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became popular and would have a profound in-
                fluence on the origins of the European novel.
                The importance of chivalric culture in storytell-
                ing persists today through its extensive use in

                fantasy fiction and fandom, gaming, animation,
                television shows, and movies.
                  One way to truly understand the nature of
                knighthood in this period is to meet some of the
                knights themselves, whether historical figures
                like Richard the Lionheart, or literary ones. In
                fact, the line between historical record and liter-
                ary invention is often blurred. Literary models
                influenced the behavior of real knights, while real

                knights offered abundant material for writers of
                literary accounts.


                Godfrey of Bouillon
                One of the earliest and most representative ex-
                amples of a chivalrous knight was Godfrey of

                Bouillon (circa 1060-1100). After the 14th cen-
                tury, he was included among the so-called Nine
                Worthies: nine men through the ages (some his-
                torical, others legendary) deemed to have em-
                bodied the ideals of chivalry.
                  Godfrey was the son of Count Eustace II of
                Boulogne and Ida of Lorraine, and together with
                his brothers helped lead the First Crusade in
                1096. Godfrey’s fame and prestige among the

                diverse group of barons commanding the Cru-
                sade grew so that, when the crusaders succeed-
                ed in reclaiming Jerusalem from Islamic rule in
                1099, they offered Godfrey the throne of the new
                kingdom of Jerusalem. Godfrey, in a gesture that
                ticked all the chivalric boxes, refused and piously
                argued that no one should wear a golden crown

                in the city where Christ had worn the crown of
                thorns. Instead, he agreed to be called the De-
                fender of the Holy Sepulcher.
                  Godfrey was such an exemplary knight that
                he became legendary. Embellished tales were
                written about his journey to the Holy Land and
                established his noble lineage. The best known
                of these stories is the legend of the Knight of

                the Swan; originally, it was the tale of an anony-                                  ROLE MODELS
                mous knight who appears in a boat drawn by a                                       LESSONS
                swan to rescue a damsel in distress. By the end
                of the 12th century, popular tellings identified
                the protagonist with the Bouillon dynasty and                                      FROM
                claimed that the mysterious Knight of the Swan
                was none other than Godfrey’s grandfather. It                                      THE PAST

                was a story that wove together fact and fiction


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