The prose 'Brut' chronicle was the most popular vernacular work of the late Middle Ages in England, setting a standard for vernacular historical writing well into the age of print, but until recently it has attracted little scholarly attention.
This book combines a study of the chronicle's sources, content, and methods of composition, with its manuscript contexts. Using the Anglo-Norman Oldest Version as a touchstone, it investigates the chronicle's social ideals, its representation of women, and its distinctive versions of such elements of British history as the Trojan foundation myth, the ruin of the Britons, the Norman Conquest, and Arthur and Merlin, arguing that its humane, populist vision demands reassessment of medieval popular understandings of British history, and of the presumed dominance of imperialism, next-worldly piety, misogyny, and a taste for violence in late-medieval culture. The book also analyses evidence for the production of the Anglo-Norman 'Brut', and examines the ways in which its makers and users reconstructed British history through manuscript context, ordinatio and apparatus, annotation and illustration.
Author(s): Julia Marvin
Series: York Medieval Press. Writing History in the Middle Ages, 5
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Year: 2017
Language: English
Pages: XVI+296
City: Woodbridge
List of Plates viii
Acknowledgments xi
Abbreviations xiii
A Note on Proper Names, Transcriptions, and Translations xv
Introduction: Recognizing the Prose 'Brut' Tradition 1
Part I: Construction 19
1. A New New Troy: Brut, Rome, and the Foundations of British History 21
2. The Community of the Realm: King, Baron, Brother, Stranger 57
3. Women with Voices 73
4. Social Arthur 93
5. The Continuity of the Realm 113
Part II: Reconstruction and Response 129
6. Evidence of Production 131
7. The Company That Prose 'Bruts' Keep 163
8. Ordinatio, Apparatus, and Annotation 177
9. History Illustrated 205
Conclusion: Merlin's Power 231
Bibliography 261
General Index 277
Index of Manuscripts Cited 295