The versions of Amis and Amiles include--(a) numerous Latin
recensions in prose and verse, notably that given by Vincent
de Beauvais in his Speculum historiale (lib. xxiii. cap.
162-166 and 169); (b) an Anglo-Norman version in short rhymed
couplets, which is not attached to the Charlemagne legend
and agrees fairly closely with the English Amis and Amiloun
(Midland dialect, 13th century); these with the old Norse
version are printed by E. Kolbing, Altengl. Bibl. vol. ii.
(1889), and the English romance also in H. Weber, Metrical
Romances, vol. ii. (1810); (c) the 12th- century French
chanson de geste analysed by P. Paris in Hist. litt. de
la France (vol. xxii.), and edited by K. Hofmann (Erlangen,
1882) with the addition of Jourdain de Blaives; (d) the
Latin Vita Sanct. Amici et Amelii (pr. by Kolbing, op.
cit.) and its Old-French translation, Li amitiez de Ami et
Amile, ed. L. Moland and C. d'Hericault in Nouvelles du xiiie siecle (Paris, 1856); (e) a 14th-century
drama, Un Miracle de Notre Dame d'Amis et Amile, ed. L.
J. N. Monmerque and F. Michelin Theatre fr. au moyen
age (1839); (f) old Norse, Icelandic, Danish versions,
&c. (see K. Hofmann, op. cit.); (g) an imitation which
under the name of Oliver and Artus was current in many
languages and was the subject of Hans Sachs's comedy, Die
treuen Gesellen (1556); (h) Engelhart und Engeltrut, by
the minnesinger Conrad von Wurzburg (ed. M. Haupt, Leipzig,
1844, 2nd ed., 1900); (i) the late prose romances, with many
changes and additions, Milles et Amys, printed by A. Verard
(Paris, c. 1503), &c., for which see G. Brunet, Manuel du
libraire, s.v. "Milles." A different version of the legend is
inserted at considerable length in L'Ystoire des sept sages
(ed. G. Paris, Soc. des anc. textes fr., 1876), in which
the friends are called Alexandre and Louis, and Bellisant
Florentine. For a further bibliography see L. Gautier, Bibl.
des chansons de geste (Paris, 1897). William Morris's version
of the French romance was printed at the Kelmscott Press in
1894. See also the essay by W. Pater in The Renaissance, 1893.
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