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  1. May 8, 2019 · The Canterbury Tales (written c. 1388-1400 CE) is a medieval literary work by the poet Geoffrey Chaucer (l. c. 1343-1400 CE) comprised of 24 tales related to a number of literary genres and touching on subjects ranging from fate to God's will to love, marriage, pride, and death.

    • Joshua J. Mark
  2. Feb 23, 2009 · Language. English. Item Size. 107.4M. Book digitized by Google from the library of Harvard University and uploaded to the Internet Archive by user tpb. 510 pages. A reissue of Chaucer's "The Canterbury Tales". Addeddate. 2009-02-23 15:47:17.

  3. Thomas Becket, the Archbishop of Canterbury from 1162 to 1170, had been brutally murdered in his cathedral over a disagreement with Henry II (1133–89), and, after Becket was canonized (in 1173), Canterbury became one of the most important sites for pilgrimage in the Christian West.

  4. Aug 10, 2023 · Abstract. This book remains in its third edition the most comprehensive single-volume account of the Canterbury Tales, combining information of what is known and what has been thought about the work to offer a fresh and individual tale-by-tale analysis.

  5. Robert W. Hanning offers accounts of some thematically comparable tales of fortuna and fama in his Boccaccio, Chaucer, and Stories for an Uncertain World: Agency in the Decameron and the Canterbury Tales (Oxford, 2021), though he locates agency solely in the fictional tellers rather than Chaucer.

  6. Jan 4, 2007 · The ten essays selected for this book illuminate the central themes of the most frequently taught Canterbury Tales. These texts are appropriate for undergraduates and general readers and were edited carefully to ensure that references and allusions are explained in footnotes.

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  8. Jul 3, 2024 · The Canterbury Tales is significant in literature for its pioneering use of the English vernacular, which helped elevate English to a literary language. Its diverse range of...

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