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Leading medievalist and Renaissance scholar Aldo Scaglione offers a sweeping sociological view of three geographic areas that reveals a surprising continuity of courtly forms and motifs: German romances the lyrical and narrative literature of northern and southern France Italy's chivalric poetry. Scaglione discusses a broad number of texts, from early Norman and Flemish baronial chronicles to the romances of Chretien de Troyes, the troubadours and Minnesingers. He delves into the Niebelungenlied, Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio, and an array of treatises on conduct down to Castiglione and his successors.
All these works and Scaglione's superior scholarship attest to the enduring power over minds and hearts of a mentality that issued from a small minority of people--the courtiers and knights--in central positions of leadership and power. Knights at Court is for all scholars and students interested in "the civilizing process."
Library of Congress subject headings for this publication: Courts and courtiers, Civilization, Medieval, Courts and courtiers in literature, Chivalry, Knights and knighthood, Literature, Medieval History and criticism, Humanism