First page of Henry's chronicle

Henry of Valenciennes was an early 13th-century French writer, historian and chronicler of the Latin Empire.

Henry of Valenciennes was a chronicler under Henry of Flanders who left for the Fourth Crusade with the army of his patron. In 1204, following the capture of Constantinople by the Franco-Venetian forces, he became a canon in the Hagia Sophia. In 1206, the year of his patron's accession to the throne of the Latin Empire, he was tasked with compiling a chronicle mostly focused on his deeds, roughly picking up where Geoffrey of Villehardouin's chronicle concludes. As a result, Henry's chronicle is usually included with Geoffrey's in the surviving manuscripts. It abruptly ends in 1209 or 1210,[1] but it is notable for its account of the battle of Philippopolis.[2] Henry is also credited with the Lai d'Aristote, previously attributed to the Norman Henry d'Andeli.[3][4]

References

  1. Dr. Nicholas Paul. "Les Memoires de Henri de Valenciennes". French of Outremer. Retrieved 18 September 2022.
  2. of Valenciennes, Henry (1872). Histoire de l'Empereur Henri (in Old French and French). Paris: Librairie de Firmin Didot frères fils & cie. pp. 316–330.
  3. Zufferey, François (2004). "Un problème de paternité: le cas d'Henri d'Andeli. II. Arguments linguistiques". Revue de linguistique romane (68): 57–78.
  4. Zufferey, François (2004). "Henri de Valenciennes, auteur du Lai d'Aristote et de la Vie de saint Jean l'Évangéliste". Revue de linguistique romane (69): 335–358.
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