Medieval literature
Medieval literature is a broad subject, encompassing
essentially all written works available in Europe
during the Middle
Ages (roughly from the fall of the Western Roman
Empire ca. 500
AD to the beginning of the Florentine Renaissance
in the late 15th
century). The literature of this time period varies wildly,
from the utterly sacred
to the exuberantly profane
(touching all points in-between), which is only fitting for a
millennium in which European life circled around the muck and
mire of the fields, the gore of the battlefield, and the quiet
removal of monasteries
and cathedrals.
For this reason, no single description can encompass the depth
and breadth of medieval literature.
Types of Writing
Religious
Catholic
clerics were the most literate class of society in the Middle Ages,
and it is their literature that has survived in the greatest number.
Countless
hymns
survive from this time period (both
liturgical
and paraliturgical). The liturgy itself was not in fixed form, and
numerous competing missals set out individual conceptions of the
order of the
mass.
Religious scholars such as
Anselm,
Thomas
Aquinas, and
Abelard
wrote lengthy
theological
treatises as they delved deeper and deeper into the mysteries of
faith.
Hagiographies,
or "lives of the saints", were also frequently written, as an encouragement
to the devout and a warning to others.
Francis
of Assisi was a prolific poet, and his
Franciscan
followers frequently wrote poetry themselves as an expression of
their piety.
Goliardic
poetry (four-line stanzas of satiric verse) was an art form
used by some clerics to express dissent.
Secular
Secular literature
in this period is even more varied than the religious. The subject
of "
courtly
love" was frequently written about, especially in southern and
western Europe (the
French,
Spanish,
and
Catalan,
most notably). The courtly romance (
roman courtois), or
chanson
de geste, became a common genre in the middle of this period.
Epic poems (
Beowulf
and
The
Divine Comedy being notable examples) in the tradition
laid down by
Homer
and
Virgil (among
others) still achieved great popularity. Political poetry was written
also, especially towards the end of this period, and the goliardic
form saw use by secular writers as well as clerics. Travel literature
was wildly popular in the Middle Ages, as fantastic accounts of
far-off lands (frequently embellished or entirely false) entertained
a society that, in most cases, limited people to the area they were
born in.
Women's Literature
While it is true that women in the medieval period were never accorded
full equality with men, many women were able to use their skill
with the written word to gain renown. Religious writing was the
easiest avenue--women who would later be beatified as
saints
frequently published their reflections, revelations, and prayers.
Much of what is known about women in the Middle Ages is known from
the works of
nuns
such as
Clare
of Assisi,
Bridget
of Sweden, and
Catherine
of Siena. Frequently, however, the religious perspectives of
women were held to be unorthodox by those in power, and the mystical
visions of such authors as
Julian
of Norwich and
Hildegard
of Bingen provide insight into a part of the medieval experience
less comfortable for the institutions that ruled Europe at the time.
Women wrote influential texts in the secular realm as well--reflections
on courtly love and society by
Marie
de France and
Christine
de Pizan continue to be studied for their glimpses of medieval
society.
Allegory
While medieval literature makes use of many literary devices,
allegory
is so prominent in this period as to deserve special mention. Much
of medieval literature relied on allegory to convey the morals the
author had in mind while writing--representations of abstract qualities,
events, and institutions are thick in much of the literature of
this time.
Piers Plowman is considered one of the best
examples of medieval allegory.
Notable Literature of the Period
- The Alexiad, Anna
Comnena
- Beowulf, anonymous
English
author
- The
Book of the City of Ladies, Christine de Pizan
- The Book of Good Love, Juan
Ruiz
- The Book of Margery Kempe, Margery
Kempe
- The
Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey
Chaucer
- Decameron,
Giovanni
Boccaccio
- The Dialogue, Catherine of Siena
- The Diseases of Women, Trotula
of Salerno
- The Divine Comedy, Dante
Alighieri
- Elder
Edda, various Icelandic
authors
- The Lais of Marie de France, Marie de France
- The Letters of Abelard and Heloise
- Das fliessende Licht der Gottheit, Mechtild
of Magdeburg
- Ludus
de Antichristo, anonymous German
author
- Mabinogion,
various Welsh
authors
- The
Knight in the Panther Skin, Shota
Rustaveli
- Nibelungenlied,
anonymous German author
- Njal's
Saga, anonymous Icelandic author
- Piers
Plowman, William
Langland
- Poem of the Cid, anonymous Spanish author
- Proslogium,
Anselm
- Revelations of Divine Love, Julian of Norwich
- Roman
de la Rose, Guillaume de Lorris and Jean de Meun
- Saga of Sassoun, anonymous Armenian
author
- Scivias, Hildegard of Bingen
- Sic et Non, Abelard
- The
Song of Roland, anonymous French
author
- Spiritual Exercises, Gertrude the Great
- Summa
Theologica, Thomas Aquinas
- The Travels of Marco Polo, Marco
Polo
- Triumphs, Petrarch
- Younger
Edda, Snorri
Sturluson
- Yvain: The Knight of the Lion, Chretien
de Troyes
See also