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Introduction; The Middle Ages; The Renaissance and the Golden Age; From 1700 to The Generation of 1898; The Modern Period
Spanish Literature, literature of Spain written in Castilian, the major language of Spain, from about the 11th century ad to the present time. For works written in the other languages of Spain and works written in Castilian in countries other than Spain itself, see Basque Language; Catalan Literature; Latin American Literature.
Medieval Spanish literature deals primarily with Christian themes but is also marked by the rich Islamic and Jewish cultures that flourished in the Spain of that period.
The earliest extant literary works in the Castilian language are short lyric poems known as jarchas, which date from the fifth decade of the 11th century and were attached to the texts of early Arabic or Hebrew poems written in Spain. The next earliest are epics composed by the juglares, the Spanish minstrels who sang in village squares and castle halls during the Middle Ages. The principal subjects of these epics were the struggles waged by the rulers of the various Christian kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula, such as Castile, against the Moors who had conquered most of the peninsula early in the 8th century, and the rivalries among Castilian and other Christian noblemen of the peninsula during that period. Spanish epic poetry reflected Germanic, Arabic, and especially French influences, but it differed from its models in that it dealt with recent historical events rather than with mythical or remote subjects. The choice of such subjects manifested the taste for concrete representation of reality in art which eventually became characteristic of Spanish literature. The earliest extant example of the art of the juglares is the anonymous epic Poema del Cid (c. 1140, Poem of the Cid), which tells of the adversities and triumphs of the Castilian leader known as El Cid. This work, a subtle masterpiece of narrative art exalting the virtues of courage, loyalty, and equanimity, is especially notable for the vividness with which the characters are drawn.
In the 13th century learned authors began to recast the lives of the saints, edifying legends, and more ancient stories, all of which were then current in Latin, into poems in Castilian. This poetic activity, known in Spanish literature as mester de clerecía, took place primarily in the monasteries and was characterized by a strict observance of metrical rules, which had been ignored in the art of the juglares. The best poet of the mester de clerecía was Gonzalo de Berceo, the earliest Spanish poet known by name, who recast pious stories into poems, giving them new fervour and freshness. As a result of the efforts of King Alfonso X, Castile was one of the first European states to develop a literature in prose. A host of jurists, historians, translators, and specialists of various kinds worked under his supervision in a formidable attempt to compile the knowledge of their time. They drew from Islamic, Jewish, and Christian sources, the court of Castile having been at the time a meeting place for scholars of all three faiths. These collective endeavours stimulated a flow of Oriental culture into western Europe. Castilian prose, fashioned under Alfonso X into a useful means of expression, reached artistic maturity in the writings of Alfonso's nephew Don Juan Manuel, who produced the collection of moral tales El conde Lucanor (1328-1335, Count Lucanor). The first Spanish chivalric romance and first novel, El caballero Cifar (The Knight Cifar) appeared around 1305. The poetry of Juan Ruiz, archpriest of Hita, ranks among the highest achievements in Spanish literature. His ideals and stylistic devices were primarily those of the Middle Ages, but he expressed his individuality to an extent more characteristic of Renaissance writers than those of the Middle Ages. His Libro de buen amor (1330, expanded 1343; Book of Good Love, 1968) is a collection of poems written in the form of a satirical autobiography and contains examples of almost every poetic form and theme of the Middle Ages. Like his contemporary the English poet Geoffrey Chaucer, he observes real life with a crafty sense of humour.
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