Map was a man of the world, with a large circle of courtly acquaintances, including
Gerald of Wales. Robert R. Edwards writes that "Map had a contemporary reputation as a wit and story teller." His only surviving work,
De Nugis Curialium (
Trifles of Courtiers) is a collection of anecdotes and trivia, containing court gossip and a little real history, and written in a satirical vein. "In its form hardly more than the undigested reminiscences and notes of a man of the world with a lively sense of humour, ... it is, indeed, in some sense a keen satire on the condition of church and state in the writer's own day ... [and] of considerable interest; especially noticeable are his accounts of the Templars and Hospitallers, and his sketch of the English court and kings from the reign of William II to his own time." Along with
William of Newburgh, Map recorded the
earliest stories of English
vampires. The French-language
Prose Lancelot cycle claims "Gautier Map" as an author, though this is contradicted by internal evidence; some scholars have suggested that he wrote a
Lancelot romance, now lost, that was the source for the later cycle. Others say that, since Map's supposed patron was the King of England, it would have been more likely for him to have written an English tale about King Arthur, Gawain or some other “English” hero, rather than a French one. Map was also said to have written a quantity of
Goliardic poetry, including the satirical
Apocalypse of Golias. ==Notes==