Domna, tant vos ai preiada
Appearance
Domna, tant vos ai preiada ("Lady, so much I have endeared you") is a 1190 poetic composition by Raimbaut de Vaqueiras.[1] It is the earliest known text to have written Ligurian. In the poem, a Provençal-speaking jester (believed to be Vaqueiras) tries to attract a Genovese woman.[2] The woman keeps rejecting him by using insults in the Genoese vernacular.
The woman compares the jester's Provençal to German, Berber, and Sardinian (No t'entend plui d'un Todesco / Sardesco o Barbarì), three languages she couldn't understand.[3][4] This section in particular, has been mentioned several times in the history of Sardinian.[5][6][7][8]
References
[edit]- ^ Orvieto, Paolo; Brestolini, Lucia (2000). La poesia comico-realistica: dalle origini al Cinquecento (in Italian). Carocci. p. 104. ISBN 978-88-430-1526-9.
- ^ Folengo, Teofilo (2024-05-19). Baldus: Traduzione e ampia introduzione di Matteo Laterza. Gruppo Albatros Il Filo. p. 171. ISBN 978-88-306-9801-7.
- ^ "Domna, tant vos ai preiada". www.trobar.org/.
- ^ "Raimbaut de Vaqueiras (392.7)". www.rialto.unina.it.
- ^ Max Leopold Wagner. La lingua sarda (PDF). Ilisso. p. 78. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 January 2016. Retrieved 9 January 2016.
- ^ Rebecca Posner, John N. Green (1982). Language and Philology in Romance. Mouton Publishers. p. 178.
- ^ Alberto Varvaro (2004). Identità linguistiche e letterarie nell'Europa romanza. Roma: Salerno Editrice. p. 231. ISBN 88-8402-446-3.
- ^ "Le sarde, une langue normale". 27 October 2013. Retrieved 28 November 2015.
External links
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