Noble image and Renaissance fiction: the memory of lineage in the House of Benavente in an unpublished chivalric romance

This paper intends to delve deeper into the connections that the House of Benavente must have had with the learned world, based on its encoded presence in a Chivalric manuscript. Indeed, father Miguel Daza, author of Caballero de la Fe (1583), builds up a determined praise of this noble family by de...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ana Martínez Muñoz
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad Complutense de Madrid 2018-07-01
Series:Cuadernos de Historia Moderna
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/CHMO/article/view/60660
Description
Summary:This paper intends to delve deeper into the connections that the House of Benavente must have had with the learned world, based on its encoded presence in a Chivalric manuscript. Indeed, father Miguel Daza, author of Caballero de la Fe (1583), builds up a determined praise of this noble family by describing their possessions in Benavente within the storyline, as well as by actively including of its VIII Count-Duke as a fictional character. The author offers an interesting literary recreation of the history of the Pimentel lineage, taking advantage of the boom in encoded fiction during the final stages of Chivalric literature. The data provided by fiction does not only deliver an extraordinary description of the shape of the disappeared castle in Benavente, but its also provides with an irreplaceable approach to the cultural atmosphere that probably surrounded this House during don Juan Pimentel’s appointment as well.
ISSN:0214-4018
1988-2475