Trouvère , sometimes spelled
trouveur , is the Northern
French (
langue d'oïl) form of the
langue d'oc (Occitan) word
trobador. It refers to poet-composers who were roughly contemporary with and influenced by the
troubadours (composers and performers of
Old Occitan lyric poetry during the
High Middle Ages) but who composed their works in the northern
dialects of France. The first known
trouvère was
Chrétien de Troyes (
fl. 1160s-80s) (Butterfield, 1997) and the
trouvères continued to flourish until about 1300. Some 2130
trouvère poems have survived; of these, at least two-thirds have melodies.