The religious nature of various tales that comprise Chaucer\u27s Canterbury Tales is a matter that has long been recognized, The purpose of the pilgrimage to Canterbury is a religious purpose, It is only natural that such a wide collection of representatives of the religious profession should be present and quite likely that medieval controversies in religious practice should arise. The tales of the Friar and Summoner, the Prioress and the Second Nun, the Pardoner and Monk, and the Nun\u27s Priest and the Parson all contain an expressed concern with the medieval theme of man\u27s relationship with God, can all be linked by various parallels in theme and method of presentation, an taken as a group demonstrate the medieval variety of opinion ...
“Performing Piety” examines the interdependent relationship between medieval sermons and plays in la...
This essay studies the various ways in which trouthe is employed in The Canterbury Tales which prese...
This dissertation consists of a series of commentaries on Chaucer\u27s allusions to saints in the Ca...
A divide exists between those who view the Canterbury Tales as a series of self-contained texts and ...
This paper was grouped with two others in a panel called “Pedagogies, some perverse.” To better refl...
Includes bibliographical references.When one considers The Canterbury Tales, which is generally acce...
The Nun\u27s Priest\u27s Tale is one of the most entertaining stories in Chaucer\u27s Canterbury T...
Chaucer is a great humanist who gently unmasks the roguery, foolishness and corruption of the mediev...
In the final decades of the 14th century, Geoffrey Chaucer chose a pilgrimage toCanterbury as the fr...
Geoffrey Chaucer was a religious poet-diplomat in 14th century England and as such was in a unique p...
It is thought that Chaucer began composing The Canterbury Tales as a dramatic whole around 1387. Thi...
(from publishers site) Chaucer’s The Nun’s Priest’s Tale is one of the most popular of The Canterbur...
A Study of the English Church in the Fourteenth Century reveals a dichotomy: on the one hand we find...
This study examines two of Chaucer\u27s Canterbury tales, the Man of Law\u27s Tale and the Second Nu...
Current scholarship on the devotional practices of late medieval England has emphasized two represen...
“Performing Piety” examines the interdependent relationship between medieval sermons and plays in la...
This essay studies the various ways in which trouthe is employed in The Canterbury Tales which prese...
This dissertation consists of a series of commentaries on Chaucer\u27s allusions to saints in the Ca...
A divide exists between those who view the Canterbury Tales as a series of self-contained texts and ...
This paper was grouped with two others in a panel called “Pedagogies, some perverse.” To better refl...
Includes bibliographical references.When one considers The Canterbury Tales, which is generally acce...
The Nun\u27s Priest\u27s Tale is one of the most entertaining stories in Chaucer\u27s Canterbury T...
Chaucer is a great humanist who gently unmasks the roguery, foolishness and corruption of the mediev...
In the final decades of the 14th century, Geoffrey Chaucer chose a pilgrimage toCanterbury as the fr...
Geoffrey Chaucer was a religious poet-diplomat in 14th century England and as such was in a unique p...
It is thought that Chaucer began composing The Canterbury Tales as a dramatic whole around 1387. Thi...
(from publishers site) Chaucer’s The Nun’s Priest’s Tale is one of the most popular of The Canterbur...
A Study of the English Church in the Fourteenth Century reveals a dichotomy: on the one hand we find...
This study examines two of Chaucer\u27s Canterbury tales, the Man of Law\u27s Tale and the Second Nu...
Current scholarship on the devotional practices of late medieval England has emphasized two represen...
“Performing Piety” examines the interdependent relationship between medieval sermons and plays in la...
This essay studies the various ways in which trouthe is employed in The Canterbury Tales which prese...
This dissertation consists of a series of commentaries on Chaucer\u27s allusions to saints in the Ca...