Everything about Tirant Lo Blanc totally explained
Tirant lo Blanc is an
epic romance written by the
Valencian knight
Joanot Martorell, supposedly finished by
Martí Joan de Galba and published in Valencia in 1490. It is one of the best known
medieval works of literature in
Catalan, and played an important role in the evolution of the
Western novel because of its influence on the author
Miguel de Cervantes.
The medieval spelling is
Tirant lo Blanch; a literal
English translation of the title would be
The White Knight or
Tirant the White, the name of the main character of the romance.
Influence
Tirant lo Blanc is one of the most important books of Catalan literature. Written by Joanot Martorell in the 15th century, the "Tirant" is a chivalric novel that also appears to have a strong autobiographic component. It tells the feats and adventures of Knight Tirant lo Blanch from
Brittany. At times, it parallels the life and adventures of admiral
Roger de Flor, a
Templar Knight and participant in the last
crusade, leader of the
Almogavar (
Catalonian and
Aragonese) army. This historical resemblance is also evident in the description of events occurring around
Constantinople and the defeat of
Sultan Mehmed II "the conqueror," and ultimately leading to the fall of Constantinople in 1453.
Compared to books of the same time period, "Tirant" lacks the bucolic, platonic, and contemplative love commonly portrayed in the chivalric heroes. Instead the main character is full of life and sensuous love, sarcasm, and human feelings. The work is filled with down to earth descriptions of daily life, prosaic and even bitter in nature.
It is considered a major influence for
Miguel de Cervantes' book,
Don Quixote de la Mancha, which was written in 1605 (Part I) and 1615 (Part II); comparisons between the two show many similarities. The similarities in both works can also be appreciated in their critical and skeptical view of the unlikely and exaggerated and fantastic chivalric novels in use at the time. At the time
Don Quixote was written, there was only one Spanish translation of the Tirant (
Valladolid, 1511) published anonymously, and Cervantes was probably not aware the original was written in
Valencian.
In the following passage from
Don Quixote, the famous "scrutiny of the library" the priest and the barber throw Don Alonso Quijada's (Don Quixote) books onto the bonfire:
» "God help me!" said the priest in a loud voice, "That we've here the 'Tirant lo Blanch' ! Hand it over to me, my friend, for I'm telling you that I found on it a treasure of enjoyment and a gold mine of recreation. Here it's Don Kyrieleison of Montalvan, valiant knight, and his brother Thomas of Montalvan, and the knight Fonseca, and the battle the brave Tirante fought with the mastiff, and the witt of damsel Placerdemivida (Pleasureofmylife - ed. note), and the loves and lies of the widow Reposada (Rested -ed note), and lady Emperatriz (Empress - ed note) in love with the squire Hipolito--in all truth, my friend, by right of its style this is the best book in the world: here Knights eat, sleep, and they die even doing a will, things that all the rest of books of this genre lack. Having said all this, I'm telling you that he deserved to have this book written because he didn't do as many silly things as to deserve to be thrown to the galleys for the rest of his life. Take the book home and read it, and then you'll realize that all I told you about it's true."
Later editions of Tirant lo Blanch dropped the final "h" which was commonly used during medieval times.
Plot
Tirant lo Blanc tells the story of a medieval knight Tirant from Brittany who has a series of adventures across Europe in his quest. He joins in knightly competitions in
England and
France until the Emperor of the
Byzantine Empire asks him to help in the war against the
Ottoman Turks, an Islamic tribe of invaders threatening Byzantium (Constantinople), the capital and seat of the Empire. Tirant accepts and is made
Megaduke of the Byzantine Empire and the captain of an army. He defeats the Turkish invaders and saves the Empire from destruction. Afterwards, he fights the Turks in many regions of the Oriental Mediterranean and Northern Africa, but he dies just before he can marry the pretty heiress of the Byzantine Empire.
The loss of
Constantinople to the
Ottoman Empire in 1453 was considered at the time to be a major blow to Christian Europe. In writing his novel, Martorell perhaps rewrote history to fit what he wanted it to be.
Movie
Tirante el Blanco, a Spanish film based on the book, was released in early 2006. Its plot is based on the later part of the Tirant, and events leading to his involvement in Constantinople and afterwards.
Bibliography
Two modern translations of the book into English include:
- Tirant Lo Blanc, translated by David H. Rosenthal (1983, 1996), ISBN 0-8018-5421-0
- Tirant Lo Blanc: The Complete Translation (Catalan Studies, Vol 1), translated by Ray La Fontaine (1994), ISBN 0-8204-1688-6
Further Information
Get more info on 'Tirant Lo Blanc'.
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