Talk:Brut Chronicle

Latest comment: 6 years ago by Llywrch in topic GA Review

Comments edit

It is unclear to me exactly what this article is about. Is the Brut Chronicle a work or a set of works? It starts off, "The Brut Chronicle is the common name of various surviving medieval chronicles." This implies to me that it is a set of related works (chronicles) and not a single work (perhaps in several variations). But then I read, "Historians consider it important due to the sheer number of copies that survive and the fact that in the late fourteenth century it was translated into the vernacular, indicating the growth in common literacy." This implies that it is a single work ("it").

The term "Prose Brut", which is common in the literature, does not appear in this article. I am not sure if it is more common to treat the Prose Brut in all its manifestations as variants of a single work or as different works within a single tradition. Srnec (talk) 18:15, 4 May 2017 (UTC)Reply

User:Drmies appears to have addressed my concerns. From my reading, it appears that the transition from treating it as a single work with many versions to treating it as a tradition or genre with several distinct works is rather recent. Srnec (talk) 00:42, 5 May 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Srnec, as the young folk say, it's complicated. There really is no "the" Brut. Drmies (talk) 01:05, 5 May 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Thanks for looking at it, Srnec. As you can tell I'm busy with cleanup after merge. As for your question, it depends. In some contexts it is talked about as "the Brut" but that's mostly general shorthand. In many cases there are specific contexts, specific versions; Fortuna mentioned the "Common" version in the text, but there's more. When I get through Matheson I'll list them--if I can. Drmies (talk) 01:58, 5 May 2017 (UTC)Reply

GA Review edit

This review is transcluded from Talk:Brut Chronicle/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: Llywrch (talk · contribs) 00:34, 5 July 2017 (UTC)Reply

  • Preparing to review this article. -- llywrch (talk) 00:34, 5 July 2017 (UTC)Reply
Review by llywrch

Sorry for the delay in writing this review, but other things intervened & I didn't have a chance until now to perform the necessary research to provide a proper & constructive critique. Because the coverage of the subject in this article is not comprehensive enough at this point to be a Good Article. A fact I noticed right away.

First, there is no mention of other works with a similar title: Wace's Roman de Brut, Layamon's Brut, or the Welsh Brut y Tywysogion. This important because these three works all share commonalities with the Brut Chronicle: they draw either on Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain, or its source. As a result, there are differences between them about the material or the details of the material. And the Welsh Brut likewise is a chronicle that extends the legendary history of Monmouth/Wace/Layamon, but with Welsh historical events instead of English ones.

Second, at one point the article states "There are no fewer than 184 versions of the English translation of the work in 181 medieval and post-medieval manuscripts", citing Matheson. (Since a copy of his work was online, I used him as a standard to compare this article against.) Now this is an amazing trick to have more versions than items; logic would dictate there would be more items than versions. Further, different authorities provide different numbers of manuscripts. And checking Matheson, I find there are in addition 49 Anglo-Norman copies (the language of the original text all of these are derived from) & 19 Latin ones. So the information here is incomplete.

Third, the article states simply "it was itself based on Geoffrey of Monmouth's text from the previous century". Although this assertion has a reliable source, a quick comparison of the table of contents of the Middle English version with my copy of Geoffrey of Monmouth's text showed a number of differences. For example, the original version of the Brut Chronicle omitted mention of the Welsh king Cadwallader, which was later added to many copies from a non-Galfridian source. (The article does explain the presence of the 33 daughters of king Diocletian of Syria in the Brut Chronicle, but there are many more points of difference between Geoffrey of Monmouth & the Chronicle.) In fact, at another point Matheson (p. 30) states that the Brut Chronicle was based on Wace's Roman de Brut. Obviously there is a disagreement over which source the original author took the legendary material, which needs more development.

"Incomplete" & "more development" are themes I keep encountering with this article. According to Matheson & other online sources I looked at, the textual evolution is very complex: the three language translations each have their own families of sub-versions, based on how the original (written between 1272 & 1300) was both brought up to date, or had the legendary portion augmented. This article barely even acknowledges this complexity.

And while the sections on the audience(s) of the Brut Chronicle are good, they could be better. Although it is stated that the Chronicle was popular in the Middle Ages, there is no mention about how it fell out of popularity. (Increasing skepticism about Brutus, Lear & King Arthur.) Or about its possible influence, beyond a single mention of Shakespeare. (English Antiquarianism was heavily influenced by the Brut Chronicle.)

As a note, there is a copy online of Brie's edition of the Middle English text at archive.org. And at least two other manuscripts of the Brut Chronicle have webpages: one at University of Michigan, the other at Dartmouth. The British Library blog has a couple of articles on the manuscripts of this work in their collection. I'd expect links to all of these in the article for it to qualify as a GA. (And all of them offer better information about the Brut Chronicle than this article has.)

As I wrote above, the coverage of this article isn't close to G.A. requirements. I'd put it closer to "C" class, or maybe a very strong "Start". Too much material is presented in too brief of fashion, only a sentence or two to cover what would otherwise need a paragraph. (Note: I found all of the missing material I discussed after a fairly simple Google search.) I'll leave this nomination open for a couple weeks in case you are serious about improving this article, but if you aren't I'll need to close it as a fail. -- llywrch (talk) 19:43, 17 July 2017 (UTC)Reply

Due to a lack of an understandable response, marking this as Failed. -- llywrch (talk) 06:11, 13 August 2017 (UTC)Reply