Title: THE LATE
1- THE LATE
- MIDDLE
- AGES
- (1066-1485)
- DOTT. GABRIELE A. COCCO
2HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
1066 Death of King Edward, the Confessor Election of Harold as King Norwegians defeated at Stamford Bridge Harold defeated by the Normans at Hastings William the Bastard becomes King
1086 Doomesday Book, first official record of property owners
1098 Crusades attempt to win back Jerusalem form the Moslems
1154-1189 Reign of Henry II
1164 Constitutions of Clarendon
1170 Assassinations of Thomas Beckett in Canterbury Cathedral
1189-1199 Richard I the Crusades
1199-1216 Reign of King John the Lackland
1215 Signing of Magna Charta Libertatum
1295 Opening of the first English Parliament
1337-1377 Reign of Edward III
1377-1453 The Hundreds Year War
1348 The Black Death
1381 The Peasants Revolt
1415 The French defeated at Agincourt
1453 English defeat at Castillon Calais remains the only English dominion in France
1455-1485 The War of the Roses
1485 Battle of Bosworth Henry Tudor wins Richard III Tudor Dynasty begins
31066. THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS
- William the Bastard (the Conqueror, since 1066)
and his people, though technically subjects to
the French king and speaking French, the Normans
(variant of Norsemen) were Vikings who settled in
Normandy a century and a half before. William I
introduced into Anglo-Saxon England the
continental feudal system. England was soon
filled with Norman castles. The old Anglo-Danish
aristocracy which did not fall at Hastings were
later dispossessed and by 1100 most of the
country was under Norman control.
41170. ST. THOMAS BECKET
- Geoffrey CHAUCER
- The Canterbury Tales, The General Prologue, ll.
12-17 - Thanne longen folk to goon on pilgrimages
- and palmeres for to seken straunge strondes
- to ferne halwes, kowthe in sondry londes
- and specially from every shires ende of Engelond,
- to Caunterbury they wende, The hooly blisful
martir for to seke - that hem hath holpen, whan that they were seeke.
-
- T.S. ELIOT
- A Murder in the Cathedral , ll. 4-8
- Towards the cathedral? What danger can be
- for us, the poor, the poor women of Canterbury?
What tribulation - with which we are not already familiar? There is
no danger - for us, and there is no safety in the cathedral.
Some presage of an act
1107. THE CONCORDAT OF LONDON In England, as in
Germany (Concordat of Worms, 1122), a distinction
was being made in the kings chancery between the
secular and ecclesiastical powers of the
prelates. Employing the distinction, Henry I
(10681135) gave up his right to invest his
bishops and abbots. Henry recognized the dangers
of depending on monastic scholars to staff his
chancery and turned increasingly to secular
scholars (who naturally held minor orders) and
rewarded these men of his own making with
bishoprics and abbeys. Henry expanded the system
of scutage to reduce the monarchys dependence on
knights supplied from church lands. The
conclusion of the brief English investiture
controversy was to strengthen the secular power
of the king.
- Under Henry II (1154-89), there came the
first great clash between the Crown and the
Church. Henry set forth a code of laws, the
Constitutions of Clarendon (1164) according to
which the king claimed considerable authority in
investing the bishops. Such constitutions also
ruled that clergymen who committed serious crimes
were to be tried by a civil court as well as by
an ecclesiastical one. The Archbishop of
Canterbury, Thomas Becket (1118-70), strongly
opposed this new measure and spent five years in
France in self-imposed exile. On his return, four
knights sent by the king murdered him in the
Canterbury Cathedral. He was soon made a martyr
and saint by the Church of Rome.
5 1205 La?amons Brut London, British
Library, MS Cotton Caligula A.ix (C), P1 ff.
3r194v P2 ff. 195r-261v
- 16,000 line alliterative verse chronicle
- with random ornamental rhyme
- La?amon (Lawman) was a priest of Worcestershire
- narrates the history of Britain
- King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table
- Translation of different sources
- Geoffrey of Monmouth, Historia
Regum Britanniae (1137) - Wace, Roman de Brut
6 1200, The Owl and the Nightingale
London, British Library, MS Cotton Caligula A.ix
(C), ff. 233ra246ra Oxford, Jesus College
MS 29 (J), ff. 156ra 168vb
- extinction of the Old English language and the
Norman influence - 1800 verses in octosyllabic couplet (from French
versification) - exempla of opposite allegorical interpretations
- the text is believed to have been originally
composed between 1189-1216 as the poem mentions
of a recently departed King Henry, Henry II who
died in 1189. However, it has been suggested that
the poem actually refers to Henry III, which
would date the poem as later than 1272 - The work is attributed to Master Nicholas of
Guildford, who is mentioned in reverential terms
within the text.
