Bültmann & Gerriets
Medieval Knighthood V
Papers from the Sixth Strawberry Hill Conference, 1994
von Stephen D Church, Ruth Harvey
Verlag: Boydell & Brewer
Reihe: Medieval Knighthood Nr. 5
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-0-85115-628-6
Erschienen am 23.11.1995
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 241 mm [H] x 161 mm [B] x 27 mm [T]
Gewicht: 803 Gramm
Umfang: 282 Seiten

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Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

`The Medieval Warhorse Reconsidered'. -
`Geoffroi de Charny's `Livre de Chevalerie' and the Knights of the Round Table - Sylvia Huot (Editor)
When is a knight not a knight? - Richard Barber
The medieval warhorse reconsidered - Matthew Bennett
Classic kighthood as nobiliary dignity: the knighting of counts and kings' sons in England, 1066-1272 - Jonathan Boulton
Abelard: knight (Miles), courtier (Palatinus) and man of war (Vir Bellator)'. - Michael Clanchy
Battlements and the bourgeoisie: municipal status and the apparatus of urban defence in later-medieval England'. - Charles Coulson
Languages, lyrics and the knightly classes - Ruth Harvey
Geoffroi de Charny's Livre de Chevalerie and the knights of the round table - Elspeth M Kennedy ***
Knights and clerics at the court of champagne: Chretien de Troyes's romances in context - Ad Putter



These studies treat a wide variety of aspects of knighthood, ranging from its emergence as an identifiably noble estate to the appropriation of chivalric trappings to serve bourgeois interests. Topics include the way in which the word 'knight' has been used, studying the terminology and ritual concerned with 'making a knight'; the circumstances and implications of the knighting of the social elite of England between 1066 and 1272; the attitudes and interests of the knights and clerics at the court of Champagne; the multifaceted 'image' of Peter Abelard, illustrating the difficulty in distinguishing between knight and cleric; the debt which Geoffrey de Charny's treatise on chivalry owes to the ideas and ideals of knighthood in Arthurian prose romances; and the linguistic competence of the twelfth-century knightly classes as audience of troubadour song. There are also important contributions on the warhorse (challenging misconceptions on its size, qualities, advantages and limitations on campaign), and on the fortifications of fourteenth-century English towns, arguing that they were more the expression of bourgeois aspirations than a response to serious military threat.


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