Yvain, the Knight of the Lion was written by
Chrétien de Troyes in
Old French, simultaneously with his
Lancelot, the Knight of the Cart, between 1177 and 1181. It survives in eight manuscripts and two fragments. It comprises 6,808
octosyllables in
rhymed couplets. Two manuscripts are illustrated, Paris BnF MS fr. 1433 and Princeton University Library Garrett MS 125 (c. 1295), the former incomplete with seven remaining miniatures and the latter with ten. Hindman (1994) discusses these illustrations as reflecting the development of the role of the knight, or the youthful
knight-errant, during the transitional period from the high to the late medieval period. The first modern edition was published in 1887 by
Wendelin Förster. Chrétien's source for the poem is unknown, but the story bears a number of similarities to the
hagiographical Life of Saint Mungo (also known as Saint Kentigern), which claims Owain mab Urien as the father of the saint by
Denw, daughter of
Lot of Lothian. The
Life was written by
Jocelyn of Furness in c. 1185, and is thus slightly younger than Chrétien's text, but not influenced by it. Jocelyn states that he rewrote the 'life' from an earlier Glasgow legend and an old
Gaelic document, so that some elements of the story may originate in a British tradition. The name of the main character Yvain, at least, ultimately harks back to the name of the historical
Owain mab Urien (fl. 6th century). Other narrative motifs in
Yvain have been convincingly traced to early Celtic lore. (MS 111).
Yvain had a significant impact on the literary world. German poet
Hartmann von Aue used it as the basis for his masterpiece
Iwein, and the author of
Owain, or the Lady of the Fountain, one of the
Welsh Romances included in the
Mabinogion, recast the work back into its Welsh setting. The poem was translated into a number of languages, including the
Middle English Ywain and Gawain; the
Old Norwegian Chivaldric
Ívens saga, and the
Old Swedish Herr Ivan. The
Valþjófsstaður door in Iceland, c. 1200, depicts a version of the
Yvain story with a carving of a knight slaying a dragon that threatens a lion; the lion is later shown wearing a rich collar and following the knight, and later still the lion appears to be lying on the grave of the knight. ==See also==