Taillefer

Wace mentions Taillefer in the ''Roman de Rou'' (c. 1170): :{| |
The story of Taillefer is told by Geoffrey Gaimar, Henry of Huntingdon, William of Malmesbury and in the ''Carmen de Hastingae Proelio''. The accounts differ, some mentioning only the juggling, some only the song, but have elements in common. The story was the subject of an 1816 ballad by the German poet Ludwig Uhland, set to music for soprano, tenor, baritone, eight-part chorus and orchestra by Richard Strauss in 1903, Op. 52, named after the protagonist Taillefer. The work received a rare performance on 13 September 2014 at the Last Night of the Proms.
A version drawn from all of the sources can be found in Winston Churchill's ''A History of the English-Speaking Peoples''.
Near the end of the 3rd volume of his works, Robert Ripley mentions Taillefer under the heading "General Eisenhower", pointing out the coincidences between the Allied general and the Norman knight. Taillefer embarked from the shore of Normandy where the Allies landed on D-Day in World War II. The Battle of Hastings was on 14 October 1066, and Taillefer died on that day; Eisenhower was born on 14 October 1890; and "Eisenhower" can be translated from German as "hewer of iron".
It is weakly attested in Burke's 1853 work ''Burke's Landed Gentry for 1853, Vol. IV, p. 237ff'' that the descendants of Taillefer included a local Baron of Oapenge, Kent, named ''Hanger Taylifer'' born circa 1256. Further attestations eventually state his direct descendants include Rowland Taylor (1510 - 1555), Martyr. Provided by Wikipedia
-
1Published 2013Other Authors: “…Taillefer…”
Full text available on Springer
Off-campus access
Electronic eBook