Nicholas of Bray (or Nicolas de Brai[a]) was a French clergyman and poet who wrote a Latinepic on the deeds of King Louis VIII of France (1223–1226), the Gesta Ludovici VIII.[1]
The Gesta is 1,870 lines long, but is incomplete as it stands.[2] It centres around the siege of La Rochelle in 1224 and the siege of Avignon in 1226.[1][2] One line suggests that he was present at Avignon.[3] Nicholas imitates Ovid's Metamorphoses, introducing thereby much classical mythology, but still contains some useful information for the historian.[2] On the whole, the Gesta reveals more about mores and customs than historical events.[3]
^ abcdAuguste Molinier, "2256. Nicolas de Bray", Les Sources de l'histoire de France: Des origines aux guerres d'Italie (1494). III. Les Capétiens, 1180–1328 (Paris: A. Picard et fils, 1903), p. 13.