characteristics of a medieval romance - Search
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  1. Romance - Medieval, Chivalric, Courtly | Britannica

    This is as true of medieval romances as of their descendants, including the French and the English 18th-century novel and the pastoral romance, which, at the time of the Renaissance, revived the classical traditions of pastoral poetry and led to the appearance, in 1504, of the Arcadia by the Italian poet Jacopo Sannazzaro and, in about 1559, of the Diana by the Spanish poet and novelist Jorge de Montemayor. Both works were widely influential in translatio…

    This is as true of medieval romances as of their descendants, including the French and the English 18th-century novel and the pastoral romance, which, at the time of the Renaissance, revived the classical traditions of pastoral poetry and led to the appearance, in 1504, of the Arcadia by the Italian poet Jacopo Sannazzaro and, in about 1559, of the Diana by the Spanish poet and novelist Jorge de Montemayor. Both works were widely influential in translation, and each has claims to be regarded as the first pastoral romance, but in spirit Diana is the true inheritor of the romance tradition, giving it, in alliance with the pastoral, a new impetus and direction.

    Medieval romance began in the 12th century when clerks, working for aristocratic patrons, often ladies of royal birth such as Eleanor of Aquitaine and her daughters, Marie de Champagne and Matilda, wife of Henry the Lion, duke of Saxony, began to write for a leisured and refined society. Like the courtly lyric, romance was a vehicle of a new aristocratic culture which, based in France, spread to other parts of western Europe. Translations and adaptations of French romances appear early in German: the Roman d’Enéas, in a version written by Heinrich von Veldeke before 1186, and the archetypal Tristan romance in Eilhart von Oberge’s Tristant of c. 1170–80. In England many French romances were adapted, sometimes very freely, into English verse an…

    Britannica

    This is as true of medieval romances as of their descendants, including the French and the English 18th-century novel and the pastoral romance, which, at the time of the Renaissance, revived the classical traditions of pastoral poetry and led to the appearance, in 1504, of the Arcadia by the Italian poet Jacopo Sannazzaro and, in about 1559, of the Diana by the Spanish poet and novelist Jorge de Montemayor. Both works were widely influential in translation, and each has claims to be regarded as the first pastoral romance, but in spirit Diana is the true inheritor of the romance tradition, giving it, in alliance with the pastoral, a new impetus and direction.

    Medieval romance began in the 12th century when clerks, working for aristocratic patrons, often ladies of royal birth such as Eleanor of Aquitaine and her daughters, Marie de Champagne and Matilda, wife of Henry the Lion, duke of Saxony, began to write for a leisured and refined society. Like the courtly lyric, romance was a vehicle of a new aristocratic culture which, based in France, spread to other parts of western Europe. Translations and adaptations of French romances appear early in German: the Roman d’Enéas, in a version written by Heinrich von Veldeke before 1186, and the archetypal Tristan romance in Eilhart von Oberge’s Tristant of c. 1170–80. In England many French romances were adapted, sometimes very freely, into English verse an…

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    As has been seen, in the later Middle Ages the prose romances were influential in France, Italy, and Spain, as well as in England; and the advent of the printed book made them available to a still wider audience. But although they continued in vogue into the 16th century, with the spread of the ideals of the New Learning, the greater range and dept...

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    The 18th century in both England and Germany saw a strong reaction against the rationalistic canons of French classicism—a reaction that found its positive counterpart in such romantic material as had survived from medieval times. The Gothic romances, of which Horace Walpole’s Castle of Otranto (1764; dated 1765) is the most famous, are perhaps of ...

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