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Stephen of Rouen : ウィキペディア英語版 | Stephen of Rouen Stephen of Rouen (died c. 1169) (French ''Étienne de Rouen'', Latin ''Stephanus de Rouen'') was a Norman Benedictine monk of Bec Abbey of the twelfth century, and a chronicler and poet.〔(PDF ) p. 12〕 The dukes of Normandy commissioned and inspired epic literature to record and legitimise their rule, and Wace, Orderic Vitalis and Stephen were among those who wrote in their service. Stephen is known for his Latin verse chronicle ''Draco Normannicus'' ("Standard of the Normans"), a chronicle running from the eleventh century to 1169; it draws on Dudo of St. Quentin and William of Jumièges.:〔(ORB: The Online Reference Book for Medieval Studies )〕 Poetically it is supposed that he was influenced by the ''Ilias'' of Simon Chèvre d'Or.〔(), in French.〕 Stephen's work includes an elegy addressed to Waleran, Earl of Worcester, and he also made an abridgement of Quintilian.〔(Rhetoric and Poetry in the Renaissance, by Donald Lemen Clark, Ph.D )〕 ==References==
*Henri Omont, editor (1884) ''Le Dragon normand et autres poèmes d'Étienne de Rouen''
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