Wednesday, December 25, 2019

The Most Important Aspect Of Knighthood During The Middle Age

The most important aspect of knighthood during the middle age where religion, prowess, and feudal loyalty. Chivalry refers to the lifestyle and moral code following by medieval knights they pledged their loyalty and services to their lord. The term feudalism is used to describe a variety of social, economic, and political obligations and relationships. The Greatest Warrior knight was Godfrey and if asked anyone who was the greatest warrior at the time they would say Godfrey. Chivalry refers to the lifestyle and moral code following by medieval knights they pledged their loyalty and services to their lord. Chivalry included the values of honor, valor, courtesy and purity, as well as loyalty to a lord, a cause, or a noblewoman. They†¦show more content†¦Italy was the home of the most popular romance during the Renaissance. Three writers combined the romance of chivalry with epic. Spain saw a vast outpouring of chivalric romances. By 1575 more romance was translated in Spanish than from French. In England, chivalric romances were the most popular type of fiction after the introduction of printing. The tale of King Arthur became an important source of inspiration in England because it gave a great start for knights to tell tales. The values of old nobility gave way to the democracies of France to the Industrial Revolution. Godfrey is worth listing as a great knight because if you asked any medieval knight who the greatest knight had been, the most likely non heroic name you would get in reply would be his name. In chivalric folklore there were nine figures they were considered the epitome of knightly virtues at the time, generally known as ‘’Nine Worthies’’. They were divided into the ‘’Three Pagan Knights’’ (Hector, Alexander and Julius Caesar). The ‘’Three Jewish Knights’’ (Joshua, David and Judas Maccabeus) and the ‘’Three Christian Knights’’ (King Arthur, Charlemagne and Godfrey of Bouillon. Godfrey was born in 1060 and he was the second son of the Count of Boulogne. He got the small duchy of the lower Lorraine from his maternal uncle and he had it taken from him by the Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV. In 1096

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