Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General Editor's Foreword
- I The Composition of the Tristran of Beroul
- II The Lure of the Hybrid: Tristan de Nanteuil, Chanson de Geste Arthurien?
- III L'Extrait du Roman d'Erec et Enide de La Curne de Sainte-Palaye
- IV ‘Talkyng of cronycles of kinges and of other polycyez’: Fifteenth-Century Miscellanies, the Brut and the Readership of Le Morte Darthur
- V Albine and Isabelle: Regicidal Queens and the Historical Imagination of the Anglo-Norman Prose Brut Chronicles
- VI Arthurian Literature, Art, and Film, 1995–1999
IV - ‘Talkyng of cronycles of kinges and of other polycyez’: Fifteenth-Century Miscellanies, the Brut and the Readership of Le Morte Darthur
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General Editor's Foreword
- I The Composition of the Tristran of Beroul
- II The Lure of the Hybrid: Tristan de Nanteuil, Chanson de Geste Arthurien?
- III L'Extrait du Roman d'Erec et Enide de La Curne de Sainte-Palaye
- IV ‘Talkyng of cronycles of kinges and of other polycyez’: Fifteenth-Century Miscellanies, the Brut and the Readership of Le Morte Darthur
- V Albine and Isabelle: Regicidal Queens and the Historical Imagination of the Anglo-Norman Prose Brut Chronicles
- VI Arthurian Literature, Art, and Film, 1995–1999
Summary
King Edward IV's Black Book and the Ordinances of 1478 describes the type of activities that the squires of the court engaged in:
Thes esquires of housold of old be acustomed, wynter and somer, in after nonys and in euenynges, to drawe to lordez chambrez within courte, there to kepe honest company aftyr theyre cunyng, in talkyng of cronycles of kinges and of other polycyez, or in pypyng, or harpyng, synging, other actez marciablez, to help ocupy the court and acompany straungers, tyll the tym require of departing.
This passage displays the typical activities of the squires and knights attending the court; activities like listening and talking ‘of cronycles of kinges and of other polycyez’ ensured a constant exchange of ideas related to history and to the national past, as well as to contemporary political events.
Another reading matter for squires and knights was chivalry, as William Caxton implies in his preface to Sir Thomas Malory's Morte Darthur.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Arthurian Literature XVIII , pp. 125 - 142Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2001