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7 - A Prism of its Time: Social Functions of the Motet in Fourteenth-Century France

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2020

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Summary

IN AN OFFICIAL LETTER in 1346, King John of Bohemia, Count of Luxembourg, absolved the Dominican order of an old allegation that they had murdered his father, Henry VII, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, by poisoning the Mass wine during communion. The crime would have taken place at Buonconvento near Siena in 1313, in the midst of a campaign during which the emperor intended to unite the warring city-states of northern Italy under the imperial crown. John's letter, written in the year of his own death in the battle of Crécy, mentions the romancij, chronicae & moteti (romances, chronicles and motets) that had been composed in response to his father's alleged murder. One such motet, Scariotis falsitas/Jure quod in opere/Superne matris gaudia, survives as the fifth musical piece in the Roman de Fauvel (Fauv). Its texts proclaim the wickedness of the Dominicans and the horror of their crime. Many of the motets in Fauv criticize the clergy and the mendicant orders; even the pope himself (at that time Clement V, the first of the Avignon popes) is accused of currying favor with the monstrous Fauvel who aspires to dominate the world. Pope Clement had initially supported Henry's enterprise in Italy but, at the instigation of King Philip the Fair of France, had abandoned his cause. Philip's past reign and his evil counselors are likewise heavily criticized in Fauv. Thus, the motet places us in the midst of the political turmoil in France and Italy at the beginning of the fourteenth century. Since the manuscript probably originated in circles of French court officials, and since John of Bohemia, who was a long-standing friend of the French royal house (and, incidentally, Guillaume de Machaut's first patron), often sojourned in Paris, he may have known or heard the motet about his father's death. John's rejection of the accusation came no less than thirty years after the alleged murder, so he too may have initially given credence to the allegation uttered in the motet.

Scariotis falsitas/Jure quod in opere reveals one of the newer functions of the motet during the fourteenth century, beyond the traditional concerns with amorous and devotional subjects. In the previous century, political topics were more proper to the conductus, although there are some thirteenth-century motets criticizing the hypocrisy of the clergy.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2018

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