First modern edition of three Hiberno-French texts.00At the beginning of the fourteenth century, Jofroi, a brother of the Dominican house of St Saviour?s in Waterford, Ireland, translated into French and adapted from the Latin three texts: the 'De excidio Troiae' of the so-called ?Dares Phrygius?, the 'Breviarium historiae romanae' of Eutropius, and Pseudo-Aristotelian 'Secretum secretorum'. While the first two, 'La gerre de Troi' and 'Le regne des Romains' are generally close translations, 'Le secré de secrés' is much modified by omissions and interpolations of 'exempla' and scientific material. In his enterprise, Jofroi was aided and abetted by his scribe, the Walloon merchant and custos, Servais Copale. This book is the first critical edition of Jofroi?s œuvre. The texts are accompanied by a general introduction, individual introductions to each of the three texts, extensive notes, an index of proper names, and a substantial glossary. Jofroi and Servais collaborated in Waterford, not Paris, as has long been assumed, and these texts are therefore witness to the importance of French as a literary language in southeastern Ireland
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