Jacques de Cambrai

Jacques de Cambrai

Genres: french, medieval folk, trouvere, folk, troubadour

About Jacques de Cambrai

Jacques de Cambrai was a thirteenth-century French trouvère active in the cultural milieu of northern France, especially around the city of Cambrai, with a floruit conventionally placed between c. 1260 and c. 1280. His oeuvre, preserved in medieval chansonniers, encompasses a modest but distinctive repertory of secular and devotional lyric, including chansons courtoises (courtly love songs), a pastourelle (a narrative song form), a Marian rotrouenge (devotional song on the Virgin), and several chansons with religious devotion as their theme. The principal manuscript preserving his works — notably a Bern manuscript — contains the majority of these pieces, which at least in the way they are transmitted appear as contrafacta, that is, texts set to or modelled on the music of other named trouvères of his time, such as Theobald I of Navarre, Colart le Boutellier, Raoul de Soissons, Gace Brulé, and Gautier d’Espinal. Among these compositions, Retrowange novelle, a Marian rotrouenge, stands out in the sources for lacking an explicit model and is directly attributed to him. Jacques de Cambrai’s devotional songs are notable in the context of the late medieval French lyric for their emphasis on the humanity and Passion of Christ and on devotion to the Virgin, situating him among the last generation of trouvères to articulate such themes in a chanson context before the later dominance of other vernacular genres.

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