Preview

Courtly Love

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
562 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Courtly Love
1. Introduction
For hundreds of years people in England and all over the world have been fascinated with courtly love. Many of the world´s most famous English poets used this Petrarchan concept and wrote poems, songs and sonnets about this Petrarchan concept. Although writers rarely use the concept of courtly love these days, we can say that it had a great influence on poetry (cf. O´Donoghue 1) and particularly on English poets and their masterpieces.
But how can we really prove that? This work will help us to understand the characteristics of courtly love and to prove to what extend this concept influenced English poetry. In the first part (2.) I will give a short description of the concept of courtly love. After that I will reconstruct the development of the most used medium for this, the sonnet (3.). A final analysis (4.) and comparison of two sonnets (5.) will prove my thesis that the concept of courtly love was indeed reflected in English poetry generations beyond its courtly era.

2. The Concept of ‘Courtly Love‘
Courtly love has always been a frequently used theme in poetry. It came into being between the 11th, 12th century at the courts of the nobility. It originated with the Troubadours, in Provence/France, “but soon spread into the neighboring countries […]” (Capellanus 3), and became an effective and important tradition, lasting over 500 years (cf. Hühn 24). A key figure concerning the spread of courtly love convention was the Italian scholar and poet Francesco Petrarcha (1304-1374). He wrote the famous Canzoniere with about 300 Italian sonnets using the convention, mostly addressed to a idealized women called Laura, whom loved with, but who did not respond to his love (cf. Roche 1).
The name courtly love describes a love convention, where a man courts a woman, who is in a higher social position . This love always remains unfulfilled and because of this unfulfilled relationship, the lover is in an inner conflict. On the one hand he feels love

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    In this essay I will be commenting on the presentation of relationships in two poems. The first poem is ‘Les Grands Seigneurs’, in which the speaker remarks on her life before marriage, where she was adored and worshiped by men, and how it has changed after marriage. ‘My Last Duchess’ is a dramatic monologue in which the speaker comments on his late wife and her character, suggesting that she was unfaithful to him and hinting that he may have murdered her because of this.…

    • 928 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The collection of texts presented in this essay depicts an underlying theme of love. The texts have been examined and explored in order to note the similarities or differences in various categories. To compare two texts by the length of their stanza would be to diminish the value of its words; indeed a comparison of texts must come from the connotation.…

    • 675 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, is a world famous play that portrays the struggles of a young couple from feuding families fighting for their love. Romeo is a young man of the Montague family who says that is in love with Juliet. But are these feelings genuine? A Petrarchan lover is attracted to beauty, idolizes his mate and is usually infatuated with his lover. These men are smooth, fancy and very flowery. All these characteristics perfectly describe the main character in William Shakespeares’s “Romeo and Juliet”. Romeo is the ideal Petrarchan lover and this is evident throughtout the whole play.…

    • 396 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Elizabeth Barrett Browning conveys love within her poetry which is viewed as pure, and transcendent. Barrett- Browning’s ‘Sonnets from the Portuguese,’ reject the traditional conventions of the Victorian Era. The sonnets, written during the courtship…

    • 1745 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    While both “Morte Darthur” and “The Miller's Tale” display some characteristics of a satirical approach in which human vices are attacked in a whimsical manner through irony, comedy, and folly, they are actually quite different in their literary genre and style. “Morte Darthur”, an adventurous tale with an imaginary setting that perfectly idealizes the chivalrous knight-hero and his noble deeds done for the love of his lady, is a classic example of a tragic medieval romance. A fabliau, of which “The Miller's Tale” is an example, takes a comical approach with the typically large cast of colorful characters: the blissfully ignorant husband, the foolish Casanova, the insatiable young wife, and the avaricious clery members whose disingenuous interests lie in only satisfying themselves. Although both tales utilize the classical aspects of courtly love, the medieval romance glorifies the devotional characteristics, while “The Miller's Tale” focuses on subject matter that is overtly sexual in nature. This approach is typical of the fabliau-style that deals with the seedier elements of courtly love traditionally left out by writers of more elevated genres. John Edwin Wells, in his 1916 Manual of the Writings in Middle English, “concluded that the fabliaux's impropriety led to their rapid disappearance” (Furrow). From a modern perspective, it reads like a “grunge romance” that relies on puns and word manipulation to achieve it's desired “shock” effect. Although both Chaucer and Malory use satirical elements to demonstrate the absurdity of implementing the contradictory, idyllic, and impractical conventions expected within courtly love on an everyday basis, they do so in a very different manner. This paper will use specific aspects of courtly love to provide a comparison of each literary genre and illustrate how the use of traditional courtly love conventions used within these two…

