The later Middle English and early Renaissance periods > Later Middle English poetry > Courtly poetry
Apart from a few late and minor reappearances in Scotland and the northwest of England, the alliterative movement was over before the first quarter of the 15th century had passed. The other major strand in the development of English poetry from roughly 1350 proved much more durable. The cultivation and refinement of human sentiment with respect to love, already present in earlier 14th-century writings such as the Harley Lyrics, took firm root in English court culture during the reign of Richard II (137799). English began to displace Anglo-Norman as the language spoken at court and in aristocratic circles, and signs of royal and noble patronage for English vernacular writers became evident. These processes undoubtedly created some of the conditions in which a writer of Chaucer's interests and temperament might flourish, but they were encouraged and given direction by his genius in establishing English as a literary language.
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·Introduction
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·The Old English period
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·The early Middle English period
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·The later Middle English and early Renaissance periods
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·Later Middle English poetry
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·The revival of alliterative poetry
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·Courtly poetry
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·Chaucer and Gower
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·Poetry after Chaucer and Gower
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·Later Middle English prose
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·Middle English drama
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·The transition from medieval to Renaissance
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·The Renaissance period: 15501660
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·Literature and the age
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·Elizabethan poetry and prose
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·Elizabethan and early Stuart drama
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·Early Stuart poetry and prose
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·The Restoration
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·The 18th century
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·Publication of political literature
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·Journalism
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·Major political writers
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·The novel
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·The major novelists
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·Defoe
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·Richardson
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·Fielding
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·Smollett
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·Sterne
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·Other novelists
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·Poets and poetry after Pope
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·The Romantic period
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·The post-Romantic and Victorian eras
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·The 20th century
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·From 1900 to 1945
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·Literature after 1945
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·The 21st century
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·Additional Reading
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·General works
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·The Old English period
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·The Middle English period
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·The Renaissance period, 15501660
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·The Restoration and the 18th century
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·The Romantic period
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·The Post-Romantic and Victorian eras
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·The 20th century
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