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From Round Table to Revolt: Amadís de Gaula and the Comuneros

From Round Table to Revolt: Amadís de Gaula and the Comuneros f r o m r o u n d ta b l e t o r e v o lt : a m a d Í s d e g au l a a n d t h e comuneros Wendell P. smith d ic k i n s o n c o l l e g e the life of garcí Rodríguez de Montalvo, refundidor of the enormously successful book of chivalry, amadís de gaula (=amadís), 1508, and author of its first continuation, sergas de esplandián (=sergas), 1510, contains an unexpected and intriguing anomaly. his son, Juan Vaca, and his nephews, garcía de Montalvo and gutierre de Montalvo,1 were leaders in the Revolt of the comuneros in Medina del campo (Álvarez 1: 502, 519, 526). given that Rodríguez de Montalvo was responsible for a book that set a fashion for noble behavior (see Place), it comes as a surprise that his progeny were in the vanguard of creating what José antonio Maravall considered one of the first modern revolutions (las comunidades: una primera revolución moderna). a link between the refundidor of the amadís and the revolt of castilian cities against charles i (1520-1522) runs so contrary to http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png La corónica: A Journal of Medieval Hispanic Languages, Literatures, and Cultures La corónica: Journal of Medieval Hispanic Languages, Literatures & Culture

From Round Table to Revolt: Amadís de Gaula and the Comuneros

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Publisher
La corónica: Journal of Medieval Hispanic Languages, Literatures & Culture
Copyright
Copyright © La corónica: Journal of Medieval Hispanic Languages, Literatures & Cultur
ISSN
1947-4261
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

f r o m r o u n d ta b l e t o r e v o lt : a m a d Í s d e g au l a a n d t h e comuneros Wendell P. smith d ic k i n s o n c o l l e g e the life of garcí Rodríguez de Montalvo, refundidor of the enormously successful book of chivalry, amadís de gaula (=amadís), 1508, and author of its first continuation, sergas de esplandián (=sergas), 1510, contains an unexpected and intriguing anomaly. his son, Juan Vaca, and his nephews, garcía de Montalvo and gutierre de Montalvo,1 were leaders in the Revolt of the comuneros in Medina del campo (Álvarez 1: 502, 519, 526). given that Rodríguez de Montalvo was responsible for a book that set a fashion for noble behavior (see Place), it comes as a surprise that his progeny were in the vanguard of creating what José antonio Maravall considered one of the first modern revolutions (las comunidades: una primera revolución moderna). a link between the refundidor of the amadís and the revolt of castilian cities against charles i (1520-1522) runs so contrary to

Journal

La corónica: A Journal of Medieval Hispanic Languages, Literatures, and CulturesLa corónica: Journal of Medieval Hispanic Languages, Literatures & Culture

Published: Jun 4, 2011

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