The Mariner in fourteenth-century England

The Shipman is among the most colourful, and yet enigmatic, of the Canterbury pilgrims who rub shoulders in Geoffrey Chaucer's exuberantly drawn group portrait of the middling ranks of late fourteenth-century English society. The vivid character sketch assigned to him is surely connected with t...

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Main Authors: Lambert, Craig, Ayton, Andrew
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: Cambridge University Press 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/370112
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spelling ftunivhullir:oai:hull-repository.worktribe.com:370112 2024-05-19T07:42:54+00:00 The Mariner in fourteenth-century England Lambert, Craig Ayton, Andrew 2012-12-31 https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/370112 unknown Cambridge University Press https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/370112 Fourteenth Century England VII Pagination 153-176 978-1-84383-721-3 Book Chapter 2012 ftunivhullir 2024-04-19T00:02:30Z The Shipman is among the most colourful, and yet enigmatic, of the Canterbury pilgrims who rub shoulders in Geoffrey Chaucer's exuberantly drawn group portrait of the middling ranks of late fourteenth-century English society. The vivid character sketch assigned to him is surely connected with the poet's personal experience during the 1370s and 1380s, which took him – no doubt significantly – to Dartmouth to arrange the release of an unjustly arrested Genoese vessel and, as a customs official, brought him into direct contact with shipmasters and mariners on the London quayside. Here, he would have recognized, was a world that could plausibly yield a plain-speaking man of action with an eventful life story, which, in terms of its combination of professionalism, adventure and questionable conduct, could make the Shipman a worthy maritime counterpart to the Knight, as acutely observed yet as interpretatively complex. But what, above all, would have been evident to Chaucer as a much travelled man of public affairs was that his group of Canterbury pilgrims would be incomplete without the inclusion of an old salt. For the shipboard community – a social and occupational pyramid of seafarers in which men like the Shipman occupied the upper levels – played a role in the life of the realm that was both distinctive and fundamentally important. Such men guided and manned the vessels that conducted England's maritime trade, long-distance and coastal; they fished the seas from inshore waters to Dogger Bank and (a little later) Iceland; and they transported the armies, supplies and envoys that were the lifeblood of the crown's martial and diplomatic endeavours. Book Part Iceland University of Hull: Repository@Hull
institution Open Polar
collection University of Hull: Repository@Hull
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description The Shipman is among the most colourful, and yet enigmatic, of the Canterbury pilgrims who rub shoulders in Geoffrey Chaucer's exuberantly drawn group portrait of the middling ranks of late fourteenth-century English society. The vivid character sketch assigned to him is surely connected with the poet's personal experience during the 1370s and 1380s, which took him – no doubt significantly – to Dartmouth to arrange the release of an unjustly arrested Genoese vessel and, as a customs official, brought him into direct contact with shipmasters and mariners on the London quayside. Here, he would have recognized, was a world that could plausibly yield a plain-speaking man of action with an eventful life story, which, in terms of its combination of professionalism, adventure and questionable conduct, could make the Shipman a worthy maritime counterpart to the Knight, as acutely observed yet as interpretatively complex. But what, above all, would have been evident to Chaucer as a much travelled man of public affairs was that his group of Canterbury pilgrims would be incomplete without the inclusion of an old salt. For the shipboard community – a social and occupational pyramid of seafarers in which men like the Shipman occupied the upper levels – played a role in the life of the realm that was both distinctive and fundamentally important. Such men guided and manned the vessels that conducted England's maritime trade, long-distance and coastal; they fished the seas from inshore waters to Dogger Bank and (a little later) Iceland; and they transported the armies, supplies and envoys that were the lifeblood of the crown's martial and diplomatic endeavours.
format Book Part
author Lambert, Craig
Ayton, Andrew
spellingShingle Lambert, Craig
Ayton, Andrew
The Mariner in fourteenth-century England
author_facet Lambert, Craig
Ayton, Andrew
author_sort Lambert, Craig
title The Mariner in fourteenth-century England
title_short The Mariner in fourteenth-century England
title_full The Mariner in fourteenth-century England
title_fullStr The Mariner in fourteenth-century England
title_full_unstemmed The Mariner in fourteenth-century England
title_sort mariner in fourteenth-century england
publisher Cambridge University Press
publishDate 2012
url https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/370112
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/370112
Fourteenth Century England VII
Pagination 153-176
978-1-84383-721-3
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