    • 1840 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Courtly Love: A medieval European concept of nobly and chivalrously expressing love and admiration. To women, this was a life with a façade of power above men and men did all in their power to please. Perhaps there were positives, such as creating an overall respectable attitude toward women and providing a model for younger men on how to live, but it depicted some behaviors of men that are debatable. In medieval literature, courtly love allows women to be on a figurative pedestal above men, however, upon closer examination, the texts of The Miller’s Tale, The Great Silkie of Shul Skerrie, and Le Morte d’Arthur prove this ideology as completely fictitious.…

    • 740 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Zora Neale's Courtly Love

    • 1218 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The allure of wanting to read a romantic novel with the theme of courtly love is appealing to many readers and exists even in today's modern times as a popular genre. Was it truly a practice of some of the ladies and knights in the courts during the middle ages? or just a parody of it’s writers and their imagination. Whether or not Courtly love was a real practice or just a fantasy during the middle ages, is commonly debated among scholars for the past century. The debate centres on whether it was a common practice of its time, or was it actually just the fantasy of writers of that period with relations between the text and reality of their day, a way to romanticize a darker, less understood time.…

    • 1218 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Courtly love is characterized by the poetry of the troubadours in southern France which originated in in the late 11th c. Its ennobling effect on the male lover who assumes a subservient position in relation to the beloved, of the woman loved, and certain codes of conduct, whether implicit or explicit, that guide the lover in his amorous pursuit (COURTLY LOVE2012). After rereading the poem several times and understanding why she is saying what she said it was understandable for women to express their forbidden feelings through poetry. It’s surprising to learn that true love began in the medieval days.…

    • 400 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The courtly love tradition came during a time when love emphasized nobility and chivalry. It originated with musicians called troubadours in the late eleventh century. Courtly love to promote a new form of paganism which people of the time called Gai Saber(means the happy wisdom or "gay science") It was practiced mainly by noble lords and women. Couples who were engaged in courtly relationships gave each other gifts and tokens of their affection. Before Courtly love established itself as a popular real-life activity, it first gained attention as a subject and theme in imaginative literature. Ardent knights, that is to say, and their passionately adored ladies have been already popular figures in song and fable before they began spawning a host…

    • 171 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Catulla and Petrarch

    • 699 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The lyric poems of the Roman poet, Catullus, and the late Middle Ages poet, Petrarch, both trace the cycle of a love affair, but the nature of those affairs is quite different. Catullus depicts a passionate, lusty relationship, whereas Petrarch describes something more akin to worship from afar. The differences likely reflect not only their different experiences, but also the different times in which they lived. Catullus lived in pre-Christian Rome, and his writings evidence the Romans’ open and frank view of sexuality. Petrarch was a product of the Middle Ages, in which the Church dominated all aspects of life.…

    • 699 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Romeo & Juliet Essay

    • 823 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Love is all consuming, and can not be defined with one word. One of the most famous literary texts about the variations of love is William Shakespeare 's ‘Romeo and Juliet’. In the play Shakespeare utilizes language techniques, characterization and plot to provide the reader with a range of ideas about love. The fundamentals of the play lie within the protagonist, Romeo where the notions of love are held. This essay will explore the variations of love depicted in the play, and discuss what literary techniques are used by Shakespeare in defining love.…

    • 823 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Chivalry

    • 359 Words
    • 2 Pages

    “Courtly love was understood by its contemporaries to be love for its own sake, romantic love, true love, physical love…” (Tuchman, 208)…

    • 359 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The matter of “true love” as we have grown to know nowadays is far from being valid in the Medieval Period, adultery being one of its main characteristics. To better understand such a concept I have turned to Andreas Capellanus’ “The Art of Courtly Love” in which he starts with the definition of love as being “a certain inborn suffering derived from the sight of the opposite sex, which causes each one to wish above all things the embraces of the other and by common desire to carry out all of love’s precepts in the other’s embrace.” The “precepts” include jealousy and adultery, love and…

    • 2822 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Browning's sonnets emphasize a type of idealized love, one that she hopes and dreams of. A love that is not ordinary, that is not based on physical appearance or on a feeling of pity or concern but for “loves sake only…… through loves eternity” (Sonnet 14). This personified statement of which she repeats continually throughout the sonnet emphasizes her demands which seem extremely idealistic and hard to meet. The sonnets explore the idea that she has never experienced love, and has only read about it, hence the discussion of Theocritus and “the antique tongue” in Sonnet 1, specifically love in its idealistic and dreamt state. This demonstrates how this text explores the idea of aspirations.…

    • 1075 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sonnet 130

    • 737 Words
    • 2 Pages

    William Shakespeare’s 130th sonnet is perhaps the most intriguing and conceptually bizarre. The majority of his sonnets on the subject of women detail how lovely and fair they are, or how he is unable to serenade them (often because of a superior man); this particular example is an utter contradiction to his other female-based works. The central idea of the speaker here is to describe the appearance of his love interest to someone else, in the most informative and vivid way possible. Sonnet 130 is crammed in every corner with imagery and figurative language, and such combination of words makes its conclusion every more brilliant.…

    • 737 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays