Jean de Le Mote


Jean de Le Mote was an Old French poet and musical composer from the County of Hainaut.
Le Mote was a native speaker of Picard or Walloon, as the spelling of his surname indicates, since le is feminine in those dialects. He is, however, probably the same person as the Jehan de La Mote who worked as a scribe in the chancery of Hainaut according to the registers of 1325–1326. He may have hailed from Ghent, if he is the person of the same name to whom King Edward III of England granted an annuity of 20 pounds in 1338. He was probably connected to the English court through Edward's wife since 1328, Philippa of Hainaut. He was still living in 1350, when Gilles [Li Muisis] praised him in his Méditations as one of the four greatest living poets.
Le Mote wrote three known long poems:
He also wrote at least one known short poem:
  • O Victriens, mondains Dieu d'armonie, one half of an exchange of poems with Philippe de Vitry, in which he responds to criticism of his service in England
Silvère Menegaldo argues for Le Mote as a transitional figure between itinerant minstrel for whom poetry and music were inextricable and the more literary "professional courtier-poet".