Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Poema de Fernán González

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Author(s)
  
unknown

Date
  
1250–66

Genre
  
Epic poetry

Language
  
Old Spanish

Verse form
  
cuaderna vía

Poema de Fernán González httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Also known as
  
Cantar de Fernán González Lay of Fernán González

Manuscript(s)
  
Biblioteca de El Escorial, IV-B-21 (unique)

Similar
  
Libro de Alexandre, Libro de Apolonio, Mocedades de Rodrigo, The Miracles of Our Lady, Estoria de España

The Poema de Fernán González is a Castilian epic poem, specifically, a cantar de gesta of the Mester de Clerecía. Composed in a metre called the cuaderna vía, it narrates the deeds of the historical Count of Castile, Fernán González. It was written between 1250 and 1266 by a monk of San Pedro de Arlanza. In 1960 a fourteenth-century Arab roofing tile was discovered in Merindad de Sotoscueva north of Burgos that had some verses of the poem scrawled on it in Old Spanish. It is the oldest copy of (a part of) the work.

The poem reiterates the campaigns of Fernán González against the Moors, his wars against the Kingdom of Navarre, his debates with the King of León, and his protection of San Pedro de Arlanza, where he was eventually buried. Fernán's ability to keep Castile out of the reach of the Moors, however, is most heavily stressed. The poem is designed to present Fernán as the legitimate ruler of all Spain and thus justify Castilian supremacy in the poet's own day. The opening lines express the poet's own desire:

Despite this strong ideological bent, the author was not well aware of the historical details. Very little about Fernán González has been conserved in writing and most of the stories about him were transmitted orally, developing into legend in the process. The Poema itself is conserved in only one fifteenth-century manuscript, where the mentality and language of the work attest to its thirteenth-century origins.

Text

  • Complete text at La Manticora: Revista de Textos Medievales.
  • References

    Poema de Fernán González Wikipedia