The Heptameron
by Marguerite de Navarre
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Published in 1558, ten years after the author's death, The Heptameron is an unfinished work inspired by the Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio, containing seventy-two short stories written in French by Marguerite de Navarre, Queen of Navarre and sister of Francois I. The story begins with five gentlemen and five lady travelers who find themselves stranded in a small town in the Pyrenees, and decide to entertain themselves through story-telling, which rapidly evolves into an all-out verbal show more battle between the sexes. Shocking to many modern readers, The Heptameron is a fascinating glimpse into sixteenth century notions of love, lust, infidelity and other sexual matters. It is believed that many of these stories were taken directly from members of the court of Francois I; however, fictional or true, it is certain that this book will delight, offend and educate readers today as it has for centuries. show lessTags
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Literature of 1550s France, 15 February 2015
This review is from: The Heptameron (Classics) (Kindle Edition)
Attributed to Marguerite of Navarre and set in mid-1500s Europe, this is an intriguing collection of seventy-two stories.
With a similar framework to the Canterbury Tales and the Decameron, the narrators - five men and five women of noble background - are thrown together in an abbey in the Pyrenees following a flood. As they wait for a bridge to be built, they entertain themselves by telling (supposedly true) stories. These concern chaste - and faithless - husbands and wives, immoral monks, people who love to the death, people who seek revenge, incest...one is even about the horrid state of toilets in an abbey! A glimpse into the show more world and attitudes of the time.
Each story is followed by the characters debating what they've just heard, and their personalities come out in their talk, from pious old Oisille and sensible Parlamente to the rather brutish Hircan who derides chaste heroes, and the misogynistic Saffredent.
The modern translation makes this completely readable and I quite enjoyed it, though the stories are variable in quality, and I found seventy-two was quite enough! show less
This review is from: The Heptameron (Classics) (Kindle Edition)
Attributed to Marguerite of Navarre and set in mid-1500s Europe, this is an intriguing collection of seventy-two stories.
With a similar framework to the Canterbury Tales and the Decameron, the narrators - five men and five women of noble background - are thrown together in an abbey in the Pyrenees following a flood. As they wait for a bridge to be built, they entertain themselves by telling (supposedly true) stories. These concern chaste - and faithless - husbands and wives, immoral monks, people who love to the death, people who seek revenge, incest...one is even about the horrid state of toilets in an abbey! A glimpse into the show more world and attitudes of the time.
Each story is followed by the characters debating what they've just heard, and their personalities come out in their talk, from pious old Oisille and sensible Parlamente to the rather brutish Hircan who derides chaste heroes, and the misogynistic Saffredent.
The modern translation makes this completely readable and I quite enjoyed it, though the stories are variable in quality, and I found seventy-two was quite enough! show less
Thoughts...............The Heptameron, attributed to De Navarre, sister of Francois I, is a collection of 72 short stories told by a group of stranded travelers awaiting rescue. This is the premise used for retelling, possibly true, stories which were circulated by De Navarre and her medieval circle of friends concerning adulterous acquaintenances, leacherous friars and circumstances which are amusing and sometimes thought provoking. Mainly, the book is a living testament to life as it was lived in medieval France told by people who actually lived it. Voices from the grave, so to speak.
Would I recommend it...................yes, I was amused by many of the stories and liken the telling of them to having a group of friends join you for show more drinks around the bonfire and sharing incredulous stories which my either shock you or leave you laughing. show less
Would I recommend it...................yes, I was amused by many of the stories and liken the telling of them to having a group of friends join you for show more drinks around the bonfire and sharing incredulous stories which my either shock you or leave you laughing. show less
The best known and most popular of the old tales told in the French language--virtually the first as it appears in written forms. And like so many cutting edge works, it is baudy. Margaret died in 1549. The collection was first published in 1558, in a highly-abridged version (censored to spare real personages?) Mal sur mal n'est pas sante.
"It is time that I recognized the truth, for it is by truth that now I am delivered from your clutches" (144).
Storage 2025
read only story 8,story 15 and story 18
AG-5
Nov 11, 2020Catalan
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Author Information

39+ Works 1,124 Members
Princess of Angouleme, Queen of Navarre, and sister to King Francis I, Marguerite Navarre was in a unique position to contribute to the intellectual and political life of the French Renaissance. She participated actively in state affairs and was celebrated as a patron of the arts, drawing to her court theologians, poets, and scholars who were show more interested in the new ideas that would forge the Renaissance and Reformation in France. Navarre produced religious dramas and mystical poetry, but her masterpiece is the Heptameron (1558), a collection of 72 posthumously published tales, loosely based on Boccaccio's Decameron. These lively stories of love and adventure frequently focus on the social roles of the sexes and recall the contemporary querelle des femmes, the late medieval debate on the status of women. They offer a vivid image of court life during the French Renaissance and a lasting contribution to the literature of feminism. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Some Editions
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Belongs to Publisher Series
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Is abridged in
Has as a reference guide/companion
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Heptameron
- Original publication date
- 1558 (original French) (original French); 1984 (English: Chilton) (English: Chilton)
- People/Characters
- Oisille; Parlamente; Longarine; Nomferide; Ennasuite; Hircan (show all 10); Saffredent; Dagoucin; Simontaut; Geburon
- Important places
- Pyrenees
- First words
- Am ersten Tag im September, um die Zeit, da die Bäder der Pyrenäen ihre wirksamste Heilkraft zu offenbaren beginnen, weilten in Cauderés etliche Kurgäste aus Frankreich wie aus Spanien, die einen, um sich hier einer Trink... (show all)kur zu unterziehen, die anderen, um Bäder zu nehmen, und wieder andere, um es mit Schlammpackungen zu versuchen ; ihre Heilkraft ist so wunderbar, daß Kranke, die von ihren Ärzten aufgegeben wurden, völlig geheilt von dort nach Hause zurückkehren.
(prologue) On the first day of September, when the springs of the Pyrenees are just beginning to be at their most potent, there were a number of people staying at the spa town of Cauterets.
(first story) In the town of Alencon, during the lifetime of the last Duke Charles, there was a procurator by the name of Saint-Aignan. - Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"It's about death and it's about a monk. So please all listen carefully."
- Original language*
- Französisch
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
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- Reviews
- 9
- Rating
- (3.58)
- Languages
- 11 — Danish, Dutch, English, French, French (Middle), German, Hungarian, Italian, Russian, Spanish, Swedish
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- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 43
- ASINs
- 30


































































