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King Harald Hardrada falls at the battle of Stamford Bridge. King Edward I of England dies on Jan 5, 1066 leaving no heirs. Harold Godwinson cornonated on same day. "Into Harold's hands I commit my Kingdom.“ Becomes the last Anglo-Saxon king. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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King Harald Hardrada falls at the battle of Stamford Bridge
King Edward I of England dies on Jan 5, 1066 leaving no heirs.
Harold Godwinson cornonated on same day. "Into Harold's hands I commit my Kingdom.“ Becomes the last Anglo-Saxon king.
William, Duke of Normandy, a distant cousin, also lays claim to the throne.
Harald Hardrada, King of Norway, another pretender.
Harold defeats Harald at the battle of Stanford Bridge, near York. Shortly after he hears of William’s landing in the south.
Bayeux Tapestry, c. 1077
After Harold defeats Hardrada at Stamford Bridge, William sails sail for the southern coast.
Bayeux Tapestry
The Battle of Hastings
Bayeux Tapestry
The Death of Harold
Geoffrey Chaucer-early 1340s-1400
part of the 'civil service‘ - father served Edward III as deputy chief butler
1357-job in household of Elizabeth, countess of Ulster and her husband Princel Lionel
the Prince travelled to France, ItalyChaucer was captured and ransomed in a 1359-60 military campain
married up--the daughter of a knight
worked his way up and around royal appointments, always middle-manager stuff but remained friendly to all changes of power
1380s withdraws from London What does this suggest?
gentil status but not a land ownerdependent on service for moneydifferent jobs essential
The Canterbury Tales
Chaucer uses different forms for different materials,
Couplets (aa bb) for mostRhyme Royal (credited to Chaucer) for
stories generating pathos (to suffer, feel) (ababbcc)
stanzaic form, gives order to more serious topics (ababbcbc) -- ballade
Prose for those things spiritual, more seriousVariety of forms, styles and tradtions brought together to expand English
The Couplet
A Knight ther was and that a worthy man
That fro the time that he first bigan
The Couplet
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
A Knight ther was and that a worthy man
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
That fro the time that he first bigan
Rhyme Royal
Rhyme Royal: each stanza or section consists of seven lines, each containing ten syllables, the first line rhyming with the third, the second with the fourth and fifth, and the sixth with the seventh (a b a b b c c). To take an instance from the beginning of Chaucer's "Troilus and Criseyde":
And so bifel, when comen was the tyme AOf Aperil, when clothed is the mede BWith newe grene, of lusty Ver the pryme, AAnd swet smellen floures whyte and rede, B In sondry wyses shewed, as I rede, BThe folk of Troye hir observaunces olde, CPalladiones feste for to holde. C
Lee Patterson, Geoffrey Chaucer’s “The Canterbury Tales” (2007)
(The Canterbury Tales)...is a compilation of almost every kind of writing known to the Middle Ages. Epic, romance, fabliau, saint’s life, exemplum, sermon, mirror of princes, penitential treatsie, tragedy, animal fable, Breton lay, confessional autobiography, Marian miracle – all these and more are present...Each of the genres...invokes not just specific writers but a whole lexicon of different kinds of writing. (7, qtd. in Bloom, Geoffrey Chaucer’s the Canterbury Tales)
John Dryden, Preface to Fables Ancient and Modern (1700)
(Chaucer) has taken into the compass of his Canterbury Tales the various manners and humors (as we now call them) of the whole English nation in his age. Not a single character has escaped him. All his pilgrims are severally distinguished from each other; and not only in their inclinations but in their very physiognomies and persons... Even the ribaldry of the low characters is different: the Reeve, the Miller, and the Cook are... distinguished from each other as much as the mincing Lady Prioress and the broad-speaking, gap-toothed Wife of Bath...(There) is such a variety...(Here) is God’s plenty. (qtd. in Bloom, Geoffrey Chaucer’s the Canterbury Tales)
Mikhail Bakhtin, Rabelais and His World (1965)
All these forms of protocol and ritual based on laughter and consecrated by tradition existed in all the countries of medieval Europe; they were sharply distinct from the serious official, ecclesiastical, feudal, and political cult forms and ceremonials. They offered a completely different, nonofficial, extraecclesiastical and extrapolitical aspect of the world, of man, and of human relations; they built a second world and a second life outside officialdom, a world in which all medieval people participated more or less, in which they lived during a given time of the year. If we fail to take into consideration this two-world condition, neither medieval cultural consciousness nor the culture of the Renaissance can be understood. To ignore or to underestimate the laughing people of the Middle Ages also distorts the picture of European culture’s historic development.
Bakhtin, cont.
What are the peculiar traits of the comic rituals and spectacles of the Middle Ages? Of course, these are not religious rituals like, for instance, the Christian liturgy to which they are linked by distant genetic ties. The basis of laughter which gives form to carnival rituals frees them completely from all religious and ecclesiastic dogmatism, from all mysticism and piety. They are also completely deprived of the character of magic and prayer; they do not command nor do they ask for anything. Even more, certain carnival forms parody the Church's cult. All these forms are systematically placed outside the Church and religiosity. They belong to an entirely different sphere.
SourcesKing Harald Hardrada falls, by Peter Nicolai Arbo : http://www.davidgibbins.com/Harald/Main%201.jpg
Portrait of Edward I of England from Cassell's History of England
All images from Bayeux Tapestry, http://www.bayeuxtapestry.org.uk
William, Duke of Normandy: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:William_I,_Lichfield_Cathedral.jpg
Invasion Map: http://www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/bayeux.htm
Stamford Bridge memorial: http://www.battlefieldstrust.com/images/imagestore/image550x550/583.jpg
Chaucer: http://www.courses.fas.harvard.edu/~chaucer/