Konrad von Würzburg (born c. 1225, Würzburg, Würzburg—died Aug. 31, 1287, Basel, Switz.) was a Middle High German poet who, during the decline of chivalry, sought to preserve the ideals of courtly life.
(Read Sir Walter Scott’s 1824 Britannica essay on chivalry.)
Of humble origin, he served a succession of patrons as a professional poet and eventually settled in Basel. His works range from love lyrics and short didactic poems (Sprüche) to full-scale epics, such as Partonopier und Meliur, on the fairy-lover theme, and Der Trojanerkrieg (The Trojan War), an account of the Trojan War. He is at his best in his shorter narrative poems, the secular romances Engelhart, Dasz Herzmaere (The Heart’s Tidings), and Keiser Otte mit dem Barte (Kaiser Otte with the Beard) and the religious legends Silvester, Alexius, and Pantaleon.
Konrad’s originality is one of form rather than content. Taking Gottfried von Strassburg, one of the masters of the epic of courtly life, as his model, he developed Gottfried’s stylized techniques often to the point of exaggeration. In one of his poems every syllable rhymes. The complexity and the explicitly didactic character of his poetry earned for him the esteem of his contemporaries. A century later the rising generation of artisan-poets known as Meistersingers named him as one of the “12 old masters” of medieval poetry from whom they claimed descent.