The Merchants Tale - Context Flashcards
What did marriage represent
The union between Christ and the Church
Sex outside of marriage
It was seen as sinful and one of the 7 deadly sins
Sex in marriage
- Both the husband and wife owed each other marriage ‘dette’
- The consumption of the marriage was required and failure to consummate said marriage was one of the few grounds for divorce
- Sex was solely for procreation
Love Triangles (Januarie - May - Damyan)
Influenced by Boccaccio’s Decameron:
(Pyrrus - Nicostratus - Lydia)
Influenced by Helen of Troy:
(Paris - Menelaus - Helen of Troy)
Courtly Love
Conventionalised medieval tradition –> love between a knight and a married noblewoman
Damyan:
- In love with another man’s wife
- He is sick with love for her and can only be cured if she returns his love
May:
- Scarcely notices Damyan, then starts to feel pity for and interest in him after receiving his letter
Chaucer’s attitude towards courtly love
Influenced by the Ten Commandments which forbid adultery:
- Christian interpretation might suggest that they are self-indulgent
- Chaucer reduces our sympathies for them by making Januarie blind therefore making him a more sympathetic character thus increasing our condemnation of May
Medieval morality plays
Commedia dell’arte theatre:
Januarie represents Zanni - an idiot character
Golden Book of Marriage - Theophrastus
Preaches that women lead men to their doom
Januarie rejects the Golden Book of marriage as he doesn’t want to think too much about choosing his wife
Women in the 14th Century
Limited opportunities for women
The place of women was often dictated by biblical writings:
–> The apostle Paul emphasised men’s authority over women
–> Forbidden from teaching and making them remain silent
Expectations of women in the 14th century
Expected to marry and have children –> primary role of being a mother and wife:
–> Did not have much say in who they married
–> They were the keepers of the house
Marriage in the 14th Century
- Easy to get married, only verbal consent was required
- Money, land and family names were very important and key factors in getting married
- Divorce was not allowed
- Marriage was seen as a union between families and not just individuals, important for:
–> Social status
–> Religious belief
–> Political alliances
–> Economic reasons
–> Deemed necessary for salvation
Why was it important to be married
Marriage was important for salvation
- Heaven and Hell were real places
- The next life mattered more
(Caster, 2013)
Semex Amans
- An older, sexually feeble, impotent man
- Januarie is 60 (old considering the life expectancy of a 14th Century man)
- A stereotypical character of a classical Roman or Greek fabliau
- Stock Figure of January
Setting
- Set in Pavia, Lombardy in Nothern-Central Italy
- Lombardy was a town full of brothels and banks which reflects both The Merchant’s and Januarie’s personalities
- Chaucer visited Lombardy on royal duties in 1378
Calendrical Months
Januarie connotes wintery impotence and death
May connotes spring-like fertility and youth