Henry d'Andeli was a 13th-century Norman poet notable for his work La Bataille des Vins (English Battle of the Wines),[1] and for the satirical poem Battle of the Seven Arts.[2] He also wrote Dit du Chancelier Philippe on the subject of his contemporary Philip the Chancellor.
^E. Butler, The Bellum Grammaticale and the Rise of European Literature (2013) p. 49
^Zufferey, François (2004). "Un problème de paternité: le cas d'Henri d'Andeli. II. Arguments linguistiques". Revue de linguistique romane (68): 57–78.
^Zufferey, François (2004). "Henri de Valenciennes, auteur du Lai d'Aristote et de la Vie de saint Jean l'Évangéliste". Revue de linguistique romane (69): 335–358.