Title: Courtly Love and Chivalry
1Courtly Love and Chivalry
- A code of behavior for Medieval knights
2The Medieval Knight
- Medieval knights were generally younger sons of
noble families. - Young noble boys would learn the arts of combat
and etiquette in noble households, serving as
squires befoe becoming full-fledged knights.
3- As a member of the first estate, a knights
role in the world was to protect his country by
fighting in wars. - Honor in battle was his aim, and he was expected
as well to be humble, courteous, faithful to his
lord and his wife, and unmotivated by material
gain. - The Knight in the Canterbury Tales is an ideal in
this way.
4Eustache Deschamps Du Bachelier dArmes
- You who desire the order of chivalry
- Must lead a new life,
- Lie awake in prayer devotedly,
- Flee sin, pride, and villeiny,
- Must defend the Church,
- The widow also, support the orphan,
- Be brave and guard the people,
- A valiant, loyal man who takes nothing from
others. - Thus a knight must govern himself.
5You must have a humble heart, always must labor
in And pursue the deeds of chivalry, Fignt in
just wars, be a great crusader, Engage in
tournaments, and joust for your lady, Must always
act honorably So that no man can find fault with
you Nor find cowardice in your deeds, And among
all people you must hold yourself to be
least. Thus must a knight govern himself.
6You must cherish your lords rights, And above
all guard his lordship, Show generosity, be a
true judge, Follow the company of valiant
men, Listen to and learn from their sayings, And
comprehend the brave deeds of heroes, So that you
can acieve great exploits, As Alexander the Great
did in former times. Thus must a knight govern
himself.
7- Since knights were only supposed to think about
and practice warfare all the time, they ran into
trouble during peacetime. - Knights with nothing to do were liable to start
wandering the countryside raping and pillaging.
This is not just because they were bored -- much
of their livelihood was composed of money and
goods taken from the enemy during and after
battle.
8- To keep knights from doing this, rulers would
either drum up an excuse to send them off to war,
engaging them to battle for an ally, for example,
or invite them to demonstrate their fighting
skills in staged tournaments. - Tournaments became an increasingly popular form
of entertainment during the Middle Ages, drawing
spectators from all over -- including ladies.
9Courtly Love
- Associated with these tournaments was the idea of
courtly love an idealized form of love that
ennobled a knight and pushed him to fight his
best. - The rules of courtly love required each knight to
fight for a particular lady, and to gain honor in
her name.
10- A courtly lover swore unwavering devotion to one
lady, who was coy at first and made him prove
himself before she would bestow her favors. - Desire to impress his lady drove a knight to
valiant acts and compelled him to act politely. - In this relationship, the lady had the upper
hand, and the knights duty was total humble
servitude and submission.
11- An ideal lover was lovesick all the time, struck
to the heart by Cupids arrow and wasting away
from the pains of love. - This was love for loves sake, not for mercenary
reasons -- which were the main factors
determining marriage at the time. - Consequently, ideal courtly love was adulterous
love. Only with an unattainable woman could a
man love for loves sake.
12- The ideals of chivalry and courtly love were
similar both required men to act polite and
fight nobly. - Both courtly love and chivalry hinged on a
concept of absolute loyalty chivalry to ones
lord and courtly love to ones lady. - Both had a religious connection the chivalrous
knight fought for God and country and fulfilled
his God-given role in the world courtly love was
in many ways a religion of love, with rituals and
commandments.
13Realities of Chivalry
- In real life, knights were not as perfectly
faithful to their lords and modest as the rules
of chivalry required. Knighthood was their
profession, and they fought to maintain
themselves. Regular pillaging was a major
component of this, and along with pillage,
slaughter of innocent townspeople or
less-than-noble acts were not uncommon. - On the other hand, ideals of bravery were not as
compelling as chivalry demanded, and amorphous
concepts of honor did not always hold water
when faced with real mortal danger.
14Realities of Courtly Love
- Likewise, what was idealized as love for loves
sake often boiled down to lust. - Adultery, although romanticized in literature and
art, was a major sin in Medieval society. - Nor did a knight necessarily devote himself to
one lady for life The Knight of La Tour Landry
describes young knights flirting with one lady,
pledging undying love, and then on being turned
down, seeking out another lady to pledge undying
love to. - Doubtless some ladies actually did bestow
themselves on young knights, but to do so was
adulterous lust, not the ennobling union of
romance literature.
15- The ideals and rules of both chivalry and courtly
love may have been invented to keep order in a
system in which younger sons (who did not inherit
the family estate) became members of strangers
households. Encouraging hormonal young men to
fight for a noblemans name and sublimate his
aggressions in (unconsummated) love for the
noblemans wife would keep them from spending
these energies in more destructive ways.
16The End
17Bibliography
- Miller, Robert, ed. Chaucer Sources and
Backgrounds. New York Oxford UP, 1977. - Schwartz, Debora. Backgrounds to Romance
Courtly Love. Online. Accessed 9/23/03. - Tuchman, Barbara. A Distant Mirror The
Calamitous Fourteenth Century. New York Alfred
A. Knopf, 2002.