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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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and elevated courtly love to a form of religion. Although that religion came<br />

into conflict with the Church’s stand against adultery, it provided a clear<br />

mirror reflecting the romantic idealism of medieval nobility.<br />

From the abundance of melodic poetry and heroic literature that<br />

served the cause of chivalry, there emerged several enduring narratives,<br />

such as Lancelot, by Chrétien de Troyes; Gottfried von Strassburg’s Tristan<br />

and Isolde; Le Roman de la Rose of Guillaume de Lorris; and the legends<br />

of the Holy Grail, the cup used by Jesus at the Last Supper and searched<br />

for devotedly by King Arthur’s knights.<br />

From the time of the Norman Conquest, French literature exerted a<br />

strong influence on English literary forms, and until the fourteenth century<br />

the French language replaced English in general composition. Jean Froissart,<br />

the itinerant historian from Valenciennes, became prominent among<br />

the literati of the fourteenth century. His major work, Chronique de<br />

France, d’Angleterre, d’Ecosse et d’Espagne (simply called the Chronicle),<br />

carries his account of the Hundred Years’ War between France and England.<br />

Not a history in the modern sense, because Froissart was preoccupied<br />

with knightly deeds and “the fine feat of arms,” it is rather a saga of<br />

chivalric display in the midst of battle.<br />

<strong>The</strong> diverse documents of the later Middle Ages give us an ambivalent<br />

image of a chivalrous knight. One side shows us a young noble hero in<br />

bright armor, astride a magnificent white charger, lance poised, ready to defend<br />

his monarch, his ladylove, the Church, the poor and oppressed, and<br />

all good Christians who sought shelter under his protective shield.<br />

<strong>The</strong> other side shows that knightly warfare was direct and savage. <strong>The</strong><br />

crusader, heavily protected, first with chain mail, later with plate armor,<br />

was equipped with battle-ax and double-edged sword, forged in fire to slay<br />

the enemy swiftly. <strong>The</strong> Black Prince, Edward of England, who was prince<br />

of Wales during the Hundred Years’ War, was, in spite of his violence in<br />

battle, compassionate to his war prisoners. In contrast, as was mentioned<br />

above, Richard the Lion-Hearted slaughtered his Muslim prisoners during<br />

the Third Crusade. As much as the code of chivalry was obeyed, it was also<br />

ignored. In any case, knightly comportment was reserved for the gentry. A<br />

knight extended his chivalrous courtesies only to a member of his class; and<br />

his ethereal devotion to his lady did not bridle his predatory advances toward<br />

women of the lower class.<br />

<strong>The</strong> vast number of enthralled peasants who tilled the soil and reaped<br />

the crops on the feudal estates were part of another world, dominated by<br />

the small but powerful aristocracy. Revolts of the peasantry were inevitable.<br />

In 1358, the French peasants rose up in a jacquerie (peasants’ revolt),<br />

demanding relief from their economic and judicial oppression; and in<br />

1381, the Wat Tyler Rebellion, just across the English Channel, convulsed<br />

Chivalry 81

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