71215. MAGNA CHARTA LIBERTATUM
- The policy of HEAVY TAXATION established by
king JOHN I, called THE LACKLAND (1199-1216),
met with fierce resistance by the nobility, the
citizens of London and the clergy. The king was
forced to grant the MAGNA CHARTA which became the
foundation of all future RIGHTS of the English
people. Yet, the liberty accorded by the MC only
concerned the NOBLES and the FREEMEN (all those
with full possession of both civil and political
rights).
81295. THE PARLIAMENT
- A further step towards the modern political
system was taken during the reign of Henry III
(1216-72). PARLIAMENT was still much of a feudal
assembly composed of nobles and high clergy
alone. - In the years 1264-65, two representatives
from each borough were also called to Parliament.
This was the beginning of the future HOUSE OF
COMMONS. - This institution developed further and under
Edward I (1272-1307) is generally referred to as
the MODEL PARLIAMENT.
9 1250, Orrmulum (Bodleian Library, MS Junius I,
col. 89)
- Late twelfth-century poem from the East Midlands
of some 20,000 short lines. It is named after its
author, an Augustinian canon called Orrm, a
Scandinavian name meaning serpent. - Hs objective is to give an English paraphrase of
the gospels for the year as arranged in the Mass
book, supplemented by a homily on each. The text
is considered to have been left unfinished. - Evidently, it was Orrms objective to offer
religious teaching in the vernacular both as
instruction for a lay audience as well as
pastoral care.
101337-1453. THE HUNDRED YEARS WAR
- By the 15th century England enjoyed peace and
internal stability as a result, it attempted to
expand into a European Empire by repeatedly
attacking France. Henry V (House of Lancaster)
led England to victory at Agincourt in 1415. His
soldiers fought for a King and a Country having a
sense of nationhood that the French feudal system
of independent baronial armies did not share. - Henry was acknowledged heir to the throne of
France in 1420, consolidating his position by
marrying the French Princess Catherine. However,
his early death and weak successor, combined with
the military success of Joan of Arc, the British
were forced back to Calais, which was to remain
Englands only French port for other 100 years.
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12 1455-1485.THE WARS OF THE ROSES
13 Now is the winter
of our discontent made glorious
summer by this sun of York and
all the clouds that lourd upon our house
in the deep bosom of the ocean buried
W. Shakespeare, Richard III
- The Middle Ages closed with a long,
devastating BLOOD FEUD fought for royal power
between the ancient dynastic houses of YORK and
LANCASTER. The CIVIL WAR, aggravated by the
soldiers returning home from France, discontented
and unemployed and ready to continue fighting
under new leaders, was not a total war, but a
series of sieges, attacks organised by a few
wealthy nobles. The wars were finally won by
Henry Tudor (House of Lancaster) who defeated
Richard III at the battle of Bosworth in 1485
and became Henry VII of England.
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15LIFE AS A PILGRIMAGE
LIFE AS A PILGRIMAGE Life was seen as a short
journey leading to true life, after death. A
sense of impending death and preparation for the
afterlife is common to the spirit of the age.
Most of the literary subjects deal with moral and
spiritual themes Whan that April with his
shoures sote The droghte of Marche hath perced to
the rote So priketh hem Nature in hir
corages Than longen folk to goon on pilgrimages
The General Prologue CHAUCER, The Canterbury
Tales
16MINSTRELS, STORYTELLERS, PREACHERS
Lordinges, quod he, in chirches whan I
preche, I peyne me to han an hauteyn speche,
The Pardoners Prologue G. CHAUCER, The
Canterbury Tales
- It was an age dominated by anonymous voices.
