n The son fell very ill and asked his mother to get Frederigo's falcon for him, which he thought would surely make him get well. She hated to ask Frederigo for his last dear possession, but fear for her son's health led her to do it.
; D# m! Q+ s/ }/ M2 _8 p' ` n She visited Frederigo's farm and told him that, to compensate him for the harm he had suffered on her account, she intended to dine with him that very day.
0 w7 H. T6 S4 C# [+ {1 _7 P n He was super-courteous, and invited her to wait in the garden. There was no food in his house, so he killed the falcon to make a meal.! ]9 Q" M* W5 g, E/ o- m( b
n Rule 24: Every act of a lover ends in the thought of his beloved.+ \) S3 {, Z6 L6 h, A
n Rule 25: A true lover considers nothing good except what he thinks will please his beloved.9 Z; a6 V3 \9 ]* w- C
n Rule 26: Love can deny nothing to love.2 w7 }; i S2 U% ~
n They ate and then she explained about her sick son and requested the falcon. Frederigo wept and revealed the truth. She praised his gracious spirit but reproached his killing the falcon for her meal. She went home; her son died a few days later.
2 j2 S8 y0 U, s n Eventually, her brothers wanted her to remarry, since she was young and rich; she said she would only marry Frederigo, which she did, and he was more prudent after that.
3 b5 ~/ Y7 q- l Frederigo and Monna Giovanna as Courtly Lovers
, U0 i0 {: O4 s n love from a distance;( n0 I# z: s U
n love for an unattainable married lady;8 y L. o( a* N d7 x
n the lover gives up his all for love;
% O R! f. Q$ o0 W$ n$ P n the lover receives the final reward of the lady for such great courtesy$ @# f% T/ B% H$ S: Z1 @* W
IV. A summary on courtly love$ ]# a6 _5 ~: C' |8 n1 A
i. The "courtly love" relationship typically was not between husband and wife, not because the poets and the audience were inherently immoral, but because it was an idealized sort of relationship that could not exist within the context of "real life" medieval marriages. In the middle ages, marriages amongst the nobility were typically based on practical and dynastic concerns rather than on love.
5 q# J8 s1 r" T ii. Courtly love relationship, as it were, challenged and sought to redefine traditional Christian ideals of love, marriage, manhood, virtue, and femininity.& c) L& B1 ]- u' ]) D
Further reading: traditional Christian ideas of love & women in medieval times2 F6 C/ u: w, L3 u! W, ~) W
i. Love:- m, @/ r0 M; X, W }
n Neither the Greeks nor the Romans thought that passionate love between the sexes could improve or transform the lovers. Rather, they thought of passionate love as either a punishment inflicted on men by the Gods, akin to madness, or as mere sensual gratification, not to be taken very seriously.
: X+ I/ V) p$ x" | n While antiquity did not approve of passionate love between the sexes, Christianity absolutely deplored it:. Z1 |( @& |- D; ]# F- Z- A
n Even passionate love between spouses was considered theologically sinful, if unavoidable, until the thirteenth century when the Church began to modify its attitudes on this issue.
- Q& p/ u0 a. J! {$ O& W- K ii. Christian idea of womanhood: Eve/Mary dualism7 u6 C: P7 @ w* m- g! c
n i. Misogynic position (the traditional church position, often expressed in medieval literature):: w% o" j: L: z6 x/ u T) D
n women were inferior: from Adam's rib
7 _ G' E/ G J! x. O n women were sinful: story of the Fall
|# u3 P; D$ [ y n ii. Cult of Mary:- J3 K W! g% y2 i. H: O
n However, Mary, with her holiness and ideal embodiment of ideal feminine traits, plays an important role in improving the images of medieval womanhood. The exaltation of the beatified Virgin Mary climaxed in the Marian cult or cult of the Virgin Mary, which influenced the literature, music and art of the high and late Middle Ages.9 J: T5 a. r+ s' D; v" s% ~/ C
n This Eve/Mary dualism allowed and even encouraged conflicting attitudes toward medieval women:( ~- b! r+ ]. A4 ~3 i: H" f
n At the same time that people were praying to the Virgin Mary for salvation, they were condemning Eve for the Fall of Man. This dualistic religious attitude towards women offers us some insight into the curious mixture of love and religion, sex and purity we find in the courtly love poetry and stories of the Middle Ages.
: p# k a! `$ ?& Q/ o3 d6 U n In a word, when a medieval passionate lover obediently subjects himself to the will of his beloved lady, he grants her a status which women did not enjoy either in Antiquity or in the Middle Ages." d! n- z z2 h1 g( c
6. Carolingian Renaissance: 101
! U; |1 b4 g* @* i/ d2 D& {; Q n Charlemagne (742-814) was the most important figure of the early medieval period, who temporarily restored order in western and central Europe. As he wanted to rule as the emperors of Rome had done, he was eventually crowned “Emperor of the Romans” by the Pope in 800.
+ E' B1 O& [) H3 _1 y5 u1 t/ T n Charlemagne encouraged interest in the Christian religion, and ancient learning by, for example, setting up monastery schools, giving support to scholars and setting scribes to work copying various ancient books. The result of Charlemagne’s efforts is usually called “Carolingian Renaissance,” with the term “Carolingian” derived from Charlemagne’s name in Latin, Carolus. X+ z5 R0 ^4 h& |0 R+ y
n The most interesting facet of this rather minor renaissance is the spectacle of Frankish or Germanic state reaching out to assimilate the riches of the Roman Classical and the Christianized Hebraic culture. |