Maria de Ventadorn (or Ventedorn) (French: Marie de Ventadour) was a patron of troubadour poetry at the end of the 12th century.[1]
Maria was one of las tres de Torena, "the three of Turenne", the three daughters of viscount Raymond II of Turenne and of Elise de Séverac.[2] These three, according to Bertran de Born, possessed tota beltat terrena, "all earthly beauty".[2] Her date of birth is uncertain; she possibly died in 1222. Her name is variously recorded as Marie de Turenne and Marguerite de Turenne. She married viscount Eble V of Ventadour (Corrèze, France); they had a son, Eble (VI),[2] who married Dauphine de la Tour d'Auvergne, and a daughter, Alix or Alasia.[3]
Maria de Ventadorn is listed as a trobairitz in her own right on the strength of a single tensó or poetic debate (dated c. 1197), of which alternate verses were apparently composed by her and by Gui d'Ussel.[2][4] The question at issue in the debate was this: once a man has succeeded in his plea to be accepted as a lady's lover, does he thereafter become her equal, or does he remain her servant? Maria takes the latter view.[2]
^ abcdefghSamuel N. Rosenberg, ed. (1998). Songs of the troubadours and trouvéres : an anthology of poems and melodies. New York [u.a.]: Garland. pp. 151–153. ISBN0815313411.
Biographies des troubadours ed. J. Boutière, A.-H. Schutz (Paris: Nizet, 1964) pp. 170–179, 208-214, 314-320.
Pierre Bec, Chants d'amour des femmes-troubadours: trobairitz et chansons de femme (Paris: Stock, 1995) pp. 164–171: Occitan text and French translation of the tensó. ISBN9782234044760
Jean Mouzat, Les poèmes de Gaucelm Faidit. Paris: Nizet, 1965.