Frauenlob (born c. 1260, Meissen, Thuringia [Germany]—died Nov. 29, 1318, Mainz, Franconia [Germany]) was a late Middle High German poet. He was the original representative of the school of middle-class poets who succeeded the knightly minnesingers, or love poets, adapting the minnesinger traditions to poems dealing with theological mysteries, scientific lore, and philosophy. His nickname, meaning “extoller of ladies,” supposedly derives from his championship of the title Vrowe (lady) over Wip (woman) in a contest with a rival poet.
Well-educated and precocious—a record exists of his participation in a poetic debate at 13—he became a wandering court minstrel, dwelt for some time in Prague, and settled in Mainz (c. 1312), where he founded the first meistersinger school. Though it is unlikely that this school had the rigid structure of the meistersinger Singschulen of the 15th century, the strained ingenuity and mannered conceits that characterize Frauenlob’s verses make him the true model of the meistersingers. His best-known poem, Marienleich (“Mary’s Song”), is an impressive display of virtuosity in which the Virgin is praised in complex language that combines traditional religious imagery, double meanings, and esoteric philosophical allusions.