Romance

Libeaus Desconus

Date of compositionc. 1325-50
Place of compositionSouth-East Midlands
Form

Twelve-line tail-rhyme stanzas: variously aa4b3aa4b3cc4b3dd4b3 and aabaabccbddb3

IMEV
1690
Keywords Bedchamber Education Familial Discord Foundlings Incest Marriage Mistaken Identity Multiple Births Penance Religious Figures Religious Spaces Secular Spaces Sexual Encounters

Gingelayne, Sir Gawain's illegitimate son, is kept away from knightly culture by his mother, who calls him 'Bewface'. One day, he finds the body of a dead knight, takes his armour and travels to King Arthur's court at Glastonbury. The King grants his request for knighthood, and, since he does not know his real name, dubs him Libeaus Desconus (The Fair Unknown). He also agrees to grant his next adventure to the new knight. Shortly after, a richly-dressed maiden called Elene arrives and requests a knight to rescue her mistress, the lady of Synadowne. She and her dwarf companion reluctantly accept Libeaus as their champion but mock his inexperience as they set off. However, when Libeaus roundly defeats Sir William Delaraunche and his three nephews, sending them all back to Arthur's court, she apologises.

They continue through the forest until they come across two hideous giants. Libeaus slays them both and rescues Violet, daughter of Earl Anctour, who rewards him richly. He sends the giants' heads to Arthur and they proceed to the castle of Sir Jeffron, who has pledged a white falcon to any lady more beautiful than his lover. Libeaus presents Elene, and the two women are displayed in the marketplace of a nearby town. When the citizens pronounce Jeffron's lover the fairer, Libeaus challenges him and, victorious, sends the falcon to Arthur.

They resume their journey until they encounter a former knight of Synadowne, Sir Otes de Lyle, who is hunting in the forest. After a dispute over a dog, twelve of Otes's friends attack Libeaus, but he defeats them in a gruelling battle and sends the leader to Arthur, who is so impressed that he makes Libeaus a knight of the Round Table. Libeaus and Elene travel on to the Yle d'Or, where Libeaus rescues the city from a Saracen giant. The lady of the city, however, is a sorceress, who uses her powers to seduce the knight. He forgets his quest for a year, but when Elene rebukes him he sets off again immediately, overcome with shame.

When they finally reach Synadowne, Libeaus fights and defeats the steward, Sir Lambard, who tells him that his lady is imprisoned by two clerks, Irayne and Mabon, in a magical palace. The next day, Libeaus enters the beautiful hall, which is made of precious stones and full of minstrels. As he approaches the dais, the music stops, the lights are extinguished and the hall begins to collapse around him. Maboun appears and challenges Libeaus. He fights both clerks until Maboun is slain and the wounded Irayne vanishes. As Libeaus prays, a dragon with a woman's face approaches and kisses the terrified knight. Its skin falls away to reveal the beautiful and naked lady of Synadowne, who declares that kissing a knight of Gawain's kin has broken her enchantment. She offers to marry Libeaus and they return to her delighted subjects, before travelling on to Arthur's court. They are married in a forty-day ceremony, then return to Synadowne and live happily for seven years.

Edition used for plot summary: Mills, Lybeaus Desconus (1969).
Manuscript: London, Lambeth Palace, MS 306.

Manuscripts

Manuscript Date Folio
London, British Library, MS Additional 27879 (Percy Folio) c.1650 pp. 317-346
London, British Library, MS Cotton Caligula A.ii 1446-60 42v-57r
London, Lambeth Palace Library, MS 306 Second half of the fifteenth century 73r-107r
London, Lincoln's Inn Library, MS 150 Late fourteenth and fifteenth centuries 1r, 4r-12v
Naples, Biblioteca Nazionale, MS XIII.B.29 1457 pp. 87-113
Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Ashmole 61 End of the fifteenth to the beginning of the sixteenth century 38v-59v

Modern editions

J. Ritson, ed., Ancient English Metrical Romances, 3 vols (London, 1802).

Vol. 2. Edited from Caligula A.ii.

John W. Hales and Frederick J. Furnivall, eds., Bishop Percy's Folio Manuscript: Ballads and Romances, 3 vols. (London: N. Trübner, 1867–68).

Vol. 2, pp. 404-499. Edited from Percy Folio.

Max Kaluza, ed., Libeaus Desconus: die mittelenglische Romanze vom Schönen unbekannten. Nach sechs Handschriften kritisch herausgegeban, Altenglische Bibliothek 5 (Leipzig, 1890).

Edited from all MSS.

M. Mills, ed., Lybeaus Desconus, EETS o.s. 261 (1969).

Edited from Caligula A.ii and Lambeth Palace manuscripts.

George Shuffelton, ed., Codex Ashmole 61: A Compilation of Popular Middle English Verse (Kalamazoo, MI: Medieval Institute Publications, 2008).

Pp. 111-164. Edited from Ashmole 61.

Eve Salisbury and James Weldon, eds., Lybeaus Desconus (Kalamazoo, MI: Medieval Institute Publications, 2013).

Edited from the Lambeth Palace and Naples MSS. 

John Witherington, ed., The Arthurian Texts of the Percy Folio (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2025).

Pp. 259-330. Edited from the Percy Folio.