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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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284 Knights<br />

From the beginning of this phase around 1430, the principal locus of<br />

traditional chivalric knighthood in most kingdoms was the monarchical or<br />

comparable princely curial order, and the principal model for all of the<br />

later orders was the Golden Fleece, founded by Duke Philippe “the Good”<br />

of Burgundy in 1430. <strong>The</strong> Burgundian dukes of the Valois line founded in<br />

1363 had all been patrons of chivalry, and the enormous wealth and consequent<br />

prestige they acquired along with the various principalities of the<br />

Netherlands and the Rhineland that they added to their original dominion<br />

gave a considerable boost to the chivalric revival that followed the foundation<br />

of their elaborate order. <strong>The</strong> kings of France themselves felt obliged<br />

to found new orders of knighthood on the Burgundian model both in 1469<br />

(the Order of St. Michael the Archangel) and again, when membership in<br />

that order had been too widely distributed, in 1578 (the Order of the Holy<br />

Spirit), and the grand duke of Tuscany founded the last of the religious orders<br />

of knighthood, that of St. Stephen, in 1561. <strong>Of</strong> the older religious orders,<br />

however, only that of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem (based<br />

from 1530 on the island of Malta) carried on the crusading tradition after<br />

about 1525. Most of the newer curial orders dissolved around that time as<br />

a result of the Reformation in Germany.<br />

<strong>The</strong> chivalry of the late classic phase was not different in conception<br />

from that of the high classic phase, but the glorification of the knight that<br />

continued throughout this period (in some courts, at least) was essentially<br />

reactionary and had less and less to do with contemporary military reality.<br />

Latin princes and nobles of ancient lineages continued to believe that the<br />

knight represented the epitome of what a nobleman should be, whatever<br />

his lordly rank, and the ideology of chivalry continued to unify the noble<br />

estate in many kingdoms until relatively late in the sixteenth century. Older<br />

romances of chivalry continued to be printed and reprinted through much<br />

of the century, and the greatest Italian poems of that century, Ludovico Ariosto’s<br />

Orlando Furioso of 1516 and Torquato Tasso’s Gerusalemme Liberata<br />

of 1575, were essentially chivalric. <strong>The</strong> last great chivalric romance<br />

to be composed in English was Edmund Spenser’s Faerie Queene of<br />

1590–1596, dedicated to Elizabeth I. <strong>The</strong> sixteenth century was thus a sort<br />

of Indian summer for both knighthood and chivalry.<br />

Postclassic Knighthood (1600/25–present)<br />

<strong>The</strong> decline of the general belief in chivalry was first heralded in a major<br />

way in Miguel de Cervantes’s novel Don Quixote, of 1605–1615, though<br />

the aging knight of that name is nevertheless portrayed as a noble and sympathetic<br />

exemplar of a worthy code that has merely ceased to command<br />

general respect. <strong>The</strong> seventeenth century was nevertheless marked not only<br />

by a clear decline in the popularity of romances and other chivalric works,

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