Related Items
Encarta Search
Search Encarta about Rondeau

Advertisement

Windows Live® Search Results

  • Rondeau - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Rondeau may mean: Rondeau (poetry), a form of French poetry; Rondo, a musical form from the 18th century to the present, also spelt 'rondeau' Rondeau (music), a medieval and early ...

  • Rondeau (poetry) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    This article is about the poetry form. For other uses, see Rondeau. A rondeau (plural rondeaux) is a form of French poetry with 15 lines written on two rhymes, as well as a ...

  • Rondeau

    Prosody reports ... Lilian Crutchfield, Erica Maria Gregg R O N D E A U

See all search results in
Windows Live® Search Results
Also on Encarta

Rondeau

Encyclopedia Article
Find | Print | E-mail | Blog It

Rondeau, (French, “rondo”), one of several fixed forms in French poetry and song, popular from the 13th to the 16th century. Possibly originating as sung accompaniment for a round dance with a chorus of singers and a soloist, early rondeaux were written by such French poet-composers as Guillaume de Machaut. The early form had eight lines, of which the first two formed a refrain repeated in the middle and at the end of the poem; only two rhymes were used.

By the 15th century, the literary rondeau, in the hands of such a poet as François Villon, began to be differentiated from the sung form. The standard literary form consists of 13 tetrameter lines divided into three stanzas, still built on only two rhymes; an unrhymed refrain, formed from the opening words of the first line, ends the second and third stanzas. Related verse forms are the rondel and the triolet, which employs the original eight-line form. In the 19th century the rondeau was revived by several British and French poets.

For the 17th- and 18th-century musical rondeau, see Rondo.



Find
Print
E-mail
Blog It


More from Encarta


© 2008 Microsoft