Charles de Coster (born Aug. 20, 1827, Munich, Bavaria [Germany]—died May 7, 1879, Brussels, Belg.) was a Belgian novelist, writing in French, who stimulated Belgian national consciousness and prepared the ground for an original native literature.
De Coster lived most of his life in poverty and obscurity and took 10 years to write his masterpiece, La Légende et les aventures héroïques, joyeuses, et glorieuses d’Ulenspiegel et de Lamme Goedzak au pays de Flandres et ailleurs (1867; The Glorious Adventures of Tyl Ulenspiegl). Freely adapting the traditional tales of the folk heroes Till Eulenspiegel (Ulenspiegel) and Lamme, he set his story in the 16th century, at the height of the Inquisition; the hero’s father is burned at the stake as a heretic, and Ulenspiegel swears an oath to avenge his death. De Coster imbues his characters with heroic qualities within a typically Belgian realism. First developed in Légendes flamandes (1858; Flemish Legends), his literary style is highly coloured and archaistic in the manner of Rabelais, Montaigne, and 16th-century chroniclers. With its theme of resistance against oppression, the book has been called “the Bible of Flanders” and “the breviary of freedom”; yet neither the gruesome death and torture scenes nor a certain tendency to philosophize prevent its being, as the author describes it, “a merry, jovial book, a work of art and of literature.” The contrast between La Légende and other Belgian novels of the period is sharp and striking. It took 20 years, however, for the novel to be appreciated.