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The Middle Ages – not classical antiquity and not the Renaissance

The Middle Ages – not classical antiquity and not the Renaissance. In Great Britain ~450 (fall of Rome) – 1485 (Tudors). Middle English vs. Medieval Literature.

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The Middle Ages – not classical antiquity and not the Renaissance

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  1. The Middle Ages – not classical antiquity and not the Renaissance In Great Britain ~450 (fall of Rome) – 1485 (Tudors)

  2. Middle English vs. Medieval Literature • In Britain, “medieval literature” is composed between ~ 500 AD and 1485 in Old English, Latin, Anglo-Norman French, Middle English, or any Celtic language • Middle English literature is written in Middle English (about 1250-1500) • We’ll do a very few “not-Middle English” pieces.

  3. Western Europe: religion and language Medieval Roman Catholicism with pockets of pagans that slowly succumb to Christianity with Muslims in Spain with Jews throughout Latin is language of diplomacy and all academic fields Classical Antiquity • Mostly Paganism; Christianity emerges at end of Antiquity; Judaism persists as a small sect. • Greek and Roman gods • Monotheists rare in antiquity • Latin is language of rule & conquest; Greek of literature & New Testament & trade

  4. Medieval Roman Catholicism with pockets of pagans that slowly succumb to Christianity with Muslims in Spain with Jews throughout Latin is language of diplomacy and all academic fields Renaissance Protestant Reformation more than one way to be a Christian all other (witchcraft; Muslim, Jewish, other Christian) rites persecuted Latin slowly replaced by vernacular Greek gains status Western Europe: religion and language

  5. Western Europe: social organization Classical Antiquity • City states in conflict in early antiquity; Roman empire after 1st C • Two social classes • Powerful warrior ruling class; • Slaves • Tiny mercantile middle class • Little Social Change Medieval • Local rule, as in • cities • dukedoms • tiny kingdoms • Hierarchical social structure • power of kings more ceremonial than actual • nobility holds power • Little mobility • between places • between social classes

  6. Medieval Local rule, as in cities dukedoms tiny kingdoms Hierarchical social structure power of kings more ceremonial than actual nobility holds power Little mobility between places between social classes Renaissance Nation states formed from formerly independent locales divine right of kings empowers royals nobility loses power growing middle class of merchants, doctors, lawyers, clergy, etc. More mobility between places between social classes Western Europe: social organization

  7. Western Europe: literature Classical Antiquity • literary forms • classical epic poetry • lyrics and erotic love poetry • philosophical dialogues and speculations • myths • Bible • explanations of natural phenomena • Almost no one reads Medieval • literary forms • Germanic warrior epic poetry • ballads, poems, songs • romances--courtly love tales • frame tales • religious drama • saints’ lives • More literate than ancient world

  8. Medieval literary forms epic poetry ballads, poems, songs romances--courtly love tales frame tales religious drama saints’ lives More literate than ancient world Renaissance New literary forms sonnet letter secular drama political, reformatory. theological tracts nonfiction prose novel fictional prose More literate than medieval world Western Europe: literature

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