Jehan de Grieviler

Jehan de Grieviler (fl. mid- to late 13th century) was an Artesian cleric and trouvère.

Jehan was probably born at Grévillers near Arras. A certain "Grieviler" is mentioned in the necrology (registre) of the Confrérie des jongleurs et des bourgeois d'Arras under 12545, but since Jehan was a known member of the Puy d'Arras, he cannot be identified with the "Grieviler" of the necrology with any certainty. Probably he was one of the sixteen unordained married clerics who petitioned the Bishop of Arras on 28 January 1254 to exempt them from secular taxation. They were evidently involved in trade and commerce. A further piece of evidence for establishing his chronology are the songs he is known to have composed with Adam de la Halle, who was very young in the 1250s.

Jehan participated in a total of thirty-four jeux partis, initiating six of the exchanges himself. Twenty-eight of these were with Jehan Bretel. Three of these last have surviving melodies, probably composed by him. He also wrote six chansons courtoises, and a seventh attributed to Jehan de la Fontaine may be by him. He also composed one surviving rotrouenge.

All of his melodies are conventional, save Uns pensers jolis, which is through-composed, and Jolie amours qui m'a en sa baillie, which begins on B and ranges from high to low F.

List of compositions

Chansons
Rotrouenges
Jeux partis with music probably by Grieviler
Jeux partis with Jehan Bretel

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Co-attribution to Bretel not certain.

References