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Codex Manesse
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==Contents== The Codex Manesse is an anthology of the works of a total of about 135<ref>the exact number is debatable; of a total of 140 entries, some are clearly of fictional characters, as in "Klingsor of Hungary" and "King Tyro of Scotland", while others may or may not be fictional, as in "Der Winsbeke", "Die Winsbekin". Yet other entries may feature historical poets but combine poems by several authors.</ref> minnesingers of the mid 12th to early 14th century. For each poet, a portrait is shown, followed by the text of their works.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Cotter|first1=Hayley|title=Between Recto and Verso: The Use of Blanks and a Theory of Authorship in the Codex Manesse|url=https://www.academia.edu/33406117|access-date=3 December 2017}}{{Dead link|date=October 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> The entries are ordered approximately by the social status of the poets, starting with the Holy Roman Emperor [[Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor|Henry VI]], Kings [[Conradin]] and [[Wenceslaus II of Bohemia|Wenceslaus II]], down through dukes, counts and knights, to the commoners. Most of the poems are ''[[Minnesang]]'', but there are also other genres, including fables and [[Spruchdichtung]] (didactic poems). The oldest poets represented in the manuscript had been dead for more than a century at the time of its compilations, while others were contemporaries, the latest even late additions of poems written during the early 14th century. In the portraits, some of the nobles are shown in full armour in their heraldic colors and devices (therefore with their faces hidden), often shown as taking part in a [[joust]], or sometimes in single combat with sword and shield, and sometimes in actual battle. Some images are motivated by the biography of the person depicted, but some designs just draw their motif from the poet's name (thus, Dietmar is shown riding a mule, since his name can be interpreted as meaning ''people's horse''),<ref>{{Cite book |last=ZAPF. |first=GUNTER BUTZER; KATJA SARKOWSKY; HUBERT |url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/1176251040 |title=GroΓe Werke der Literatur XV |date=2020 |publisher=NARR FRANCKE ATTEMPTO VER |isbn=978-3-7720-5705-2 |pages=12 |language=DE |oclc=1176251040 |quote=Dietmar...could be conceivable...as a people's horse, specifically the donkey}}</ref> while others draw on imagery from their lyrics ([[Walther von der Vogelweide]] is shown in a thoughtful pose which exactly matches the description of himself in one of his most famous songs).
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