Parzival is a major medieval German romance by the poet Wolfram von Eschenbach, in the Middle High German language.
The poem, commonly dated to the first quarter of the 13th century, is itself largely based on Chrétien de Troyes’s Perceval, the Story of the Grail and mainly centers on the Arthurian hero Parzival (Percival in English) and his long quest for the Holy Grail following his initial failure to achieve it.
Parzival begins with the knightly adventures of Parzival's father, Gahmuret, his marriage to Herzeloyde, and the birth of Parzival.
The story continues, where Chrétien's story begins, as Parzival meets three elegant knights, decides to seek King Arthur, and continues a spiritual and physical search for the Grail.
As in the extant copies of Chrétien's tale a long section is devoted to Parzival's friend Gawan and his adventures defending himself from a false murder charge and winning the hand of the maiden Orgeluse.
Among the most striking elements of the work are its emphasis on the importance of humility, compassion, sympathy and the quest for spirituality.
A major theme in Parzival is love.
Heroic acts of chivalry are inspired by true love, which is ultimately fulfilled in marriage.
The romance was the most popular vernacular verse narrative in medieval Germany,[5] and continues to be read and translated into modern languages around the world.
Wolfram began a prequel, Titurel, which was later continued by another writer, while two full romances were written adapting Wolfram's story of Loherangrin.
Richard Wagner based his famous opera Parsifal, finished in 1882, on Parzival.
Parzival is divided into sixteen books, each composed of several thirty-line stanzas of rhyming couplets.
The stanza lengths fit perfectly onto a manuscript page.
For the subject matter Wolfram von Eschenbach largely adapted the Grail romance, Perceval, the Story of the Grail, left incomplete by Chrétien de Troyes.
Wolfram claimed that a certain Kyot the Provençal supplied additional material drawn from Arabic and Angevin sources but most scholars now consider Kyot to be Wolfram's invention and part of the fictional narrative.[6]
Book I opens with the death of King Gandin, Parzival's grandfather.
His oldest son, Galoes, receives the kingdom but offers his brother Gahmuret the land of Anjou in fief.
However, Gahmuret departs to gain renown.
He travels to the African kingdom of Zazamanc, whose capital is besieged by two different armies.
Gahmuret offers his services to the city, and his offer is accepted by Queen Belacane.
He conquers the invaders, marries Queen Belacane, and becomes king of Zazamanc and Azagouc.
Growing bored with peace, Gahmuret steals away on a ship, abandoning his pregnant wife.
Belacane later gives birth to a son, Feirefiz (whose skin is mottled black and white).
In Book II, Gahmuret returns to the West, where he meets and marries Queen Herzeloyde.
Ever restless, however, Gahmuret soon returns to fight for the Baruch in the Far East, where he is later killed by a treacherous acquaintance.
Book III tells of how the pregnant Herzeloyde, grief-stricken at her husband's death, retires to a secluded forest dwelling and vows to protect her new child, Parzival, from the ways of knighthood at all costs by raising him entirely ignorant of chivalry and the ways of men.
His seclusion is shattered by three knights passing who tell him of King Arthur's court at Camelot.
Enamoured, he decides to go join Arthur's court.
His mother is heartbroken at the news of his decision but allows him to depart, dressing him in fool's garments in the hopes that the knights will refuse to take him in.
Soon after his departure she dies, utterly bereft.
The first part of the journey takes place completely in the world of King Arthur, where the colourful and strange appearance of Parzival awakens the interest of the court.
After becoming entangled in courtly intrigue between Duke Orilus and his wife Jeschute he meets his cousin Sigune who reveals to him his true name.
Parzival also fights and kills Ither, the red knight of Kukumerlant.
Putting on the red knight's armour he rides away from the court and meets Gurnemanz, from whom he learns the duties of a knight, especially self-control and moderation.
Gurnemanz also advises him to avoid impudent curiosity.
In Book IV Parzival meets and falls in love with the maiden Condwiramurs when he lends his aid to her town, which is under siege.
They marry but he leaves soon afterwards to seek news of his mother.
In Book V he arrives at the castle of the Grail.
He does not ask his host, the Fisher King Anfortas, about his mysterious wound, however, or about the magical objects paraded before him, remembering Gurnemanz's advice to be not too curious.
The next morning Parzival finds himself completely alone in a totally deserted castle, leading him to speculate that his experiences of the previous night were an illusion conjured by malevolent spirits to snare him.
Parzival returns to the world of Arthur and again meets Sigune, who tells him of how he should have asked the lord of the castle a question, but does not specify.
She then vows to never speak to him again.
