Hugues wrote at least five lyric poems that are preserved in various chansonniers. His last one was written to the troubadourFalquet de Romans, asking his friend to participate in the Crusade with him outra mar. Hugues sent his poem with the jongleur Bernart d'Argentau, forming an important source of information about both poets. According to Hugues, neither he nor Falquet were young at the time.[2] Hugues was dead by August 1220, which provides an ante quem date for the poem. Hugues is referred to as N'Ugo de Bersie in the Occitanrazo that accompanies the poem in the chansonnier.
His most famous Old French work is La Bible au seigneur de Barzil, a poem of 1,029 octosyllables preaching the reform of the Church. Hugues was influenced by his time in Constantinople and by "the certainty of death and the uncertainty of his times", when the Crusades were generally failures and the Cathar heresy was rampant in southern France. Hugues has criticism for all three social classes (nobility, clergy, and peasantry). Hugues's Bible is in the same category as the slightly earlier Bible Guiot of Guiot de Provins. La Bible exemplifies "the beliefs of a pious layman with a considerable breadth of worldly experience".
In the late sixteenth century, Hugues's Bible furnished much historical evidence for the antiquarian works of Claude Fauchet.
^Though the poetic exchange has been dated as early as 1201 or as late as November 1220 – September 1221, the former date is too early and the latter invalidated by Hugues's death. Recently, dates of 1215, 1216, 1217, and 1219 have been proffered (Riquer).
Sources
Boulton, Maureen B. M. "Hugues de Berzé" (p. 462). Medieval France: An Encyclopedia, ed. William W. Kibler. New Jersey: Routledge University Press, 1995. ISBN0-8240-4444-4.
Lecoy, Félix. "Pour la chronologie de Hugues de Berzé." Romania67 (1942–1943): 243–254.
Riquer, Martín de. Los trovadores: historia literaria y textos. 3 vol. Barcelona: Planeta, 1975.