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A Nostalgic Filter: A University of Pittsburgh ExhibitionMain MenuFrontispieceGolden BooksFront GalleryMaking CopiesFront GalleryGender & ExperienceHallwayPoetry & SongRotundaSacred TimeBack GalleryMobility & TravelSide GalleryResourcesAcknowledgements
San Marino, California, Huntington Library, EL 26 C 9
Geoffrey Chaucer’s 'Canterbury Tales' imagines the journey of a group of pilgrims to the shrine of Thomas Becket, a popular destination for late medieval pilgrimages in England. Each chapter represents a tale told by one of the pilgrims, introduced in a prologue that identifies the pilgrim as a member of a particular profession or social identity, framing Chaucer’s collection of short stories through the communal medieval experiences of traveling and storytelling. Though left incomplete upon Chaucer’s death in 1400, the poem was widely known in the 15th century; multiple early manuscripts disseminated the text and inspired later authors to write their own endings for the book in homages comparable to the ‘fan fiction’ of today.
1media/52_Elles_2_thumb.jpg2020-10-20T23:22:32-07:00The Pardoner carrying a Processional Cross2Facsimile of the Ellesmere Chaucer, fol. 138rmedia/52_Elles_2.jpgplain2020-10-22T08:50:08-07:00
1media/51_Elles_1_thumb.jpg2020-10-20T23:19:10-07:00The Miller playing Bagpipes2Facsimile of the Ellesmere Chaucer, fol. 34vmedia/51_Elles_1.jpgplain2020-10-22T08:51:08-07:00