up between the two named participants; it may be that Simon is only the author of the even-numbered stanzas in which he is the 'je'. *RS289 ''Simon, lequel emploie mieus son temps'' *RS572 ''Maistre Simon, d'un essample nouvel'' *RS1818 ''Simon, or me faites savoir''


Sources

*
Theodore Karp Theodore Cyrus Karp (17 July 1926 – 5 November 2015) was an American musicologist. His principal area of study was Secular music, mainly mediaeval monophony, especially the music of the trouvères. He was a major contributor in this area to th ...

"Simon d'Authie"
''Grove Music Online''. Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press, accessed 5 April 2013 (paywalled). * Friedrich Gennrich
'Simon d’Authie: Ein pikardischer Sänger', ''Zeitschrift für romanische Philologie'' 67 (1951): 49–104
(paywalled).


References

{{Authority control Trouvères 13th-century French Roman Catholic priests Canon law jurists