Unit 1: La época medieval

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50 Terms

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Medieval Iberian Peninsula

The Iberian world from roughly the 5th to the 15th centuries, marked by shifting borders, multiple kingdoms, and major cultural-religious diversity.

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Political fragmentation

The lack of a unified Spain in the Middle Ages; the peninsula was a mosaic of kingdoms and jurisdictions with changing frontiers.

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Convivencia

Coexistence (often tense and unequal) among Christian, Muslim, and Jewish communities in medieval Iberia; not synonymous with total harmony.

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Feudalism

A socioeconomic system based on landholding and personal bonds of service and loyalty between lords and dependents.

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Vassalage

A feudal relationship in which a vassal owes loyalty and service to a lord in exchange for protection and resources.

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Catholic Church (medieval influence)

A dominant institution shaping politics, culture, education, and daily life; much medieval writing has moral, doctrinal, or didactic aims.

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Reconquista (711–1492)

A long process of conflict and negotiation in Iberia between Christian and Muslim powers that shaped identities and the “frontier” imagination.

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Crusades (11th–13th c.)

Religious wars that influenced medieval mentalities and increased cultural exchange between Europe and the Middle East.

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Frontier (frontera) motif

A recurring focus on borders, war, alliances, and shifting power—central to many medieval Iberian texts and identities.

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Rise of universities (12th c.)

The growth of medieval universities that expanded study and debate in theology, philosophy, and the liberal arts, aiding knowledge circulation.

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Oral performance (performance culture)

Transmission of literature through recitation or singing (often by juglares), encouraging memorability, variation, and audience engagement.

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Juglar (minstrel)

A performer who recited or sang works (especially epic and romances) in public spaces and courts, adapting texts in performance.

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Manuscript transmission

The copying and circulation of texts by hand before printing, often producing multiple versions and less textual stability.

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Scribes

People who copied manuscripts and could introduce changes, intentionally or accidentally, affecting how a text survives.

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Institutional settings (monasteries and courts)

Centers that preserved and promoted certain kinds of writing (religious, political, didactic), shaping cultural authority.

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Medieval authorship

A concept of authorship different from the modern one; many works are collective or anonymous, while named authors imply tighter message control.

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Anonymous composition

Works without a known single author (common in oral tradition, such as much of the romancero), yet still expressing values and ideology.

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Old Castilian (Castellano antiguo)

Medieval Spanish that evolved from Vulgar Latin and shows archaic and fluctuating forms; it becomes central to major peninsular literature.

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Vulgar Latin

Everyday spoken Latin from which Romance languages (including medieval Castilian/Spanish) developed, distinct from classical Latin.

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Arabic lexical borrowing

Spanish vocabulary influenced by contact with Arabic, especially in fields like agriculture, science, and architecture.

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Standardization of Spanish

The gradual fixing of written norms (orthography/grammar) to reduce variation; medieval literature contributed to this process.

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Honor (honra)

Public reputation validated by the community; a form of social capital whose loss or recovery can drive medieval plots.

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Fama (public fame)

Widely recognized renown tied to public deeds and collective memory; closely linked to honra in epic and courtly contexts.

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Lineage (linaje)

Family descent and inherited status; crucial because honra and legitimacy extend beyond the individual to the family group.

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Public validation of reputation

The idea that status is confirmed externally (witnesses, judgments, rewards, marriages, royal recognition), not merely through private feeling.

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Miracle tale (milagro)

A short religious narrative in which divine intervention (often by the Virgin) proves a moral order and teaches a clear lesson.

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Marian devotion

Religious focus on the Virgin Mary as a powerful mediator whose mercy and protection are dramatized in miracle narratives.

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Didactic literature

Writing designed to teach moral or practical lessons; often includes explicit guidance, moralizing tone, and persuasive structure.

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Mester de juglaría

A tradition associated with juglares and oral delivery, featuring irregular verse, direct language, and formulaic repetition for memory.

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Cantar de gesta

An epic poem recounting a hero’s deeds with collective significance, offering models of loyalty, valor, and social order.

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Poema de mío Cid

c. 1200 epic about Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar; a foundational Castilian text emphasizing feudal values and the rebuilding of honra.

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Epic hero as negotiator

A medieval heroic model (exemplified by the Cid) defined not only by force but by prudence, resource management, and seeking legitimate recognition.

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Epithets and formulas

Fixed phrases and repeated descriptors common in oral epic that strengthen memorability, authority, and heroic identity.

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Scenes of recognition

Public moments where the community or the king confirms a hero’s legitimacy and honra, reaffirming social order.

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Mester de clerecía

Learned, clerical literary tradition with refined language and explicit teaching aims; emphasizes control of message and moral instruction.

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Cuaderna vía

A stanza of four Alexandrine lines with monorhyme consonance (AAAA), signaling metrical regularity and didactic, controlled rhetoric.

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Gonzalo de Berceo

c. 1198–1264; the first known Castilian poet by name, central to mester de clerecía and religious narrative poetry.

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Los Milagros de Nuestra Señora

Berceo’s collection of Marian miracle stories structured to persuade readers toward devotion and trust in mercy.

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Narrator as interpretive guide

A narrator who comments, judges, and directs meaning (common in didactic/religious works), shaping how audiences understand the lesson.

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Romance (Spanish ballad)

A relatively brief narrative poem that often begins in medias res, focuses on a tense scene, and ends abruptly or openly.

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In medias res

A narrative technique that starts “in the middle of things,” dropping the audience into an ongoing conflict to heighten tension.

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Open/abrupt ending

A romance feature in which closure is withheld; the incompleteness invites interpretation and intensifies mystery, fatalism, or emotion.

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Romancero Viejo

A body of anonymous, orally transmitted romances about heroes, legends, and historical events, reflecting popular tradition and collective identity.

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Romance del Conde Arnaldos

A romance centered on secret/withheld knowledge (a mysterious song by the sea), using open ending to amplify desire and frustration.

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Romance de la pérdida de Alhama

A lament linked to Alhama’s fall (1482) during the Reconquista; uses repetition and dialogue to create collective grief and catastrophe.

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Exemplum (ejemplo) in prose

A brief instructive story used as an argument: a vivid case leads to an explicit moral or practical conclusion.

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Frame narrative (Conde–Patronio)

A structure where a main character presents a problem and a counselor responds with a story, followed by a stated lesson (moraleja).

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Don Juan Manuel

1282–1348; aristocratic author of courtly didactic prose whose identifiable authorship implies strong control over message and ideology.

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El Conde Lucanor (including Ejemplo XXXV)

Don Juan Manuel’s didactic collection of exempla; its counsel-story-moraleja format teaches strategies for authority, reputation, and social survival.

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Courtly love (amor cortés)

A lyric motif idealizing (often unattainable or platonic) love between a knight and a noble lady, tied to European courtly traditions.

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