We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Siege of Jerusalem
Regular price
£13.00
Sale price
£13.00
Regular price
£13.00
Unit price
/
per
Sale
Sold out
Re-stocking soon
The poem chronicles a historical war, and it is this historical quality that must stand out: the poem not only has resonances of the bloodshed that battle inevitably brings, but it also is, in a ve...
Read More
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
- Format:
-
01 March 2005

The fourteenth-century Siege of Jerusalem has been called by Ralph Hanna the chocolate-covered tarantula of the alliterative movement for its apparent anti-Semitism and is, as Livingston notes in his introduction, simply difficult for twenty-first-century readers to like. The poem, which describes the destruction of the Second Temple by Roman forces in AD 70, is graphic in detail and unpleasant in its relish of the suffering of the Jews. But as Livingston points out, Like the gritty violence of Alliterative Morte Arthure, the gore in Siege is perhaps best read as a grim awareness of the terrible realities of war, not as a bloodthirsty and berserk cry for further bloodshed. The poem chronicles a historical war, and it is this historical quality that must stand out: the poem not only has resonances of the bloodshed that battle inevitably brings, but it also is, in a very literal sense, history. This is to say, the war is over. The vengeance of Jesus has been accomplished. The Siege-poet's answer to the social-political-religious question of whether there is such a thing as a just war is that there was one: Titus and Vespasian's vengeance for the death of Christ. . . . Further efforts to avenge Christ were unnecessary. . . . That the poem is a call to action and to crusade, then, seems to be a claim that is far less sustainable than its opposite: a call to peace and to remembrance.
Price: £13.00
Pages: 154
Publisher: Medieval Institute Publications
Imprint: Medieval Institute Publications
Series: TEAMS Middle English Texts Series
Publication Date:
01 March 2005
ISBN: 9781580440905
Format: Paperback
BISACs:
LITERARY CRITICISM / Ancient & Classical, LITERARY CRITICISM / Medieval, Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval
Michael Livingston is Associate Professor of English at The Citadel, in Charleston, S.C. He is an author of both fiction and non-fiction and has published on topics as diverse as early Christianity, Tolkien, and James Joyce.
Acknowledgments Introduction Introduction History of the Temple The Vengeance of Our Lord Tradition Date and Provenance of the Poem Overview of the Poem Initial Critical Issues: Genre, Jews, and Violence Sources for the Poem The End of the Fourteenth Century: The Idea of Just War The Structure of the Poem: Architecture of Divine Providence The Laud Manuscript and Its Vocabulary Manuscripts Siege of Jerusalem Explanatory Notes Textual Notes Bibliography