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  1. The Road to Canterbury. These maps are from Robert A. Pratt's Tales of Canterbury and was used again in Larry D. Benson, Canterbury Tales Complete. The first map shows the route of the pilgrims from Southwark in London to Rochester. The second map shows their route from Rochester to Canterbury.

  2. The Canterbury Tales. Synopses and Prolegomena. The Frame Narrative; Fragment 1. 1.1 General Prologue. Canterbury Way (The Road to Canterbury) London to Rochester; Rochester to London; Dance of Death; E. Talbot Donaldson - "Chaucer the Pilgrim; Fragments or Groups of Tales; Spring; The Martyrdom Of Thomas à Becket; The Tale of Beryn; 1.2 The ...

  3. Chaucer: Road To Canterbury. Geoffrey Chaucer's life to middle age, He survived the Black Death as a child, and become actively involved in the 100 Years War, the war that was to leave England devastated. Despite all these catastrophes, English literature went though a short Renaissance, and the program considers the leading role that Chaucer ...

  4. Chaucer: Road to Canterbury. Geoffrey Chaucer's life to middle age, He survived the Black Death as a child, and become actively involved in the 100 Years War, the war that was to leave England devastated. Despite all these catastrophes, English literature went though a short Renaissance, and the program considers the leading role that Chaucer ...

  5. Apr 13, 2009 · Overview: The Canterbury Road To Modern England. The pilgrims of Geoffrey Chaucer's set off from London for Canterbury Cathedral, which has been a shrine since 1170 when Archbishop Thomas Becket ...

  6. The Canterbury Tales is a collection of stories built around a frame tale, a common and already long established genre in this period. Chaucer's Tales differs from most other story "collections" in this genre chiefly in its intense variation. Most story collections focused on a theme, usually a religious one.

  7. Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales is one of the most widely publicised books in English, having never gone out of print. Written between 1387-1400, a time when Latin and French were the languages of sophistication, Chaucer insisted on using the common language of Old English. The Tales tell the story of a group of pilgrims, from millers to ...

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