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  1. While the pilgrimage itself receives scant attention in The Canterbury Tales, the fact that the characters are on a pilgrimage to Canterbury draws out key themes: the showy, hypocritical nature of many religious actions and the characters’ widely varying moral commitments.

  2. Expert Answers. David Morrison. | Certified Educator. Share Cite. In the medieval world, pilgrimages were a very important part of religious life. People of all classes would regularly travel to...

  3. The pilgrimage, which in medieval practice combined a fundamentally religious purpose with the secular benefit of a spring vacation, made possible extended consideration of the relationship between the pleasures and vices of this world and the spiritual aspirations for the next.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. But The Canterbury Tales is all about the struggle to keep audiences entertained. The central conceit is that a group of pilgrims enter into a storytelling competition to take their minds off the...

  5. May 8, 2019 · The Canterbury Tales is narrated by a character whom scholars identify as Chaucer-the-pilgrim, a literary character based on the author but presented as far more naïve, clueless, and trusting than the actual Chaucer could have been.

  6. At the time Geoffrey Chaucer wrote the General Prologue and the twenty-four stories in The Canterbury Tales, pilgrimages—journeys to sacred places undertaken as an act of religious...

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