Book contents
- Geoffrey Chaucer in Context
- Geoffrey Chaucer in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Chaucer as Context
- Part II Books, Discourse and Traditions
- Part III Humans, the World and Beyond
- Part IV Culture, Learning and Disciplines
- Chapter 26 Childhood and Education
- Chapter 27 Philosophy
- Chapter 28 The Medieval Universe
- Chapter 29 Medicine and the Mortal Body
- Chapter 30 The Law
- Chapter 31 Art
- Chapter 32 Architecture
- Chapter 33 Heraldry, Heralds and Chaucer
- Part V Political and Social Contexts
- Part VI Chaucer Traditions
- Further Reading
- Index
Chapter 33 - Heraldry, Heralds and Chaucer
from Part IV - Culture, Learning and Disciplines
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 June 2019
- Geoffrey Chaucer in Context
- Geoffrey Chaucer in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Chaucer as Context
- Part II Books, Discourse and Traditions
- Part III Humans, the World and Beyond
- Part IV Culture, Learning and Disciplines
- Chapter 26 Childhood and Education
- Chapter 27 Philosophy
- Chapter 28 The Medieval Universe
- Chapter 29 Medicine and the Mortal Body
- Chapter 30 The Law
- Chapter 31 Art
- Chapter 32 Architecture
- Chapter 33 Heraldry, Heralds and Chaucer
- Part V Political and Social Contexts
- Part VI Chaucer Traditions
- Further Reading
- Index
Summary
This chapter explores the relationship of Chaucer and his literary work to the wider chivalric culture in which he lived. It discusses the developments over the course of the fourteenth century to the status, significance and remit of the gatekeepers of chivalric knowledge, the officers of arms. Heraldry, the language of chivalry, was omnipresent in the late medieval world and encapsulated status, genealogy and affinity. During the fourteenth century it emerged from exclusively aristocratic usage to include widespread adoption by the gentry and the urban patriciate. Chaucer was himself armigerous and operated at the practical fringes of chivalric culture through work such as overseeing the erection of scaffolds for the Smithfield tournaments of 1390, providing witness testimony in the Court of Chivalry in 1386, and through his wider social life with prominent officers of arms such as his father-in-law, Guyenne King of Arms.
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- Geoffrey Chaucer in Context , pp. 286 - 292Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019