The literary convention of courtly love can be found in most of the major authors of the Middle Ages, such as
Geoffrey Chaucer,
John Gower,
Dante,
Marie de France,
Chretien de Troyes,
Gottfried von Strassburg and
Thomas Malory. The medieval
genres in which courtly love conventions can be found include the
lyric, the
romance and the
allegory.
Lyric Courtly love was born in the lyric, first appearing with Provençal poets in the 11th century, including itinerant and courtly
minstrels such as the French troubadours and
trouvères, as well as the writers of lays. Texts about courtly love, including lays, were often set to music by troubadours or minstrels. According to scholar Ardis Butterfield, courtly love is "the air which many genres of troubadour song breathe". Not much is known about how, when, where, and for whom these pieces were performed, but we can infer that the pieces were performed at court by troubadours, trouvères, or the courtiers themselves. This can be inferred because people at court were encouraged or expected to be "courtly" and be proficient in many different areas, including music. It is difficult to know how and when these songs were performed because most of the information on these topics is provided in the music itself. One lay, the "Lay of Lecheor", says that after a lay was composed, "Then the lay was preserved / Until it was known everywhere / For those who were skilled musicians / On viol, harp and rote / Carried it forth from that region…" Scholars have to then decide whether to take this description as truth or fiction. Period examples of performance practice, of which there are few, show a quiet scene with a household servant performing for the king or lord and a few other people, usually unaccompanied. According to scholar Christopher Page, whether or not a piece was accompanied depended on the availability of instruments and people to accompany—in a courtly setting. For troubadours or minstrels, pieces were often accompanied by fiddle, also called a
vielle, or a
harp. Courtly musicians also played the vielle and the harp, as well as different types of
viols and
flutes. This French tradition spread later to the German
Minnesänger, such as
Walther von der Vogelweide and
Wolfram von Eschenbach, and to the troubadours of the Iberian peninsula, see
Galician-Portuguese lyric. It also influenced the
Sicilian School of Italian vernacular poetry, as well as
Petrarch and
Dante.
Romance and
Guinevere in
Howard Pyle's illustration for
The Story of the Champions of the Round Table (1905) The vernacular poetry of the , or
courtly romances, included many examples of courtly love. Some of them are set within the cycle of poems celebrating
King Arthur's court. This was a literature of leisure, directed to a largely female audience for the first time in European history.
Allegory Allegory is common in the romantic literature of the Middle Ages, and it was often used to interpret what was already written. There is a strong connection between religious imagery and human sexual love in medieval writings. The tradition of medieval allegory began in part with the interpretation of the
Song of Songs in the Bible. Some medieval writers thought that the book should be taken literally as an erotic text; others believed that the Song of Songs was a metaphor for the relationship between Christ and the church and that the book could not even exist without that as its metaphorical meaning. Still others claimed that the book was written literally about sex but that this meaning must be "superseded by meanings related to Christ, to the church and to the individual Christian soul". Marie de France's
lai "
Eliduc" toys with the idea that human romantic love is a symbol for God's love when two people love each other so fully and completely that they leave each other for God, separating and moving to different religious environments. Furthermore, the main character's first wife leaves her husband and becomes a nun so that he can marry his new lover. In it, a man becomes enamored with an individual rose on a rosebush, attempting to pick it and finally succeeding. The rose represents the female body, but the romance also contains lengthy digressive "discussions on free will versus determinism as well as on optics and the influence of heavenly bodies on human behavior". and the later works of
Petrarchism (as well as the continuing influence of Ovid), the themes of courtly love were not confined to the medieval, but appear both in serious and comic forms in early modern Europe. Shakespeare's
Romeo and Juliet, for example, shows Romeo attempting to love Rosaline in an almost contrived courtly fashion while Mercutio mocks him for it; and both in his plays and his sonnets the writer can be seen appropriating the conventions of courtly love for his own ends.
Paul Gallico's 1939 novel
The Adventures of Hiram Holliday depicts a Romantic modern American consciously seeking to model himself on the ideal medieval knight. Among other things, when finding himself in Austria in the aftermath of the
Anschluss, he saves a
Habsburg princess who is threatened by the Nazis, acts towards her in strict accordance with the maxims of courtly love and finally wins her after fighting a duel with her aristocratic betrothed. ==Points of controversy==