The Medieval Knight
In this unit, we'll explore the ideal of the
medieval knight. One traditional view of when feudal knighthood
originated is
during the reign of Charles Martel, as some historians argue that he had greater need
of cavalry to respond to the Arab threat. This hypothesis has been
challenged and is now known to be inaccurate, as the first Arab
cavalries did not arrive until at least eight years after the Battle of Poitiers (Tours).
Feudal society was essentially a creation of
Charlemagne and his descendents. One of the most popular legends
concerning knighthood was the legend of King Arthur and the Knights of
the Roundtable. This legend, too, evolved over time, from Welsh
legends, through the early medieval chronicles of Gildas and Nennius, to
Geoffrey of Monmouth, Wace, Layamon, and finally to Malory. The
best resource I have for you to explore is my course web site on
King Arthur and the Knights of the Roundtable. There you can
explore all the various forms of the legend and numerous resources.
There are numerous films on the Arthurian legend,
many of which mix primary source accounts from different eras.
Among these films are:
Knights of the Round Table
Perceval slow-moving, but authentic Eric Rohmer film based on the
Perceval epic of Chretien de Troyes.
Sword
of Lancelot Guinevere rejects Lancelot at the end of the film.
Lancelot is unrepentant about his relationship with Guinevere.
Lancelot du Lac Robert Bresson film which portrays the affair as the
reason for the kingdom's downfall, and Lancelot as repentant for his
sins.
Excalibur John Boorman film which mixes just about all the primary
source traditions.
Monty
Python and the Holy Grail perhaps the best overall version of
the Arthurian legends, in that it debunks the mystique of Arthur and has
him hopping around the countryside on his own two feet.
Merlin explores the various legends behind Merlin.
We'll also explore the legend of Robin Hood in
films such as
Robin Hood (Douglas
Fairbanks);
Robin Hood Prince of Thieves;
Adventures of Robin
Hood (Errol Flynn);
Robin Hood
(Patrick Bergin);
Robin and Marian
(would you believe Sean Connery?); oh, and
Men in Tights.
Robin Hood robbed the rich and gave to the poor,
which reflects some of the social conditions and needs of late
twelfth-century and early thirteenth-century England. You might
want to explore
The Robin
Hood Project at the University of Rochester. This site contains all
the relevant primary sources. The
Robin Hood page from the
Legends site is also a very nice site with links to other useful
resources.
Another topic of this unit will be
El Cid. One
element of the knightly ideal was the battle against the "infidel."
Knight often fought for Holy Mother Church. This was especially
true after the speech of Urban II at Claremont in 1095, which
called for a Crusade against Muslims and argued for the reinvention of
the knightly ideal of murder and plunder, as Urban gave knights a way to
live what was regarded as many as sinful lives if done in the name of
the Church. Medieval Europeans had little understanding of Muslim
culture, and very distorted legends about Islam circulated in medieval
Europe. Medieval legend transformed figures such as Roland, who in
fact died in an ambush by the Christian Basques during the reign of
Charlemagne, into heroes who battled Muslims. The knightly fight against
the infidel motivated the Crusades. In order to critique the film we
will view, you might want to read about
El Cid in the
Catholic Encyclopedia. The real El Cid first battled the Moors
for King Alfonso of Castille and then later fought with the Moors
against Alfonso. The story is an excellent way to explore the
various exchanges between European and Islamic culture in the Middle
Ages. The El
Cid page from Legends has links to various resources on the poem of
the Cid and the figure himself. The
Lay of the Cid has romanticized much of the story, just as the Song of Roland was pretty far removed from the facts surrounding the defeat of Charlemagne's rear guard.
See
Lynn Nelson's Commentary on this poem at her University of Kansas
website.
Another hero who fought against "infidels" was
Alexander Nevsky. We'll view the
Eisenstein film, made during the
Soviet era. We'll also listen to
Prokofiev's cantata, Alexander Nevsky. During the Crusades, new
military orders arose, and Nevsky encountered one group of these, the
Teutonic Knights, and defeated them.
We'll also compare these ideas to Norse ideals, as
seen in Die Niebulungen,
directed by Fritzt Lange.
The
Thirteenth Warrior is another film commentary on the medieval knight
and is a film version of
Beowulf.
Perhaps the greatest film masterpiece dealing with
medieval knighthood is
Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal. A knight returns home from the
Crusades only to face the personification of Death as it dances through
the countryside during the fourteenth century. The knight must
examine the values of his life, and the idyllic life of the countryside
as seen through a simple performer and his wife are portrayed as the
ideal life.
It is interesting to compare the medieval ideal of
knighthood to that of feudal Japan. There are numerous epic films that
depict Japanese samurai, including Akira Kurusawa's
Seven Samurai and
Ran; Samurai
I,
II,
III;
Heaven and Earth;
Shogun;
Chushingura;
The 47 Ronin;
Selected Primary Sources Exemplifying Knightly Ideals
Beowulf
The Song
of Roland