Geoffrey Chaucer 1343-1400 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Geoffrey Chaucer 1343-1400

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The Canterbury Tales Biographical Information Considered one of the 3 greatest poets of the English language. ... The tales begin with the General Prologue , ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Geoffrey Chaucer 1343-1400


1
Geoffrey Chaucer1343-1400
  • The Canterbury Tales

2
Biographical Information
  • Considered one of the 3 greatest poets of the
    English language.
  • Son of a prosperous London wine merchant who
    secured a position for him as a page in a royal
    household.
  • At 20 years old, during military service, Chaucer
    was captured in France and the King paid his
    ransom.

3
Biographical Information
  • He married a woman of great connections and went
    on to be a civil servant, serving as a customs
    controller, justice of the peace and eventually a
    member of Parliament.
  • In 1387 he began The Canterbury Tales, a work he
    never completed.
  • The General Prologue is said to be a concise
    portrait of an entire nation.

4
Medieval Period
  • 1066, Battle of Hastings
  • Normans from France beat the Anglo-Saxons
  • William the Conquerer leads (Norman King)
  • 2 cultures blend begins feudalism

5
Medieval Period
  • 1154, Norman line ends
  • Henry II starts the Plantagenet Line
  • Executes Thomas Beckett, the Archbishop of
    Canterbury in 1170.

6
Medieval Period
  • 1399-1413, House or Line of Lancaster
  • Hundred Years War 1337-1453, England wanted to
    claim Frances land.

7
Medieval Period
  • In 1455, Henry VI becomes ill and gives the
    throne to the Duke of York, starting the York
    line.
  • War of the Roses- York (white rose) and Lancaster
    (red rose).
  • Edward IV becomes the 1st York King.

8
Story of Canterbury
  • These tales are told during a pilgrimage journey
    from London to the shrine of the martyr, St.
    Thomas Becket at Canterbury Cathedral,
    approximately 70 miles to the southeast.
  • St. Thomas Becket was executed by the order of
    Henry II

9
Thomas Becket
  • Born in 1118 in London
  • Studied in London and at the University of Paris.
  • His father died, leaving him broke and the
    Archbishop of Canterbury took him in and financed
    his education.
  • He became involved in the political happenings of
    the time and was eventually appointed Chancellor
    of England by Henry II, becoming the second most
    powerful man in England.

10
Thomas Becket
  • He famed for luxury and a magnificent lifestyle.
  • Henry nominated him the Archbishop of Canterbury
    and everything changed.
  • He was ordained a priest and began living in
    great austerity.
  • He soon clashed with the king over clerical and
    king rights.

11
Thomas Becket
  • For 6 years they continued to clash
  • Becket's allegiance shifted from the court to the
    Church inspiring him to take a stand against his
    king.
  • Becket had excommunicated the Bishops of London
    and Salisbury for their support of the king.
  • This news threw King Henry (still in France) into
    a rage in which he was purported to shout "What
    sluggards, what cowards have I brought up in my
    court, who care nothing for their allegiance to
    their lord. Who will rid me of this meddlesome
    priest?"

12
Thomas Becket
  • The king's exact words have been lost to history
    but his outrage inspired four knights to sail to
    England to rid the realm Becket. They arrived at
    Canterbury during the afternoon of December 29
    and immediately searched for the Archbishop.
    Becket fled to the Cathedral where a service was
    in progress. The knights found him at the altar,
    drew their swords and began hacking at their
    victim finally splitting his skull.
  • The death of Becket unnerved the king. The
    knights who did the deed to curry the king's
    favor, fell into disgrace. Several miracles were
    said to occur at the tomb of the martyr and he
    was soon canonized. Hordes of pilgrims
    transformed Canterbury Cathedral into a shrine.
    Four years later, in an act of penance, the king
    donned a sack-cloth walking barefoot through the
    streets of Canterbury while eighty monks flogged
    him with branches. Henry capped his atonement by
    spending the night in the martyr's crypt. St.
    Thomas continued as a popular cultist figure for
    the remainder of the Middle Ages.

13
The Story of Canterbury Continued
  • The tales begin with the General Prologue, the
    first lines of which establish the fact that this
    pilgramage takes place in the spring, the
    symbolic time of new life and awakening.
  • Along the way the poet stops at an inn and the
    Host suggests to the travelers that they all
    exchange tales as they travel.
  • He wrote in iambic pentameter a line of poetry
    ten syllables long with an unstressed syllable
    followed by a stressed syllable. This later
    becomes the most popular metrical line in English.

14
  • If you had to choose 5 types of people to
    represent our society today, who would they be?
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