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  2. Book of Chivalry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Chivalry

    The Book of Chivalry (French: Livre de chevalerie) was written by the knight Geoffroi de Charny (c.1306-1356) sometime around the early 1350s. The treatise is intended to explain the appropriate qualities for a knight, reform the behavior of the fighting classes, and defend the chivalric ethos against its critics, mainly in clerical circles.

  3. Chivalry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chivalry

    Medieval historian Richard W. Kaeuper saw chivalry as a central focus in the study of the European Middle Ages that was too often presented as a civilizing and stabilizing influence in the turbulent Middle Ages. On the contrary, Kaueper argues "that in the problem of public order the knights themselves played an ambivalent, problematic role and ...

  4. Furusiyya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Furusiyya

    The following is a list of known Furusiyyah treatises (after al-Sarraf 2004, al-Nashīrī 2007). [13]Some of the early treatises (9th to 10th centuries) are not extant and only known from references by later authors: Al-Asma'i, Kitāb al-khayl (خيل "horse"), Ibn Abi al-Dunya (d. 894 / AH 281) Al-sabq wa al-ramī, Al-Ṭabarānī (d. 971 / AH 360) Faḍl al-ramī, Al-Qarrāb (d. 1038 / AH ...

  5. Thomas Heebøll-Holm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Heebøll-Holm

    Thomas Kristian Heebøll-Holm is a medieval historian at the SAXO Institute at the University of Copenhagen.He is most known for his research involving medieval knights and the possibility that they suffered from Post-traumatic stress disorder and other hardships.

  6. Courtly love - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Courtly_love

    Courtly love (Occitan: fin'amor; French: amour courtois [amuʁ kuʁtwa]) was a medieval European literary conception of love that emphasized nobility and chivalry. Medieval literature is filled with examples of knights setting out on adventures and performing various deeds or services for ladies because of their "courtly love".

  7. Accolade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accolade

    The Knights of the Crown: the Monarchical Orders of Knighthood in Later Medieval Europe, 1325-1520. 2d revised ed. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell Press, 2000. Keen, Maurice; Chivalry, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1984, ISBN 0-300-03150-5; Robards, Brooks; The Medieval Knight at War, UK: Tiger Books, 1997, ISBN 1-85501-919-1

  8. Tobias Capwell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobias_Capwell

    Armour of the English Knight 1400–1450 Tobias Emanuel (" Toby ") Capwell FSA (born c. 1973 ) is an American historian who lives and works in London. His principal interest is in European arms and armour of the medieval and Renaissance periods (roughly, the 12th century to the 16th).

  9. Knight-errant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knight-errant

    Title page of an Amadís de Gaula romance of 1533. A knight-errant [1] (or knight errant [2]) is a figure of medieval chivalric romance literature.The adjective errant (meaning "wandering, roving") indicates how the knight-errant would wander the land in search of adventures to prove his chivalric virtues, either in knightly duels (pas d'armes) or in some other pursuit of courtly love.