Minstrels, moving from castle to castle, sang
some legends (i.e. King Arthur and the Knights of
the Round Table). - Storytellers, in village squares, sang of love,
magic and war in the ballads. - Preachers addressed people during services and/or
in public homilies (selling of indulgences) -
17A NEW LITERATURE, A NEW ENGLISH
Written English literature began to
reappear at the end of the 12th century.
The change from Old English to Middle
English did not immediately begin after
1066. Middle English slowly developed out of
Old English, Norse influences and its vocabulary
was largely enriched by French and its Latin
matrix. When Middle English literature
began to take place in the aristocratic
circles, they exemplified completely new
forms and genres showing French and Italian
influence. The standardization of the
English language was greatly helped by
Chaucer, whose southern dialect was
appointed to be the literary language of England.
Caxtons work widened such a phenomenon.
- The Conquest caused some serious
consequences for the Anglo-Saxon culture. The
Normans brought a new language FRENCH, and a
different literary sensibility. The French
dialect the Normans spoke is called ANGLO-NORMAN.
Anglo-Saxon literature was soon dwarfed by the
French models and Old English went on being
spoken by the common people. French was spoken in
the UPPER CLASSES and at COURT whilst Latin was
the language of the Church. -
- The older literary forms, the epic especially
and its ideals, died as a consequence of the end
of the civilization of which they were an
expression . -
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19THE ROMANCE
20ROMANCE
- Originally, it was a poetic form
- originated in France and it reached its climax
with the works of Chrétien de Troyes (abt. 1182) - Retells the adventures of knights, both battles
and love - Leisure-time literary form for the aristocracy
- Turning point form Germanic epic to chivalry and
the code of honour
21Roman de la Rose
- The Roman de la Rose is a medieval French poem
styled as an allegorical dream vision. It is a
notable instance of courtly literature. The
works stated purpose is to both entertain and to
teach others about the Art of Love. At various
times in the poem, the "Rose" of the title is
seen as the name of the lady, and as a symbol of
female sexuality in general. Likewise, the other
characters' names function both as regular names
and as abstractions illustrating the various
factors that are involved in a love affair. - The poem was written in two stages. The first
4058 lines, written by Guillaume de Lorris circa
1230, describe the attempts of a courtier to woo
his beloved. Around 1275, Jean de Meun composed
an additional 17,724 lines. Jeans discussion of
love is considered more philosophical and
encyclopedic, but also more misogynistic.
22THEMES MATTER
- Medieval romances were usually concerned with
characters (types) and events of the courtly
world. - Their subject matter was love, adventures,
supernatural events. In addition, Christian
motifs like the quest of the Holy Grail are
strictly related to supernatural events,
apocryphal writings and legends of a far-flung
past. - MATTER OF ROME Aeneas, Caesar
- MATTER OF FRANCE Charlemagne
- MATTER OF BRITAIN King Arthur the Knights of
the Round Table - MATTER OF ENGLAND King Horn, Havelok the Dane.
23 1375. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
London, British Library, MS Cotton Nero A.x , ff.
91r-124v
- expansion of an Arthurian episode (mythologema)
- 2530 lines mixture of Germanic, Celtic and French
influences gathered together by the use of the
supernatural. - northern dialect, unknown author
- use of a sui generis alliterative verse as the
Old English alliterative measure -
24The Ballad
- Originally anonymous poems meant to be sung and
danced, transmitted orally with variants - Organised in several stanzas, generally arranged
in quatrains (four line stanzas) - Its meter is consists of alternating iambic lines
of four accents (first and third) and three
accents (second and fourth). - Stanzas usually rhyme abab
- Since they were sung, refrain, inversion and
repetition are frequently employed - it includes standard formulas
- The story id often told in a question-answer way
IAMB a foot comprising an unstressed syllable
followed by a stressed syllable (as in a-bove).
25THEMES
- The story is simple and direct,
- concentrates on a single incident
- There is generally little/no background to the
facts narrated and little use of detail - Ballads can be classified by the following
themes - BALLADS OF MAGIC
- Fairies, ghosts, witchcraft. Great imaginative
power - BORDER BALLADS
- Rivalry between England and Scotland
- BALLADS OF LOVE AND DOMESTIC TRAGEDY
- BALLADS OF OUTLAWS
- The Robin Hood Cycle in Piers Plowman by
W.Langland (1377)