Descendants and posthumous reputation of Geoffrey Chaucer
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- History of Parliament Online - Geoffrey Chaucer
- Poetry Foundation - Biography of Geoffrey Chaucer
- Poets.org - Geoffrey Chaucer
- History Learning Site - Biography of Geoffrey Chaucer
- World History Encyclopedia - Geoffrey Chaucer
- Humanities LibreTexts - Geoffrey Chaucer (1343–1400)
- Historic UK - Geoffrey Chaucer
- Pressbook - Geoffrey Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales
- Official Site The Chaucer Heritage Trust
- University of Glasgow - The World of Chaucer
- Harvard's Geoffrey Chaucer Website - Life of Chaucer
- Born:
- c. 1342/43, London?, England
- Died:
- October 25, 1400, London
- Notable Works:
- “Hous of Fame”
- “Legend of Good Women”
- “The Book of the Duchess”
- “The Canon’s Yeoman’s Tale”
- “The Canterbury Tales”
- “The Clerk’s Tale”
- “The Cook’s Tale”
- “The Franklin’s Tale”
- “The Friar’s Tale”
- “The Knight’s Tale”
- “The Man of Law’s Tale”
- “The Manciple’s Tale”
- “The Merchant’s Tale”
- “The Miller’s Tale”
- “The Monk’s Tale”
- “The Nun’s Priest’s Tale”
- “The Pardoner’s Tale”
- “The Parlement of Foules”
- “The Parson’s Tale”
- “The Physician’s Tale”
- “The Prioress’s Tale”
- “The Reeve’s Tale”
- “The Second Nun’s Tale”
- “Treatise on the Astrolabe”
- “Troilus and Criseyde”
Information concerning Chaucer’s children is not fully clear. The probability is that he and Philippa had two sons and two daughters. One son, Thomas Chaucer, who died in 1434, owned large tracts of land and held important offices in the 1420s, including the forestership of North Petherton. He later leased Chaucer’s house in Westminster, and his twice-widowed daughter Alice became duchess of Suffolk. In 1391 Chaucer had written Treatise on the Astrolabe for “little Lewis,” probably his younger son, then 10 years old. Elizabeth “Chaucy,” probably the poet’s daughter, was a nun at Barking in 1381. A second probable daughter, Agnes Chaucer, was a lady-in-waiting at Henry IV’s coronation in 1399. The records lend some support to speculation that John of Gaunt fathered one or more of these children. Chaucer seems to have had no descendants living after the 15th century.
For Chaucer’s writings the subsequent record is clearer. His contemporaries praised his artistry, and a “school” of 15th-century Chaucerians imitated his poetry. Over the succeeding centuries, his poems, particularly The Canterbury Tales, have been widely read, translated into modern English, and, since about the middle of the 19th century, the number of scholars and critics who devote themselves to the study and teaching of his life and works has steadily increased.
R.M. Lumiansky