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Jean II de Trie (''c''. 1225 – 11 July 1302) was the first of his name (John I) and second of his house to be Count of Dammartin. He succeeded his father, Mathieu, in Dammartin and as lord of Trie and Mouchy, on the latter's death in 1272. He is the same person as the trouvère Jehan de Trie, to whom two surviving ''chansons courtoises'' have been attributed. One of these, ''Bone dame me prie de chanter'', is also sometimes attributed to Theobald I of Navarre or Gace Brulé. The other, ''Li lons consirs et la grans volentés'', is undisputed. Both are isometric, decasyllabic, and Dorian, set in bar form and beginning with the leading-tone (the seventh degree). At one place in ''Bone dame'' there occurs the highly unusual octave leap downwards. John died near Courtrai in the Battle of the Golden Spurs, fighting on the side of the French against the Flemings, on 11 July 1302. He had married first Ermengarde, then Yolande, daughter of John I of Dreux. The latter bore him two children: Renaud, who succeeded him, and Mahaut, who in 1298 married Henry de Vergy (died 1333). ==Bibliography== *Thierry Claerr. "Jean de Trie, comte de Dammartin et poète lyrique du XIIIe. siècle, est-il le héros du ''Roman de Jehan de Dammartin et Blonde d'Oxford''?" ''Romania'', 117:1–2 (1999), 258–72. *William J. Courtenay. "Between Pope and King: The Parisian Letters of Adhesion of 1303." ''Speculum'', 71:3 (1996), 577–605. *Holger Petersen Dyggve. ''Trouvères et protecteurs de trouvères dans les cours seigneuriales de France''. Helsinki, 1942. *Theodore Karp. ("Jehan de Trie." ) ''Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online.'' Accessed 20 September 2008. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「John I, Count of Dammartin」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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