TY - JOUR
T1 - The punishment of the Jews, Hugh of Lincoln, and the question of satire in Chaucer's Prioress's Tale
AU - Dahood, Roger
PY - 2005
Y1 - 2005
N2 - This essay, through attention to the drawing and hanging of Jews in the Prioress's Tale, tests the claim that the tale satirizes the Prioress's anti-semitism. Section 1 addresses the nature of the punishment, which Chaucerians have questioned, and concludes from linguistic and historical evidence that Middle English drawe means "drag." Section 2 suggests that the punishment alludes to the drawing and hanging of Lincoln Jews in 1255 for the death of Hugh of Lincoln, whom the Prioress invokes. Section 3 suggests that in view of John of Gaunt's, Chaucer's, and other prominent Ricardians' ties to Lincoln Cathedral, an institution as early as 1235 associated with anti-semitism and the center of Hugh's cult, the tale is probably not satiric. Section 4 considers in light of medieval English veneration of Hugh the questions of how Chaucer viewed anti-semitism and why English anti-semitism flourished long after 1290, when few Jews remained in England.
AB - This essay, through attention to the drawing and hanging of Jews in the Prioress's Tale, tests the claim that the tale satirizes the Prioress's anti-semitism. Section 1 addresses the nature of the punishment, which Chaucerians have questioned, and concludes from linguistic and historical evidence that Middle English drawe means "drag." Section 2 suggests that the punishment alludes to the drawing and hanging of Lincoln Jews in 1255 for the death of Hugh of Lincoln, whom the Prioress invokes. Section 3 suggests that in view of John of Gaunt's, Chaucer's, and other prominent Ricardians' ties to Lincoln Cathedral, an institution as early as 1235 associated with anti-semitism and the center of Hugh's cult, the tale is probably not satiric. Section 4 considers in light of medieval English veneration of Hugh the questions of how Chaucer viewed anti-semitism and why English anti-semitism flourished long after 1290, when few Jews remained in England.
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U2 - 10.1484/J.VIATOR.2.300019
DO - 10.1484/J.VIATOR.2.300019
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:63649147965
SN - 0083-5897
VL - 36
SP - 465-491+xii
JO - Viator - Medieval and Renaissance Studies
JF - Viator - Medieval and Renaissance Studies
ER -