CHIVALRY

shĭvˈəlrē, system of ethical ideals that arose from feudalism and had its highest development in the 12th and 13th cent.

Chivalric ethics originated chiefly in France and Spain and spread rapidly to the rest of the Continent and to England. They represented a fusion of Christian and military concepts of morality and still form the basis of gentlemanly conduct. Noble youths became pages in the castles of other nobles at the age of 7; at 14 they trained as squires in the service of knights, learning horsemanship and military techniques, and were themselves knighted, usually at 21.

The chief chivalric virtues were piety, honor, valor, courtesy, chastity, and loyalty. The knight's loyalty was due to the spiritual master, God; to the temporal master, the suzerain; and to the mistress of the heart, his sworn love. Love, in the chivalrous sense, was largely platonic; as a rule, only a virgin or another man's wife could be the chosen object of chivalrous love. With the cult of the Virgin Mary, the relegation of noblewomen to a pedestal reached its highest expression.

The ideal of militant knighthood was greatly enhanced by the Crusades. The monastic orders of knighthood, the Knights Templars and the Knights Hospitalers, produced soldiers sworn to uphold the Christian ideal. Besides the battlefield, the tournament was the chief arena in which the virtues of chivalry could be proved. The code of chivalrous conduct was worked out with great subtlety in the courts of love that flourished in France and in Flanders. There the most arduous questions of love and honor were argued before the noble ladies who presided (see courtly love). The French military hero Pierre Terrail, seigneur de Bayard, was said to be the last embodiment of the ideals of chivalry.

In practice, chivalric conduct was never free from corruption, increasingly evident in the later Middle Ages. Courtly love often deteriorated into promiscuity and adultery and pious militance into barbarous warfare. Moreover, the chivalric duties were not owed to those outside the bounds of feudal obligation. The outward trappings of chivalry and knighthood declined in the 15th cent., by which time wars were fought for victory and individual valor was irrelevant. Artificial orders of chivalry, such as the Order of the Golden Fleece (1423), were created by rulers to promote loyalty; tournaments became ritualized, costly, and comparatively bloodless; the traditions of knighthood became obsolete.

Medieval secular literature was primarily concerned with knighthood and chivalry. Two masterpieces of this literature are the Chanson de Roland (c.1098; see Roland) and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (see Pearl, The). Arthurian legend and the chansons de geste furnished bases for many later romances and epics. The work of Chrétien de Troyes and the Roman de la Rose also had tremendous influence on European literature. The endless chivalrous and pastoral romances, still widely read in the 16th cent., were satirized by Cervantes in Don Quixote. In the 19th cent., however, the romantic movement brought about a revival of chivalrous ideals and literature.

For the lyric poetry of the age of chivalry, see troubadours; trouvères; minnesinger.

See B. E. Broughton, Dictionary of Medieval Knighthood and Chivalry (1986); M. Keen, Chivalry (1984); H. Chickering and T. H. Seiler, ed., The Study of Chivalry (1988).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Chivalry  - 9763 results

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as the author of chivalry with a fairly independent attitude towards specific clerical...its strict and judgemental comparison of mere earthly chivalry with the true, heavenly chivalry. 82 As Richard Barber observes, if he thinks of the...
...accounts, then, rely upon a scheme whereby chivalry falls into a betrayal of its true `spirit...of them. For one thing, the death of chivalry is itself a chivalric trope. Raymond...to the views of some early writers, chivalry was in a state of decline in the twelfth...
SOME BOOKS ON CHIVALRY ASHTON, J.: Romances of Chivalry . 1887. BASNAGE, J.: Dissertation Historique sur les...Roques. 1740. BATTY, J.: The Spirit and Influence of Chivalry . 1890. BUSCHING, J. G. G.: Ritterzeit und Ritterwesen...
...Elizabethans derived many ideas about chivalry. Chivalrys norms were fully applicable...Christians. On the battlefield, rules of chivalry protected only members of the knightly...opposite was also true." 7 In effect, chivalry served as the customary law governing...
...Calidore: New combination of learning and chivalry: The scholar and the gentleman: Sidney...Prince Hal: Falstaf: The "Order of Chivalry" and the "Law of Arms": Degenerate...Malory, Spenser, and Shakespeare towards chivalry. CONCLUSION 267 Contrast of French and...
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journal articles on: Chivalry  - 1203 results

