Composed in the 1480s by the Munich painter and writer Ulrich Fuetrer,
Iban is the story of a young knight at King Arthur's court, who
pursues adventure abroad, wins a land and its lady as his wife, loses
both through his immaturity and negligence, and eventually regains his
country and his spouse in a series of adventures that teach him to place
the welfare of others above his own desires. A retelling of Hartmann von
Aue's Middle High German classic Iwein from circa 1200, itself an
adaptation of the Old French writer Chrétien de Troyes' earlier Yvain,
the Knight with the Lion, Fuetrer's Iban is one of fifteen narratives
making up his massive Arthurian anthology, The Book of Adventures,
which the author compiled for Duke Albrecht IV of Bavaria-Munich. Among
the last premodern retellings of the story of the knight Ywain,
Ibanoffers modern readers an invaluable window onto how the most
beloved Arthurian tales were reinterpreted at the end of the Middle Ages
and at the threshold to the early modern period.
This book offers an edition of the romance, the first for nearly a
quarter of a century, accompanied by a facing translation, the first
into a modern language of any part of the Book of Adventures. It also
includes an introduction, putting the romance into its wider contexts,
and explanatory notes.