TY - BOOK AU - Keen,Maurice TI - Nobles, Knights and Men-At-Arms in the Middle Ages SN - 9781441139498 AV - DA60 -- .K44 1996eb U1 - 355.00941 PY - 2003/// CY - London PB - Bloomsbury Publishing Plc KW - Military art and science -- History -- Medieval, 500-1500 KW - Knights and knighthood -- Great Britain -- History -- To 1500 KW - Nobility -- Great Britain -- History -- To 1500 KW - Military history, Medieval KW - Great Britain -- History, Military -- 1066-1485 KW - Electronic books N1 - Cover -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Foreword -- 1 War, Peace and Chivalry -- 2 Chivalry and Courtly Love -- 3 Brotherhood-in-Arms -- 4 Chivalry, Heralds and History -- 5 The Medieval Kings and the Tournament -- 6 Chaucer's Knight, the English Aristocracy and the Crusade -- 7 Gadifer de La Salle: A Late Medieval Knight Errant -- 8 The Jurisdiction and Origins of the Constable's Court -- 9 Treason Trials under the Law of Arms -- 10 English Military Experience and the Court of Chivalry: The Case of Grey v. Hastings -- 11 Some Late Medieval Ideas about Nobility -- 12 The Debate about Nobility: Dante, Nicholas Upton and Bartolus -- 13 Henry V's Diplomacy -- 14 The End of the Hundred Years War: Lancastrian France and Lancastrian England -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Y N2 - The literature of chivalry and of courtly love has left an indelible impression on western ideas. What is less clear is how far the contemporary warrior aristocracy took this literature to heart and how far its ideals had influence in practice, especially in war. These are questions that Maurice Keen is uniquely qualified to answer. This book is a collection of Maurice Keen's articles and deals with both the ideas of chivalry and the reality of warfare. He discusses brotherhood-in-arms, courtly love, crusades, heraldry, knighthood, the law of arms, tournaments and the nature of nobility, as well as describing the actual brutality of medieval warfare and the lure of plunder. While the standards set by chivalric codes undoubtedly had a real, if intangible, influence on the behaviour of contemporaries, chivalry's idealisation of the knight errant also enhanced the attraction of war, endorsing its horrors with a veneer of acceptability UR - https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/orpp/detail.action?docID=1749707 ER -