He also meets Jeschute again, who was unwittingly humiliated by him the last time, and defeats Orilus in single combat.
Eventually Parzival renews the marriage of Jeschute and Orilus.
Parzival returns in Book VI as a perfect potential member of the Round Table to King Arthur.
But during a festive meal, Cundrie, messenger of the grail, appears, curses Parzival in the name of the grail and claims that Parzival had lost his honour.
Parzival immediately leaves the court even though he is not able to understand his guilt.
Gawan takes over as the central figure of Books VII-VIII as he tries to clear his name of a false charge of murder.
In Book IX, we learn that Parzival fights for the good but suffers from his alienation from God.
After nearly five years of wandering and fighting, from combat he gains a new horse, owned by a grail knight, and this horse leads him one Good Friday to Trevrizent to whom he introduces himself as a penitent sinner.
He stays with this holy man for fourteen days and learns about the hidden meaning of life and the true meaning of the grail, and also is informed that his mother is the sister of the Grail King. He makes a step towards a life of spiritual understanding. Through his loneliness and through his yearning for the grail and for Condwiramurs he puts himself outside the world of Arthur. He is called to another world, that of the grail.
Books X-XIV tell of Gawan's attempts to win the hand of the maiden Orgeluse.
In Book XV, Parzival fights with a knight who is the first to seem more adept than he. Parzival's sword breaks but, instead of slaying him, the other knight sees no honor in such a feat and both retire to the grass. There they learn that they share the same father. "I was against my own self," says Parzival to Feirefiz, his brother from afar. Again Cundrie appears and proclaims now that Parzival's name has appeared on the grail, marking him as the new grail king.
During his journey to the grail in Book XVI Parzival reunites with his wife and takes Feirefiz as a companion. Feirefiz cannot see the grail, but he can see the grail maiden and promptly falls in love with her.
Some details of the romance have inspired controversy, partly because the narrative is interspersed with humorous anecdotes by Wolfram.
It is not clear whether many of the claims he makes are intended to be taken as fact or as jest.
For example, in one passage he claims to be totally illiterate.
Whether the original poem was composed as part of an oral tradition or as a written work is a subject of debate among scholars.
Wolfram also claimed that a lost Arabic manuscript by a descendant of Solomon was discovered by a certain Kyot the Provençal, though this may have been his way of parodying the dubious veracity of many other Grail texts.[citation needed]
The place of women in medieval German literature was in general an exalted one and Wolfram as an author reflects this by making womanhood an ideal for his characters.
The characters like that of Herzeloyde, Sigune and Condwiramurs are not only intimately involved in Parzival’s search but also closely related to the Grail itself.[7]
The character of Herzeloyde, Parzival’s mother, is a virtuous woman.
With a selfless devotion and the humility which is another vital attribute to the Grail King and as a descendent of the Grail family, she makes both the conscious and unconscious choice to guide Parzival on the quest to take his fated place as next in the lineage.
Her advice is interpreted in the context of his finding both love and God as guidance towards better being prepared to take on the Grail.[7]
The womanly kinship of Sigune is the next guide that Parzival shall encounter.
Her appearance (at three times in the tale) is essential and occurs on each occasion at a significant stage in his progress, at a point when he is in urgent need of some kind of guidance. Her first contribution is to provide Parzival his identity, an essential detail for a man that his mother was not able to impart. She directs him to Arthurs’s Court, and in doing so heads him off to the quest. In their second meeting she scolds him for failing to understand the nature of his quest and goal, ultimately pushing him to the atonement needed to fully grasp his duty as Grail King.
Thirdly, the last meeting of Parzival and Sigune is one of quiet recognition, her life a prayer in itself that anticipates the same state for Parzival.[7]
The last woman for Parzival is his wife, Condwiramurs. Her role lies in the “love of a devoted wife. She is interesting in that her vitality lies in what she is, rather than her specific guidance to Parzival. The time that Parzival must recognize his inability to possess her, he leaves her and does not return. Her symbolic significance allows her character to be a guide in terms of the readiness of Parzival. Ultimately, both the Grail and Conwiramurs combine to form Parzival’s goal. She spurs him on his quest, and like the Grail itself, is an inspiration and reward. In the end, her guidance is best represented by her name on the Grail as well as Parzival.[7]
Wolfram followed Parzival with the fragmentary romance Titurel, which serves as a prologue.
This poem was continued by a later poet known as Albrecht.
Wolfram's story of Loherangrin was expanded into two full romances, Lohengrin and Lorengel, and later German writers often referred back to Parzival in their works.
Ludwig II of Bavaria was inspired by the poem, and Singers' Hall in his castle Neuschwanstein is decorated with tapestries and paintings depicting the story.
