The Book of Chivalry is the most pragmatic of all surviving chivalric
manuals. Written at the height of the Hundred Years War, it includes the
essential commonplaces of knighthood in the mid-fourteenth century and
gives a close-up view of what one knight in particular absorbed of the
medieval world of ideas around him, what he rejected or ignored, and
what he added from his experience in camp, court, and campaign.
Geoffroi de Charny was one of the quintessential figures of his age,
with honors and praise bestowed upon him from both sides of the English
Channel. He prepared the Book of Chivalry as a guide for members of
the Company of the Star, a new but short-lived order of knights created
by Jean II of France in 1352 to rival the English Order of the Garter.
Elspeth Kennedy here edits the original French text of Charny and
provides a facing-page translation for the modern reader. Richard. W.
Kaeuper's historical study places both man and his work in full context.
In the formal themes that give Charny's book structure, and in his many
tangential comments and asides, this work proves a rich source for
investigating questions about the political, military, religious, and
social history of the later Middle Ages. With this translation, the
prowess and piety of knights, their capacity to express themselves,
their common assumptions, their views on masculine virtue, women, and
love once more come vividly to life.