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crossref-it.info - AS/A2 English Literature Study Guides - texts in context.

 

Chaucer, Geoffrey » Chaucer’s court career

Senior civil servant

Today the words ‘courts’ and ‘courtiers’ connote highly frivolous, rarified or artificial social worlds. Chaucer’s career was more what we would call that of a leading civil servant. At this period, there was no division between the royal household and the government. The court was a milieu in which the best art, elegance and luxury were found while, simultaneously, it was also the place within which serious administration of the country took place.

The Hundred Years War (which was really a series of linked wars between England and France that lasted, with gaps, roughly a hundred years) was in progress:

Chaucer’s service under Edward III: 1367 - 77

In 1367, Chaucer was given a life pension by the King, presumably for his services. We have no evidence that he was paid for his writings, though it is very possible that he had patrons among the royal family.
 
In the following years:
From 1374 to 1386 he was given the post of Controllership of Customs and Subsidy of Wools, Skins and Hides in the Port of London:

Chaucer’s service under Richard II: 1377 - 99

Richard IIEdward III died in 1377, and his successor, his grandson Richard II, was still a child. For the first years of his reign, his uncles, and particularly John of Gaunt, effectively ruled the country. Chaucer was clearly regarded as an excellent administrator.
In 1389, Richard II started to rule in his own right:
As with his work at the customs, Chaucer’s royal appointments show that he was appreciated as a man of immense practical and financial capabilities.

Literary output

The mid and late 1380s were also a period of extraordinary creativity for Chaucer. He was working on:

Chaucer’s relationships with John of Gaunt and Henry IV

John of GauntChaucer inhabited a variety of social and economic worlds and apparently had multiple political allegiances. He had been a servant of Richard II, yet throughout his adult life also seems to have been close to the king’s uncle, the powerful John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster. Gaunt died in 1397. In 1399, Henry Bolingbroke, Gaunt’s son and the new Duke of Lancaster, deposed Richard II and became King Henry IV.
 
Chaucer seems to have been as popular with the new regime as with the old. This may illustrate both the degree to which he was valued in court circles and also his ability to relate well to people, even those opposed to each other.