Manuscript tradition The manuscript tradition preserves 115 strophes of Morungen's, constituting 35 songs. He is represented in the three main Minnesang manuscripts:. • MS A (the
Kleine Heidelberger Liederhandschrift, 1270-1280) has 29 strophes under Morungen's name, though three of these are ascribed to Ulrich von Singenberg in MS C. • MS B (the
Weingarten Manuscript, first quarter of the 14th Century) has 25 strophes under Morungen's name and three under
Dietmar von Aist's. • MS C (the Große Heidelberger Liederhandschrift, the
Manesse Codex, c. 1304) has by far the largest collection, with 104 strophes under Morungen's name. Of these 43 appear in the "Tross Fragment" (MS Ca), which is based on C. Four other manuscripts have small amounts of additional material: • MS E (the Würzburg Manuscript (
München, Universitätsbibliothek, 2° Cod. Ms. 731c., the Housebook of Michael de Leone, 1345-1354) has eight strophes (two songs) of Morungen's under the names of
Walther von der Vogelweide and
Reinmar. • MS M (the
Carmina Burana MS,
Munich, Staatsbibliothek, clm 4660) has a single anonymous strophe matching one in C. It is the only Morungen text with
neumes. • MS p (
Berne, Burgerbibliothek, Cod. 260) has four strophes of Morungen's. • MS S (the
Kremsmünster fragment, CC248) has three strophes of the song "Sîn hiez mir nie widersagen" (MF 130,9), including one strophe not in any other MS. At the end of this song on folio 78r of MS C a space large enough for a single strophe has been left, which may have been intended for the additional strophe.
Themes An essential theme in Morungen's work is the demonic nature of
Minne, the
Middle High German word for this type of love, which for the mediaeval writers was embodied by the ancient classical goddess of love,
Venus.
Minne is experienced partly as a magical, pathological, even fatal power, but also as a religious and mystical experience. Morungen is a very graphic lyricist: he particularly often makes use of images of shining (sun, moon, evening star, gold, jewels, mirror) as comparisons by which to describe the lady who is being sung and praised. In form and content the poems are influenced by the
Provençal troubadour lyric:
dactylic rhythms and through-rhymes (
Durchreimung) occur frequently. Motifs in the content have also been taken over from the same source: for example, the motif, otherwise rare in German Minnesang, of the "notice of termination of the service of love" (Lied XXVII), the roots of which are to be found in
classical literature (for example
Ovid). ==Legacy==