1 / 5

The Song of Roland: Who’s Who

The Song of Roland: Who’s Who. Charlemagne (Charles the Great): king of France, uncle of Roland, brother-in-law of Ganelon Roland: feudal vassal of Charlemagne Oliver: ditto; Roland’s best friend; Roland is engaged to Oliver’s sister Aude Archbishop Turpin: warrior priest

kemp
Download Presentation

The Song of Roland: Who’s Who

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Song of Roland: Who’s Who • Charlemagne (Charles the Great): king of France, uncle of Roland, brother-in-law of Ganelon • Roland: feudal vassal of Charlemagne • Oliver: ditto; Roland’s best friend; Roland is engaged to Oliver’s sister Aude • Archbishop Turpin: warrior priest • Naimon: Charlemagne’s vassal • Ganelon: step-father of Roland, feuds with him, betrays French

  2. The Song of Roland: Who’s Who on the “pagan” side • Marsilion: pagan king of Spain already defeated by Charlemagne • Blancandrin: Marsilion’s advisor • Aëlroth: Marsilion’s nephew, he is the first to challenge Roland and to die in battle • Bramimunde: Marsilion’s queen, she will later convert to Christianity and become Juliana.

  3. Roland as part of warrior culture • Feudalism • relation of lord to vassal paramount • Emphasis on heroism in battle • Roland cannot back down from battle • Roland wants to be found dead in Spain, with his head turned towards his enemies • Might is right • Christianity shows itself to be best by winning battles, not converting minds

  4. Roland as part of Christian culture • Emphasis on forms of Christian worship • attending matins and mass • last confessions and absolutions from sin • Oliver and Roland die forgiving one another • Only Roland and Archbishop Turpin survive the battle. • Roland reflects common Christian misunderstandings of Islam • confuse Islam with polytheistic paganism • celebrate crusades against Islam

  5. Roland composed ~ 1100; set ~ 800 written ~ 50 years after oral composition all lines end with same vowel sound, a pre-cursor to end rhyme warrior culture and Christian values Germanic tradition uncle-nephew society Beowulf composed ~ 850; set ~ 500 written ~ 150 years after oral composition sound device in poem is alliteration warrior culture values earliest poem in Germanic tradition of loyalty to group, leader uncle-nephew society Roland and Beowulf

More Related