The legend of Girart's piety, the heroism of his wife Bertha, and his wars with Charles passed into the genre of literary romance; however, the historical facts are so distorted that, in the epic
Girart de Roussillon, he became an opponent of
Charles Martel who was married to Bertha's sister. The legendary narrative
Girart de Roussillon was long held to be a Provençal work, but its Burgundian origin has been proven. Accounts of Girart are found in several early manuscripts. The earliest
chanson de geste, called
Le Chanson de Girart de Roussillon, dates from the second half of the 12th century. The original text, written in rhymed
decasyllables, is preserved at the
Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF). It was translated for the first time by Paul Meyer in 1884 (Paris: Champion). A recent translation into modern French with notes by Micheline Combarieu du Grès and Gérard Gouiran was published in 1993 (Paris: Librairie générale française). A romance written in rhymed
alexandrines was written between 1330 and 1349 by
monks in the
abbey of
Pothières, which was founded in about 860 by Girart. It was dedicated to
Odo IV, Duke of Burgundy (ca. 1295–1350), and
Jeanne de Bourgogne (called "Joan the Lame"), queen of France (1293–1349). The text is composed in a dialect midway between
French and
Old Occitan. Five manuscript copies of this version survive; two in
Montpellier, France at the Bibliothèque Interuniversitaire (section médecine), one in
Troyes (now held at the
Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal in Paris), one in Paris at the BnF, and one in
Brussels at the
Bibliothèque royale de Belgique. This version was printed by
Yale University in 1939 (New Haven: Yale University Press, Yale Romanic Studies, 16). The version in alexandrines was the source for a romance in prose by
Jehan Wauquelin in 1447 (Paris: éd. L. de Montille, 1880). Southern French traditions concerning Girart, in which he is called the son of
Garin de Monglane, are embodied in the 13th century narrative in rhymed
decasyllable verses about the
siege of
Vienne by
Charlemagne in
Girart de Vienne by
Bertrand de Bar-sur-l'Aube. The same traditions are also embraced in
Aspramonte by
Andrea da Barberino, based on the French
chanson Aspremont, where he is called Girart de Frete or de Fraite and he leads an army of
infidels against Charlemagne. ==See also==