Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Essays
- The Current State of Research on Late-Medieval Drama: 1998–2000. Survey, Bibliography, and Reviews
- History or Fiction? The Role of Doubt in Antoine de La Sale's Le Paradis de la royne Sibille
- Drawing Conclusions: The Poetics of Closure in Alain Chartier's Verse
- Widows: Their Social and Moral Functions According to Medieval German Literature, with Special Emphasis on Erhart Gross's Witwenbuch (1446)
- Robert Henryson's Pastoral Burlesque Robene and Makyne (c. 1470)
- Late-Medieval Merchants: History, Education, Mentality, and Cultural Significance
- Grandeur et modernité de Philippe de Commynes (1447–1511)
- Who Witnessed and Narrated the 'Banquet of the Pheasant' (1454)? A Codicological Examination of the Account's Five Versions
- Medications Recommended in Incunabula
- English Knights, French Books, and Malory's Narrator
- Quatre figures féminines apocryphes dans certains Mystères de la Passion en France
- Die Bibel in der spätmittelalterlichen religiösen Gebrauchsliteratur
- Conter et juger dans les Arrêts d'Amour de Martial d'Auvergne (c.1460)
- L'Argent: cette nouvelle merveille des merveilles dans la version en prose de la Chanson d'Esclarmonde (1454)
- Magic and Superstition in a Fifteenth-Century Student Notebook
Who Witnessed and Narrated the 'Banquet of the Pheasant' (1454)? A Codicological Examination of the Account's Five Versions
from Essays
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Essays
- The Current State of Research on Late-Medieval Drama: 1998–2000. Survey, Bibliography, and Reviews
- History or Fiction? The Role of Doubt in Antoine de La Sale's Le Paradis de la royne Sibille
- Drawing Conclusions: The Poetics of Closure in Alain Chartier's Verse
- Widows: Their Social and Moral Functions According to Medieval German Literature, with Special Emphasis on Erhart Gross's Witwenbuch (1446)
- Robert Henryson's Pastoral Burlesque Robene and Makyne (c. 1470)
- Late-Medieval Merchants: History, Education, Mentality, and Cultural Significance
- Grandeur et modernité de Philippe de Commynes (1447–1511)
- Who Witnessed and Narrated the 'Banquet of the Pheasant' (1454)? A Codicological Examination of the Account's Five Versions
- Medications Recommended in Incunabula
- English Knights, French Books, and Malory's Narrator
- Quatre figures féminines apocryphes dans certains Mystères de la Passion en France
- Die Bibel in der spätmittelalterlichen religiösen Gebrauchsliteratur
- Conter et juger dans les Arrêts d'Amour de Martial d'Auvergne (c.1460)
- L'Argent: cette nouvelle merveille des merveilles dans la version en prose de la Chanson d'Esclarmonde (1454)
- Magic and Superstition in a Fifteenth-Century Student Notebook
Summary
The Banquet hosted in Lille by Philippe le Bon on February 17th, 1454, continues to elicit fascination in those who study it. The feast was a lavish affair: guests entering the hall had to pass a chained lion before taking their seats at tables decorated with automata, described as entremets, including fountains, moving tableaux, and a pie crust containing twenty-eight musicians. During and after their meal, guests were entertained with similarly exotic scenes (also called entremets): a fire-breathing dragon flew over their heads, and a small boy mounted on a deer moved amongst them, singing a duet in which the deer took the melody line. Finally, the allegorical figure of Sainte Eglise entered, mounted on the back of an elephant. She read a moving poem about her plight in the East following the Turkish capture of Constantinople during the previous year. Inspired by this spectacle, Philippe le Bon and his guests made vows to the Virgin and to a live pheasant, presented for this purpose, oaths intended to recapture Constantinople for the Christian faith.
The Banquet's iconography and the seriousness of its moral purpose account for some of the feast's fascination for the researcher. However, I would argue that there is a perceivable tension between the splendor of the public occasion and the intimacy of the voices in the written accounts, in which eyewitness narrators shared their misgivings as to the cost and purpose of the entertainment.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Fifteenth-Century Studies , pp. 124 - 137Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2003