Walter Map (born c. 1140, Hereford?, England—died c. 1209) was an English churchman and writer whose work helps to illuminate the society and religious issues of his era.
Probably of Welsh descent, Map studied at the University of Paris from about 1154 to 1160. He took holy orders and became a clerk in the household of Henry II, and he served the king as an itinerant judge and represented him at the third Lateran Council (1179). After holding various church positions, he became archdeacon of Oxford in 1197.
It was as a writer rather than an ecclesiastic, however, that Map came to be remembered. Between 1181 and 1192 he composed De nugis curialium (Courtiers’ Trifles). A miscellany written in Latin, it contains legends, folklore, and tales as well as gossip, observations, and reflections, and it reveals the author to have been knowledgeable and shrewd and a man of considerable wit. Perhaps the best-known item is the letter from Valerius to Rufinus on the folly of marrying that is referred to in the prologue to “The Wife of Bath’s Tale” in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. The book also includes valuable histories of Christian heretical sects of the period and of the Anglo-Norman kings. Other works once attributed to Map, including Arthurian romances and goliardic satires against the clergy, are no longer thought to be his work.