Geoffrey Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales

Download Report

Transcript Geoffrey Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales

The Medieval Period and The
Canterbury Tales
MS. MATHEWS
ENGLISH 10H
William the Conqueror and Feudalism
 Feudalism: a caste
system based on
religious hierarchy
God
King
Barons
Vassals
Knights
Serfs
How Feudalism Worked
• For safety and for defense, people in the Medieval
Period formed small communities around a
central lord or master.
• Most people lived on a manor, which consisted of
the castle, the church, the village, and the
surrounding farm land.
• These manors were isolated, with occasional visits
from peddlers, pilgrims on their way to the
Crusades, or soldiers from other fiefdoms.
Feudalism and Knighthood
 Knights did not hold land.
 Boys above the serf class were trained early (age 8+),




usually in someone else’s home to be sure the training
was strict.
Dubbing was originally a hard, testing blow, but is
now a ceremonial shoulder tap.
Knighthood was grounded in the feudal idea of
loyalty.
Knighthood included a complex system of social
codes.
The idea of chivalry stems from this code of behavior
for knights and gentlewomen.
No Voice, No Choice!
 Women during the Medieval Period
were not soldiers and had no political
rights.
 Women were subservient to their men (husbands,
brothers, fathers)
 Peasant women lived in ceaseless childbearing,
housework, and hard fieldwork.
Courtly Love
 Courtly love developed partly out of the cult of
the Virgin Mary, which elevated women.
 The object of love was to be worshipped from afar
as an ideal.
 Love was supposed to be an ennobling
influence, and only noble people were
worthy of love.
 Several influences built up to
acceptance of courtly love.
What led to the acceptance of courtly love?
 Marriages of convenience
in the 8th-16th centuries
made adultery a way of
life.
 Men had shorter life spans
than women. Women
could inherit and, thu,s
gain control of wealth.
 Men went to war, leaving
women in control, as they
went on Crusades to clear
the holy land of infidels,
starting in 1095.
 The belief that the lady
should be treated as
infinitely desirable was
fostered by women and by
poets.
 The way of life portrayed
in metrical romances
influenced real
expectations and
behavior.
 When courtly love turned
physical, there was a
breakdown in society, i.e.
Lancelot and Guinevere.
The Crusades
 A series of wars waged by
European Christians
against Muslims.
 Jerusalem was the prize.
 The Europeans lost, but
benefited enormously
from contact with higher
Middle Eastern
civilizations.
Why did the knights fight in the Crusades?
 Pope Urban appealed to knights’ religious
convictions.

He said Muslim Turks were robbing and torturing Christian
pilgrims journeying to the holy land.
 The war offered knights a chance for glory and
wealth.
 Urban suggested the knights fight Muslims instead
of continuing to fight one another.
The Canterbury Tales
 Shows readers the true Medieval World
 14th century England
 Is a frame story about an unrelated group of
twenty-nine pilgrims traveling together on a
pilgrimage.
 Pilgrimage – a long journey to a holy site or shrine
taken by those who are devout
 This pilgrimage is a trip to a cathedral in Canterbury
upon the death of the beloved Thomas a Becket
(Archbishop of Canterbury) in the 1100s
Thomas a Becket
 Archbishop of




Canterbury
Assassinated in 1170
Resulted in a backlash
against the English
monarchy
Thomas was martyred;
he became St. Thomas.
Chaucer’s pilgrims are
on their way to visit his
shrine in The
Canterbury Tales.
The Canterbury Tales
 The poem is a frame story, a story about stories
 Each person on the pilgrimage tells a story
 Insight into romances, comedies, etc. of the time
 Crude humor
 Comedies
 Religious mysteries
 Social commentary
 Chaucer's original plan for The Canterbury Tales projected
about 120 stories, two for each pilgrim to tell on the way
to Canterbury and two more on the way back.
 Only 24 of the 120 tales were completed
Motifs
 Romance: high adventure romance and other
romance as well
 Fabliau/Fabliaux: a tale marked by comic or
ribald/bawdy treatment of worldly themes

The Miller’s Tale
Themes
 Courtly Love
 Importance of Company
 The Corruption of the Church
Genre: Estates Satire
 Shows the three estates (classes) in the Medieval
Period and makes fun of them



Those who fight
Those who labor
Those who pray
 Gives an analysis of society in terms of hierarchy,
social function, and morality
 The aim of satire is to reform society by pointing out
folly or vice
 Optimistic assumption…if you know what is
good/right, you will do it
The Prologue
 Gives the reader insight to the Medieval society
 Indirect Characterization:
 External appearance is a sign of intangible qualities of a person…still
a factor today (aka dressing the part)
 Can tell something about morality, rank, etc. from external features
 Pilgrims are individuals, not groups, but they are known by
their professions
 Individualizing details are rare; most details that are given
are included only to show what that particular pilgrim
ought—and yet fails—to do
 Pay attention to what Chaucer does NOT say

Prioress no mention of God
The Prologue continued
 Narrator meets 29 others at the Tabard Inn, located
in a suburb of London
 Challenge by Harry Bailey, Innkeeper – Each pilgrim
must tell two stories on the way to Canterbury and
two on the return trip
 Best Tale » entitled to a feast
 The stories suit the teller – The Knight tells a
romance, the Wife of Bath tells about marriages, etc.