The issue describes the literary profusion (manuscripts and printed works) that characterised the court of Burgundy and in particular that of the "Grand Duke of the West, Philip the Good", whose bookshop was particularly well-stocked with works produced in the region of the "Burgundian Low Countries", around the towns of Lille, Bruges and Antwerp. Read More
In this issue, the journal nord' presents the prolific literature of northern France and the "Burgundian Netherlands" in the 15th and early 16th centuries. Under the reign of the Dukes of Burgundy, the region produced a large number of texts (novels, prose settings, history, travel accounts, etc.) that demonstrate the vitality of literary creation in this region, supported by the production of illuminated manuscripts of great decorative richness, much of it intended to glorify the Dukes of Burgundy, patrons of the authors and the production workshops.
Introduction. Pourquoi parle-t-on d'une littérature « bourguignonne » dans le Nord de la France ?
Jean Devaux
Articles
Le rapport texte-images dans les manuscrits illustrés par le Maître de Wavrin
Rosalind Brown-Grant
La mise en prose de la Manekine de Philippe de Remi par Jean Wauquelin
Marie-Madeleine Castellani
Paris et Vienne : un manuscrit, trois incunables
Maria Colombo Timelli
La Danse des aveugles de Pierre Michault (ms. Lille, BM, 342)
Catherine Dhérent
Le roman de Perceforest
Christine Ferlampin-Acher
Le pèlerinage en Terre Sainte de Jacques Le Saige, marchand de Douai (1518)
Pascale Girboux
Les enfances des héros dans la collection de romans de chevalerie en prose réunie par Jean de Wavrin (XVe siècle)
Matthieu Marchal
Gilles de Chin et Le Chastellain de Coucy (ms. Lille, BM, Godefroy, 50)
Aimé Petit
Les textes sur la mort dans la littérature bourguignonne
Danielle Quéruel
Varia
Édouard Cassagnaux, romantique amiénois
Ronan Dargent