Puneet Varma (Editor)

1370s in poetry

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Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

Contents

Works published

1375:

  • Barbour composed The Brus under the probable commission of Robert II in Scotland. The poem is an innovative blend of vernacular romance and chronicle genres.
  • Births

    Death years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article. There are conflicting or unreliable sources for the birth years of many people born in this period; where sources conflict, the poet is listed again and the conflict is noted:

    1370:

  • Andrea da Barberino (died 1431), Italian writer and poet
  • John Lydgate (died 1451), English monk and poet
  • Felip de Malla (died 1431), Catalan prelate, theologian, scholastic, orator, classical scholar, and poet
  • 1375:

  • Andreu Febrer (died 1444), Catalan Spanish translator of the Divine Comedy
  • 1377:

  • Nund Reshi (died 1440), Indian, Kashmiri-language poet
  • Deaths

    Birth years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:

    1370:

  • Vedanta Desika (born 1269), poet, devotee, philosopher and master-teacher
  • 1372:

  • Seán Mór Ó Dubhagáin, Irish poet
  • 1374:

  • Gao Qi (born 1336), Chinese poet of the Ming dynasty
  • Petrarch (born 1304), Italian scholar, poet and one of the earliest Renaissance humanists
  • 1375:

  • Chūgan Engetsu (born 1300), Japanese poet, occupies a prominent place in Japanese Literature of the Five Mountains
  • 1377:

  • Guillaume de Machaut (born c. 1300) French poet and composer, perhaps the most influential composer of the Middle Ages
  • References

    1370s in poetry Wikipedia