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What was NOT called “courtly love” in the Middle Ages. But properly called “fin amor”. The term “courtly love” is a 19 th century invention. Was possibly coined by Gaston Paris, a translation from Provençal “cortez amors”
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What was NOT called “courtly love” in the Middle Ages But properly called “fin amor”
The term “courtly love” is a 19th century invention. • Was possibly coined by Gaston Paris, a translation from Provençal “cortez amors” • Much of the myth and literary viewpoints of courtly love were developed and elaborated on in the 19th and early 20th centuries • At this distance, it’s harder to be sure what the Middle Ages thought of the subject
Confluence of Forces • Introduction of stirrup in 8th/9th centuries led to class of warriors mounted on horseback—chevaliers • Set of behavioral expectations evolved for this class of warriors--chivalry
Cultural Imperatives • Social class distinctions—emerging concepts of feudalism • Church’s need to control civilian power structures • Late 10th c. onwards—affective piety and worship of Virgin Mary as intercessor • Politics—Crusades and the disruption caused by travel and family separation • Economics—need for major noble families to move and divide households and circulate from one residence to another
Fin amoris a code of behavioral expectations that govern a particular class of people in a particular time frame It is a codified set of historical practices that governed and determined complex social, political, and class interactions.
Continental Influences • 11th century troubadours and trouvéres • Southern and central France—particularly around the Angevin court—Andreas Capellanus (going back to Ovid) • Spread across Europe through vehicle of Crusades—at least some Arabic influence—really start to see it after 1st Crusade (1099 C.E.)
As codified by G. Paris, “courtly love” in a literary sense is • An idealizing love based on man’s sexual attraction to woman • Lover accepts beloved’s independence • Lover attempts to win beloved’s admiration by accomplishing noble deeds, living virtuously, and thus conveying renown to the lady—calls her midons (term of feudal vassalage) • Sexual satisfaction not always expected
Quickly popularized • C.S. Lewis, The Allegory of Love (1936) • Talked about “the religion of love” • Assumed that actual adultery was part of the system • Also assumed that humility and courtesy were parts of the system • Seen in a lot of later scholarship as a “truth” of the Middle Ages
The actual circumstancesare harder to pin down • Hard to accept that nobility would patronize a system that encouraged adultery and infidelity (too dangerous to inheritance rights) • Church seems to have endorsed at least some of it as building moral virtue • Best to think of it as a highly-codified role-playing game
“The Rules” • Largely those established in The Art of Courtly Love—complete with RPG scenarios • Govern behavior among people who are NOT married • Incorporate emerging cultural & religious expectations for behavior of chivalric class • Probably culminate in establishment of Order of the Garter (1344…or maybe 1348…) by Edward III • By Malory’s time, an archaic concept but still valued—practices mostly gone but attitudes remained.