
Contents
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The Arthurian Lineage in Chrétien's Works The Arthurian Lineage in Chrétien's Works
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Erec Et Enide: Contrast within a Kin Group Erec Et Enide: Contrast within a Kin Group
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Cliges: Marriage as an Alliance of Powerful Kin Groups Cliges: Marriage as an Alliance of Powerful Kin Groups
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Lancelot: Lack of Kin Lancelot: Lack of Kin
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Yvain: Avenging Kin Yvain: Avenging Kin
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Perceval: The Quest for Kin Perceval: The Quest for Kin
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Kinship Relationships in Chrétien Kinship Relationships in Chrétien
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter describes how important relations among kin are in Chretien's society; in fact, it far outweighs the significance of all but the parent–child relationship in American and Western European societies. Not only were members of kinship groups considered responsible for one another's actions, but political alliances often depended on the extension of such groups through arranged marriages. Understanding the ramifications of kinship and marriage in northern France in the second half of the twelfth century is essential for an appreciation of Chretien's romances. The organization of French society in the second half of the twelfth century is idealized as a threefold division: the nobility, the clergy, and the peasants, those who ruled and fought, those who prayed, and those who worked, respectively.
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