Ludwig II of Bavaria was also patron to the composer Richard Wagner and encouraged him to create the opera Parsifal based on the romance.
He then commissioned eight private performances of the work.
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Chrétien de Troyes. The Complete Romances of Chrétien de Troyes-"The Story of the Grail", ed. David Staines, Indiana University Press, 1990, 340. ISBN 0-253-20787-8
- ^ BBC Gallery, Parzival and the Holy Grail
- ^ Loomis, Roger Sherman. Development of Arthurian Romance, Hutchsinson and Company, 1963, 70.
- ^ Weigand, Hermann J. Three Chapters on Courtly Love in Arthurian France and Germany, University of North Carolina Press, 1956, 33.
- ^ Hasty, Will (1999). A Companion to Wolfram's Parzival. Rochester, NY: Camden House. pp. ix.
- ^ Bumke 2004, p. 245–247
- ^ a b c d Gibbs, Marion. “The Role of Woman in Wolfram’s Parzival.” German Life and Letters. 21.4 (1968): 296-308. Print.
[edit] Bibliography
- Bumke, Joachim (2004) (in German). Wolfram von Eschenbach. Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler. ISBN 3-476-18036-0.
- Green, D.H. The Art of Recognition in Wolfram's Parzival. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press, 1982. ISBN 0-521-24500-1
- Groos, Arthur. Romancing the Grail: Genre, Science, and Quest in Wolfram's Parzival. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1995. ISBN 0-8014-3068-2
- Groos, Arthur. "Wolfram von Eschenbach's 'Bow Metaphor' and the Narrative Technique of Parzival." MLN 87.3, 1972. 391-408.
- Hasty, Will, ed. (1999). A Companion to Wolfram's Parzival. Columbia, SC: Camden House. ISBN 1-57113-152-3.
- G. Ronald Murphy, SJ. Gemstone of Paradise: The Holy Grail in Wolfram's Parzival. Oxford University Press, 2006. ISBN 0-19-530639-2
- Springer, Otto. "Wolfram's Parzival" in Arthurian Literature in the Middle Ages, Roger S. Loomis (ed.). Clarendon Press: Oxford University. 1959. ISBN 0-19-811588-1
[edit] Editions and translations
The standard edition of the text is Karl Lachmann's, 1926. This is the basis for all modern editions, including:- Wolfram von Eschenbach, Parzival. De Gruyter 2003. ISBN 3-11-017859-1.
- Wolfram von Eschenbach, Parzival with Titurel and The Love-lyrics, trans. Cyril Edwards. Boydell Press 2004, OUP 2006. ISBN 1-84384-005-7 & ISBN 0-19-280615-7
- Wolfram von Eschenbach, Parzival, trans. A.T.Hatto. Penguin 1980. ISBN 0-14-044361-4.
- Wolfram von Eschenbach, Parzival, A Romance of the Middle Ages, trans. Helen M. Mustard and Charles E. Passage. Vintage Books, 1961. ISBN 0-394-70188-7
- Wolfram von Eschenbach, Parzival. De Gruyter 2003. ISBN 3-11-017859-1. With prose translation by Peter Knecht.
- Wolfram von Eschenbach, Parzival, (2 vols). Deutscher Klassiker Verlag 2006. ISBN 3-618-68007-4. With verse translation by Dieter Kühn.
- Wolfram von Eschenbach, Parzival, (2 vols). Reclam 1986 ISBN 3-15-003682-8 und ISBN 3-15-003681-X. With translation by Wolfgang Spiewok.
- Hermann Reichert: Wolfram von Eschenbach, Parzival, für Anfänger. Wien: Praesens Verlag, 2., völlig überarbeitete Aufl. 2007. ISBN 978-3-7069-0358-5.
- Wolfram von Eschenbach, Parzival. Siruela 1999. ISBN 978-84-7844-446-5. With translation by Antonio Regales.
- Clarke, Lindsay. Parzival and the Stone from Heaven - a Grail Romance for our Time. Oxford: Godstow Press, 2011. ISBN 978-0-9547367-5-0.
[edit] External links
- Literary Encyclopedia entry on Parzival
- Electronic version of a Parzival-manuscript from the Bibliotheca Palatina (Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg) -from the workplace of Diebold Lauber in Hagenau around 1443-1446.
- E-text of Parzival ('Bibliotheca Augustana')
- Article entitled "Wounded Masculinity: Parsifal and The Fisher King Wound" The symbolism of the story as it relates to the Wounded Masculinity of Men by Richard Sanderson M.Ed., B.A.
- Text of "Parzival" on Gutenberg.spiegel.de
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