Conon de Béthune
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Conon de Béthune (before 1160 in the former region of Artois, today Pas-de-Calais - 17 December 1219, possibly at Adrianople) was a French crusader and "trouvère" poet who became a senior official and finally regent of the Latin Empire of Constantinople. Alternative spellings of his name include Coesnes, Quenes, Conain, and Quenon.[1]
Life
Probably born before 1160, he was the fifth son of Robert V de Béthune, hereditary Lord of Béthune and Advocate of the Abbey of Saint-Vaast at Arras in today's Pas-de-Calais, who died on the Third Crusade at the siege of Acre in 1191, and his wife Alice, daughter of Hugues III, Count of Saint-Pol.[1] His four elder brothers were:
- Robert VI de Béthune, who succeeded his father as Lord of Béthune and Advocate of Arras;
- Guillaume II de Béthune, who succeeded his brother as Lord of Béthune and Advocate of Arras;
- Baudouin de Béthune, Count of Aumale and companion of King Richard I of England; and
- Jean de Béthune, Bishop and secular ruler of Cambrai.[1]
Conon was educated by his cousin, the noted poet Hugues III d'Oisy, Castellan of Cambrai, who taught him the art of poetry. It is probable, from comments made in one of his poems, that Conon appeared before the French court at the occasion of the marriage of King Philippe Auguste with Isabelle of Hainaut in 1180 and sang his songs before Marie de Champagne, noted for her connection to the poet Chrétien de Troyes. He was however embarrassed, as he recorded wryly in the poem Mout me semont Amors ke je m'envoise, by his Artesian accent.[2]
After having taken part in the Third Crusade to Palestine, Conon de Béthune went with his brother Guillaume on the Fourth Crusade in 1203, accompanying the knights of Baldwin, Count of Flanders and Hainaut. At the outset he was chosen as one of six knights to command all transport and supplies and when the army arrived at Constantinople he was appointed its spokesman in negotiations with the Byzantines. His rhetorical ability, wisdom and chivalry were praised by fellow Crusader Geoffroi de Villehardouin, who said of Conon: Bon chevalier et sage estoit et bien eloquens (A good knight and a wise one he was, and most eloquent).[1]
After the diverted Crusade's capture of Constantinople in 1204, Conon held a number of important positions in the Latin Empire, the successor to the Byzantine Empire established by the Crusaders and centered on Constantinople. Awarded the senior title of protovestiarius, inherited from the Byzantine court, sometime in 1205,[3] he played a key role in Baldwin's reconciliation with Boniface of Montferrat before the Battle of Adrianople against the Bulgarians, in which Baldwin was captured and later put to death.[4] In 1209, he supervised the signing of the Treaty of Sapienza on the emperor's behalf.[5]
Conon then served Baldwin's brother Henry of Flanders until his death in 1217, followed by Baldwin's sister Yolanda of Flanders, during which time he defended the city of Adrianople and was raised to the higher rank of sevastokrator. On the death of Yolanda in 1219, her son Robert of Courtenay became Emperor but was far away in France. In his absence, the barons of the Empire elected Conon to serve as regent (baiulus) but he died shortly after.[4]
Landholdings
He had various lands in France, as seigneur or as tenant. He was seigneur of Bergues near Dunkirk in 1202 and also of two villages (Rulliacum and Camissiacum) where in that year he freed the inhabitants, almost certainly to raise funds for crusading. These holdings he left in the charge of his nephew, Robert VII, Lord of Béthune while he was away.[1]
Family
Though the name of his wife is unknown, two sons are recorded: Conon de Béthune, called The Strong, who was alive in 1238, and Baudouin de Béthune, who inherited his father's lordship of Adrianople, maybe after the death of his elder brother. It later passed to the Dukes of Athens.[1] Baudouin also held the court title of Caesar, likewise adopted from Byzantine practice.[6]
Poetry
Only 14 works of poetry attributed to Conon de Béthune have survived, and several of these attributions may be doubtful. His poetry was written to be sung and ten of his poems give musical notation. The majority of his poems are courtly love songs, but two of them are important chansons de croisade or crusade songs in which the poet-lover deplores his approaching departure from his beloved but nevertheless accepts the "noble calling" of crusader. Conon de Béthune also shows himself at times to be ironic or satirical, and in one of his crusade poems he rails with vehemence against financial abuses by those collecting funds for the crusaders. Some think he married Anne of Paris after composing a poem for her.
Some works by Conon are:
Chançon legiere a entendre
Si voiremant con cele don je chant
Mout me semont Amors que je m'envoise
Ahi! Amors, com dure departie
Bien me deüsse targier
Se raige et derverie
Belle doce Dame chiere
Tant ai amé c'or me convient haïr
L'autrier un jor aprés la Saint Denise
L'autrier avint en cel autre païs
References
- ^ His name first appears in the written record in 1180.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Andre Du Chesne, Historiographe Du Roy (1639). "Histoire Genealogique de La Maison de Bethune, Justifïee par Chartes de Diverses Eglises & Abbayes, Arrests du Parlement, Titres Particuliers, Epitaphes, et Autres Bonnes Preuves". A Paris, chez Sebastien Cramoisy, Imprimeur Ordínaire Du Roy, Rue Saint Jacques, aux Cicognes. pp. 159 to 164. Retrieved 15 November 2015.
- ↑ Axel Wallensköld (1921), Les Chansons de Conon de Béthune, Paris, Honoré Champion, https://fr.wikisource.org Accessed 15 November 2015
- ↑ Van Tricht (2011), pp. 173–174
- 1 2 Shawcross (2012), pp. 195–196
- ↑ Van Tricht (2011), p. 164
- ↑ Van Tricht (2011), p. 177
Sources
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Béthune, Conon de". Encyclopædia Britannica. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Hasenohr, Geneviève and Michel Zink, eds. Dictionnaire des lettres françaises: Le Moyen Age. Collection: La Pochothèque. Paris: Fayard, 1964.
- Rosenber, Samuel N.; Switten, margaret; Le Vot, Gerard (2013). Songs of the Troubadours and Trouveres: An Anthology of Poems and Melodies. Routledge. pp. 241–248. ISBN 9781134819140.
- Shawcross, Theresa (2012). "Conquest Legitimized: The Making of a Byzantine Emperor in Crusader Constantinople (1204–1261)". In Harris, Jonathan; Holmes, Catherine; Russell, Eugenia. Byzantines, Latins, and Turks in the Eastern Mediterranean World After 1150. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 181–220. ISBN 978-0-19-964188-8.
- Van Tricht, Filip (2011). The Latin Renovatio of Byzantium: The Empire of Constantinople (1204-1228). Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-20323-5.