Charlemagne Materials
Copyright 2005 by Scott Pavelle a/k/a Brion Enkazi

Welcome to the Charlemagne Homepage
Of Scott Pavelle a/k/a Brion Enkazi

COPYRIGHTS AND PERMISSIONS

If you found this page you probably know what it’s about, but just in case you don’t I’ll offer this brief introduction.

In my real life I’m a
business attorney in Pittsburgh, PA.  One of my hobbies is the study of the Carolingian (i.e., Charlemagne)[1] cycle of medieval romances (a/k/a Chansons de Geste, or ‘Songs of Deeds’).  I am what you might call an informed and interested amateur.  I neither speak nor read French, let alone medieval French or its various dialects, but I have read a good bit of that was published in English and a fair amount of the accessible commentary.

My interest began with William Caxton’s 1485 book Lyf of the Great and Crysten Prince Charles the Great, which he translated from a 13th century French work called the Speculum Historiale.[2]  On something halfway between a whim and an obsession, I decided to take this story and re-write it for the modern ear.  The result was a serial in my local SCA newsletter that I’ve since compiled into the book Charlemagne and the Admiral of Spain.

My current project is to do the same thing with Caxton’s 1489 book The Right Plesaunt and Goodly Historie of the Foure Sonnes of Aymon.  The results to date are available under the title The Four Sons of Aimon.

Over the course of putting all this together I’ve also compiled a wealth of backstories, character sketches, history (real and mythic), timelines, family trees, maps, on-line resources, and other assorted background materials.  Those are what you’ll find by pursuing the links set forth below.

Have fun, and please feel more than free to write with any thoughts, comments, commentary, or critique you’d care to add.  I’ve a good thick skin and love to learn.

Scott Pavelle

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CHARLEMAGNE AND THE ADMIRAL OF SPAIN

ADMIRAL OF SPAIN HOMEPAGE
INTRODUCTION

TABLE OF CHARACTERS
CHAPTER 1 - Oliver & Fierabras

Notes for Chapter 1

CHAPTER 2 - Captures & Rescues

Notes for Chapter 2

CHAPTER 3 - The Tower

Notes for Chapter 3

CHAPTER 4 - The Ride of Richard of Normandy

Notes for Chapter 4

CHAPTER 5 - The Battle of Mantryble Bridge

Notes for Chapter 5

CHAPTER 6 - The Final Assault

Notes for Chapter 6

CHAPTER 7 - The Battle of Aygremore

Notes for Chapter 7

AFTERWORD

PREQUEL - The Destruction of Rome - I worked from Caxton, who was himself translating an incomplete work.  Here is a prose version I’ve adapted from the romance “The Sultan of Babylon”  My kind thanks to Professor Alan Lupack and the good folk at TEAMS (the Consortium for the Teaching of the Middle Ages) for allowing me to provide it here.  NOTE:  There are extra copyright limitations on this page.

SOURCE – Caxton’s The Lyf Of the Noble and Crysten Prince Charles the Grete - (As published by the Early English Text Society Extra Series in 1880-1881).

CHARLEMAGNE AND THE FOUR SONS OF AIMON 

FOUR SONS OF AIMON HOMEPAGE
INTRODUCTION PART 1 - What Has Gone Before

INTRODUCTION PART 2 - The Shadow of the Merovingians
INTRODUCTION PART 1 - Geography, a Key Concern
TABLE OF CHARACTERS


BACKSTORIES

The Role of Duke Naymon (original)
Milon & Berta (Twisted From Tradition)
The Origin of Ganelon (Original)
The Origins of Roland & Oliver (Twisted From Tradition)
The Knighting of Ogier the Dane (Traditional)
A Roland for an Oliver (Traditional)
Roland and Ferragus (Twisted From Tradition)

CHARACTER SKETCHES

Admiral of Spain Character Sketches
Four Sons of Aimon Character Sketches
Maugis of Aigremont, the Fairy Knight
Ogier the Dane (Longfellow's poem "Charlemagne" from Tales of a Wayside Inn)


HISTORIES

A Summary History of the Merovingians
A Mythic History of the Merovingians

TIMELINES

A Timeline of the Carolingian Romances (WARNING: Has some spoilers).
Four Sons of Aimon Timeline (WARNING: This is almost entirely a spoiler).

FAMILY TREES

Charlemagne - Historical
Charlemagne - Mythic
Four Sons of Aimon

MAPS

Charlemagne's Empire
The Paris-to-Aix Region and MontessorMontessor was the first castle built by the Four Sons of Aimon.  It is also known a "Mountainford".
Charlemagne’s Europe

ON-LINE RESOURCES

Bullfinch’s Legends of Charlemagne

William Caxton’s 1485 “Lyf of the Noble and Crysten Prince Charles the Grete”

(The source for my book “Charlemagne and the Admiral of Spain”)

Einhard’s Life of Charlemagne (Historic)
Gregory of Tours’ “History of the Franks”
TEAMS – The Consortium for Teaching of the Middle Ages (on-line texts)

Ralph the Collier (A truly miscellaneous tale)
Sege of Melayne (The story focused on Archbishop Turpin)
Sultan of Babylon (Caxton translated part II of this story into his Charles the Grete)

OTHER ASSORTED BACKGROUND MATERIALS



[1] “Charlemagne” means “Charles the Great.” “Carolingian” comes from “Carolus,” the Latin form of Charles.

[2] Caxton’s book was re-published and is currently available as volumes 36 and 37 of the Early English Text Society Extra Series (reprinted as one volume 1967), or on-line at http://charlemagne.celtic–twilight.com/caxton_ch/index.htm.  Other versions of the same story were published under the title Sir Ferumbras (EETS vol. 34) and as part of the Romance of The Sultan of Babylon.  Both are somewhat less readable than Caxton.


Scott P. Pavelle, Esq.
355 Fifth Avenue
Suite 1200
Pittsburgh, PA 15222
Direct: (412) 325-2535
Front Office: (412) 391-2515
Fax: (412) 291-3365
E-mail #1:
sppksp@acba.org
E-mail #2: scottp@pavellelaw.com
Web Page: www.PavelleLaw.com

 
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