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Chivalry. by John France Chivalry. By Maurice Keen. (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press...book published in 1984. There has been much research on war and chivalry in the past twenty years, so how well has the work lasted? Maurice...
Chivalry unmasked: courtly spectacle and the abuses...knightly romance within his theater of chivalry. Amphialuss appropriation of the masques...Amphialuss manipulation of the masques of chivalry, the consequences of the alienation of...
Chivalry and Violence in Medieval Europe by Thomas F. Madden Chivalry and Violence in Medieval Europe. By Richard W. Kaeuper...happened with this book. It really ought to be called "Chivalry and Violence in England and France in the Central...
...Tradition and Modern War; Bloody Good: Chivalry, Sacrifice, and the Great War. by...cartoons, Allen J. Frantzen insists that chivalry is neither trite nor moribund. On the...world" (9), misconceptions about chivalry may not only distort the remote past...
The play world and the real world: chivalry in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight...borrowing, particularly with regard to chivalry. This institution has long been recognized...real world was a prominent feature of chivalry as it was practiced among the nobility...
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magazine articles on: Chivalry  - 379 results

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Piety and Chivalry St Georges Chapel Windsor: Nigel Saul...English church, the worlds of piety and chivalry so characteristic of the late Middle...exotic ambience of Burgundian-style chivalry which he created at Windsor, Edward...
Elgar and Chivalry by Robert Matthew-Walker ELGAR AND CHIVALRY By Robert Andersen Elgar Editions ISBN O 9537082 5 X...title as this 100 years ago or more, for the notion of chivalry meant far more to Elgar and his contemporaries than...
The Court of Chivalry 1634-40: Richard Cust Introduces...day he went straight to the Court of Chivalry around the corner in Whitehall, and...website the proceedings of the Court of Chivalry during its heyday. The court was established...
Chivalry Revisited: in Print and Online by Rachel Galvin Voices from the High Middle Ages are being rescued from long neglected manuscripts...
...in Late Fourteenth-Century Italy, and after His Death Acquired a Reputation as a First-Class General and as a Model of Chivalry. by Stephen Cooper IF YOU GO INTO THE DUOMO in Florence, you will see a splendid equestrian portrait of the Englishman Sir...
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Restoring chivalry by Terrence Moore Byline: Terrence Moore `Is chivalry dead?" I ask my Western civilization students. Chivalry seems to have indeed become irrelevant today, and that is a tragic loss for both men and women. Women refuse...
Should Men Still Be Chivalrous? Was Chivalry Extinguished by the World Wars or Does...SEEMS the only place youll find male chivalry is at a taxi rank, where drivers like...talk to most women and theyll agree that chivalry is dead. Gone just like the generation...
Whither Goeth Chivalry? Author, Educator Lament Loss to Society...Loredana Vuoto, THE WASHINGTON TIMES Chivalry is dead, Edmund Burke famously declared...Gentleman: The Modern Mans Guide to Chivalry." The archaic spelling of "compleat...
Sorry, but Chivalry Isnt Dead, Says Emily Maitlis. Byline...the defence of men by declaring that chivalry is not dead. The 41-year-old mother...Maitlis said: If you ask me if I mourn a chivalry I never knew - of bows and curtseys...
Sorry, but Chivalry Isnt Dead, Says Emily Maitlis. Byline...the defence of men by declaring that chivalry is not dead. The 41-year-old mother...Maitlis said: If you ask me if I mourn a chivalry I never knew - of bows and curtseys...
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encyclopedia articles on: Chivalry  - 45 results

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CHIVALRY shiv lre, system of ethical ideals that...the chief arena in which the virtues of chivalry could be proved. The code of chivalrous...be the last embodiment of the ideals of chivalry. In practice, chivalric conduct was...
...turned to medieval lore for Tannhauser (1845) and to tales of chivalry and knighthood for Lohengrin (1850), Tristan und Isolde...Of these, Pietro Mascagni s Cavalleria Rusticana ( Rustic Chivalry, 1890) and Ruggiero Leoncavallo s I Pagliacci ( The Clowns...
...Renaissance and the Golden Age of Spanish Literature The first known novel of chivalry, Amadis of Gaul , was printed in Zaragoza in 1508 and served as a model for the novels of chivalry that became (16th cent.) the most popular genre in Spain, together...
...printing to England in 1475 and in 1485 printed Sir Thomas Malory s Morte dArthur. This prose work, written in the twilight of chivalry , casts the Arthurian tales into coherent form and views them with an awareness that they represent a vanishing way of life...
...of Reynard the Fox. Hadewijch , John Ruysbroeck , and Gerard Groote spoke the language of mysticism . By the 14th cent., chivalry and scholasticism had waned, and by the 15th cent. mysticism was transformed as moral piety. Among the best-known of Dutch...
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