Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- A Monastic Reformation of Domestic Space: Richard Whitford's Werke for Housholders
- Two Cultural Perspectives on the Battle of Lippa, Transylvania, 1551: Whose Victory Is It?
- Interpreting Sir Gawain and the Green Knight: Translation and Manipulation of Audience Expectations
- The Dry Tree Legend in Medieval Literature
- The Book of the Duke and Emperor: A New Edition and Interpretations within the Manuscript Context of MS. Manchester, Chetham's Library 8009 (Mun. A.6.31)
- Margery Kempe and the Spectatorship of Medieval Drama
- Wessel Gansfort, John Mombaer, and Medieval Technologies of the Self: Affective Meditation in a Fifteenth-Century Emotional Community
- Discerning Voices in the Trial of Joan of Arc and The Book of Margery Kempe
- Book Reviews
The Book of the Duke and Emperor: A New Edition and Interpretations within the Manuscript Context of MS. Manchester, Chetham's Library 8009 (Mun. A.6.31)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- A Monastic Reformation of Domestic Space: Richard Whitford's Werke for Housholders
- Two Cultural Perspectives on the Battle of Lippa, Transylvania, 1551: Whose Victory Is It?
- Interpreting Sir Gawain and the Green Knight: Translation and Manipulation of Audience Expectations
- The Dry Tree Legend in Medieval Literature
- The Book of the Duke and Emperor: A New Edition and Interpretations within the Manuscript Context of MS. Manchester, Chetham's Library 8009 (Mun. A.6.31)
- Margery Kempe and the Spectatorship of Medieval Drama
- Wessel Gansfort, John Mombaer, and Medieval Technologies of the Self: Affective Meditation in a Fifteenth-Century Emotional Community
- Discerning Voices in the Trial of Joan of Arc and The Book of Margery Kempe
- Book Reviews
Summary
In October of 1473 Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, met with the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick III in Trier, in modern day France. Their meeting was sumptuous, charged, and recorded by an unknown chronicler in the Book of the Duke and Emperor. The Duke and Emperor, which has not been previously edited, is an historical account of an important political meeting including details of its protocol, attendees, and activities, while also embodying a late-medieval cultural ideal put forward by the Duke and his chronicler. The late fifteenth-century MS. Manchester, Chetham's Library 8009 (Mun. A.6.31) contains the unique extant copy of this Middle English prose text, which is found alongside Middle English romance, hagiography, a comic ballad, and courtesy literature. Importantly, when considered with the pieces that coexist with it, the Duke and Emperor takes on new meaning within the “whole book” of the manuscript. This literally contextual examination first presents the Duke's ideal of power, status, and performing identity, and then manifests an unexpected dissenting voice detectable within another text of the manuscript.
This article aims to introduce a significant fifteenth-century historical account which encapsulates Charles the Bold's ideology of power and conveys the dynamics involved in both acquiring and confirming that power. The piece also aims to provide a close reading within the MS. Chetham 8009 which demonstrates how the Duke and Emperor enters into an informed debate over ideologies of status and display with two other items in the manuscript: the romance Ipomadon and John Russell's Book of Carving and Nurture.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Fifteenth-Century Studies 38 , pp. 97 - 122Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2013