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Church and Court Patronage

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Church and Court Patronage By Mika Tsuboi, Jacob Rosok, Kyle Fuller, Sarah Brown, Lyssa Hogan Patronage The term derives from the latin patronatus, the formal ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Church and Court Patronage


1
Church and Court Patronage
  • By
  • Mika Tsuboi, Jacob Rosok, Kyle Fuller, Sarah
    Brown, Lyssa Hogan

2
Patronage
  • The term derives from the latin patronatus, the
    formal relationship between a Patronus and his
    Clientes.
  • Support
  • Encouragement
  • Privilege
  • Sponsorship

3
History of Patronage
  • Peak between 14th and 17th centuries
  • Various Scholars who enjoyed the support of
    patrons
  • Natural philosophers (Galileo)
  • Musicians (Beethoven, Mozart)
  • Writers (Shakespeare)
  • Philosophers
  • Alchemists
  • Astrologers
  • Artists (Leonardo da Vinci Michelangelo)

4
Benefits of Patronage
  • Recipients
  • Received Notability and Credibility
  • Benefactors
  • Received prestige

5
Types of Patronage
Court
Church
6
Court Patronage
7
Development of court Patronage
  • Conditions under which court patronage manifests
  • Ancient origins

8
History
  • England
  • Anglo-Saxon Scop
  • was looked upon as divinely inspired for the
    purpose of setting forth the noble deeds of his
    hearers, and of raising their thoughts to higher
    things.
  • -Karl Julius Holzknecht
  • Courtly Love
  • Medieval Emperors
  • Patronage Leads to the Renaissance

9
Elizabethan Era
  • Patronage of actors changes quality of
    performance
  • Public performances as practices for court
  • Elizabeth selects her own company
  • Shakespeare

10
Social Stratification
  • Common People
  • Nobility

11
Christianity in the Middle Ages
12
Church as Patron
  • Financial resources to commission literature
  • Education to produce it
  • Influence to spread it

13
Financial Resources
  • Creation of literature was expensive
  • Books considered a luxury item
  • In order to make money for writing, authors must
    work on commission
  • No means of independent distribution

14
Education
  • Average person not literate
  • Most of those who were literate were employees of
    the church
  • Monks copying manuscripts

15
Influence
  • Church
  • Vast network
  • If a work was deemed worthy, Church had means of
    distributing it over vast distances
  • Example Dream of the Rood in three different
    locations

16
Direct Vs. Indirect Patronage
  • Direct
  • actual financial commissioning of a work by a
    church group or official
  • direct control of content
  • Indirect
  • A reflection of church influence and cultural
    dominance in society
  • Example Beowulf
  • Preserved when copied by monks
  • Example Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
  • Reflection of Christian morality

17
Pros and Cons
  • Pros
  • Less literature produced
  • Less literature preserved
  • Cons
  • Bias

18
Sir Gawain and The Green Knight
  • And he releases it lightly, and lifts up his
    hand / And gives him Gods blessing, and
    graciously prays lines 369-370
  • - Aurthur is shown as a spiritual leader. This
    also enforces the belief that the King was
    somehow divine and connected directly with God.
  • And therefore, as I find, he fittingly had / On
    the inner part of his shield her image
    portrayed lines 648-649
  • - The Cult of the Virgin promotes the belief that
    the Virgin Mary, while not directly involved with
    the inner workings of the Holy Trinity, does hold
    great sway in Heaven and can use this power for
    the benefit of her devotees.

19
  • And better so to have been than battered to
    bits, / Beheaded by an elf-man, for empty pride!
    lines 680-681
  • - The Green Knight can be interpreted in many
    ways, but generally he is seen as a device used
    to glorify Christianity while demeaning previous
    religions.

20
  • Thus she tested his temper and tried many a
    time, / Whatever her true intent, to entice him
    to sin lines 1549-1550
  • - The continued advances upon Gawain may be an
    allusion to the story of Adam and Eve. This
    would give the text an appeal to a particularly
    pious audience as well as demonstrate the
    knowledge held by the author.
  • Each brother of that band, a baldric should
    have, / A belt borne oblique, of a bright green /
    To be worn with one accord for that worthys
    sake. / So that was taken as a token by the Table
    Round lines 2516-2519
  • - Demonstrates that a gracious King and his
    court, who have allied themselves with a gracious
    God, have the power to turn something negative
    into a symbol of unity and strength.

21
Propaganda
  • Can we trust the texts we read as a good account
    of medieval culture?

22
Examples of Propaganda
  • Michelangelo
  • Geoffrey Chaucer
  • Welsh Poets

23
The End
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