Parzival Wolfram is best known today for his
Parzival, sometimes regarded as the greatest of all
German Arthurian romances. Based on
Chrétien de Troyes' unfinished
Perceval, le Conte du Graal, it is the first extant work in German to have as its subject the
Holy Grail (in Wolfram's interpretation a gemstone). In the poem, Wolfram's narrator expresses disdain for Chrétien's (
unfinished) version of the tale, and states that his source was a poet from
Provence called
Kyot.
Titurel and Willehalm Wolfram is the author of two other narrative works: the fragmentary
Titurel and the unfinished
Willehalm. These were both composed after
Parzival, and
Titurel mentions the death of Hermann I, which dates it firmly after 1217.
Titurel consists of two fragments, which tell the story of Schionatulander and Sigune (lovers that were already depicted in
Parzival). The first fragment deals with the birth of love between the main characters. The second fragment is quite different. Schionatulander and Sigune are alone in a forest, when their peace is suddenly disturbed by a mysterious dog, whose leash contains a story written in rubies. Sigune is eager to read the story, but the dog runs off. Schionatulander sets off to find him, but, as we already know from
Parzival, he dies in the attempt.
Willehalm, an unfinished poem based on the
Old French chanson de geste,
Aliscans, was a significant work, and has been preserved in 78 manuscripts. It is set against the backdrop of the religious wars between the Christians and the
Saracens. The eponymous hero Willehalm kidnaps a Saracen princess, converts her to Christianity and marries her. The Saracen king raises an army to rescue his daughter. The poem has many of the distinguishing features of medieval literature: the victory of the Christians over a much larger Saracen army, the touching death of the young knight Vivian, Willehalm's nephew and the works mirror of chivalric courage and spiritual purity.
Lyric poetry Wolfram's nine surviving songs, five of which are
dawn-songs, are regarded as masterpieces of
Minnesang. Dawn-songs recount the story of a knight who spends the night with his beloved lady, but at dawn has to slip away unnoticed. Mostly it is the lady who wakes the knight up in the morning, but sometimes this mission is made by the watchman. No melodies survived. Two melodies are still connected to him, the
Schwarzer Thon, attributed to Wolfram in a 14th-century manuscript, and the fragmentary and unfinished epic
Titurel (after 1217) with a complicated four-line
stanza form that was often used in later poems.
Influence The 84 surviving manuscripts of
Parzival, both complete and fragmentary, indicate the immense popularity of Wolfram's major work in the following two centuries.
Willehalm, with 78 manuscripts, comes not far behind. Many of these include a continuation written in the 1240s by
Ulrich von Türheim under the title
Rennewart. The unfinished
Titurel was taken up and expanded around 1272 by a poet named Albrecht, who is generally presumed to be
Albrecht von Scharfenberg and who adopts the narrative persona of Wolfram. This work is referred to as the
Jüngere Titurel (
Younger Titurel). The modern rediscovery of Wolfram begins with the publication of a translation of
Parzival in 1753 by the Swiss scholar
Johann Jakob Bodmer.
Parzival was the main source
Richard Wagner used when writing the
libretto to his opera,
Parsifal. Wolfram himself appears as a character in another Wagner opera,
Tannhäuser. ==References==