Chivalry and Violence in Medieval Europe

Chivalry and Violence in Medieval Europe

by RichardKaeuper (Author)

Synopsis

Medieval Europe was a rapidly developing society with a problem of violent disorder. Professor Kaeuper's original and authoritative study reveals that chivalry was just as much a part of this problem as it was its solution. Chivalry praised heroic violence by knights, and fused such displays of prowess with honour, piety, high-status, and attractiveness to women. Though the vast body of chivalric literature praised chivalry as necessary to civilization, most texts also worried over knightly violence, criticized the ideals and practices of chivalry, and often proposed reforms. The knights themselves joined the debate, absorbing some reforms, ignoring others, sometimes proposing their own. The interaction of chivalry with major governing institutions ( church and state ) emerging at that time was similarly complex: kings and clerics both needed and feared the force of the knighthood. This fascinating book lays bare these conflicts and paradoxes which surrounded the concept of chivalry in medieval Europe.

$69.29

Quantity

10 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 350
Edition: New Ed
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Published: 12 Apr 2001

ISBN 10: 0199244588
ISBN 13: 9780199244584
Book Overview: Winner of the Verbruggen Prize 2002 awarded by the De Re Militari Society

Media Reviews
The ambiguities of the chivalry and the tensions that it creates in a civil society are fruitfully explored in Richard W. Kaeuper's Chivalry and Violence in Medieval Europe * Years Work in English Studies *