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U of T researcher sheds new light on accusations against medieval poet Chaucer: New York Times

 A portrait of Geoffrey Chaucer
Geoffrey Chaucer, a14th-century English poet and author is depicted in a portrait from the Welsh Portrait Collection at the National Library of Wales (image via Getty Images)

Long-held assumption about 14th-century English poet Geoffrey Chaucer are being challenged by new research co-led by the University of Toronto鈥檚 Sebastian Sobecki and .

In a development that has rocked the world of medieval literary studies, Sobecki, a professor in the department of English in the Faculty of Arts & Science, and Euan Roger of the British National Archives unearthed court documents that they say establish that Chaucer and Cecily Chaumpaigne 鈥 who was previously believed to have accused Chaucer of rape 鈥 were in fact co-defendants in a labour case.

Sebastian Sobecki鈥嬧赌嬧赌嬧赌嬧赌嬧赌

The documents, , show that the case was brought by a Thomas Staundon, who accused Chaumpaigne of leaving his employment without his authorization to go work in Chaucer鈥檚 home. Sobecki and Roger found the key writ in the case, from 1379, in the records of the King鈥檚 Bench 鈥 the top criminal court in England at the time 鈥 held in a deep storage facility in a former salt mine in Cheshire in northwest England.

In a , Sobecki and Roger note that while it is 鈥渋mpossible to rule out an act of physical or sexual violence鈥 or coercion around Chaumpaigne鈥檚 move from Staundon鈥檚 employment to Chaucer鈥檚, the new evidence shows that the accusations against Chaucer 鈥渨ere not charges of rape, and they probably did not refer to a physical abduction (or at least there is no evidence for this among the court鈥檚 records), but rather related to a labour dispute.鈥

However, Sobecki told the New York Times that the finding shouldn鈥檛 be used to discredit the feminist critiques of Chaucer, which is why he and the journal鈥檚 editors sought commentary from three eminent feminist scholars. In their article, Sobecki and Roger also emphasized that it remains vital to continue exploring how Chaucer 鈥減articipated in hegemonic discourses that shaped the lives of all women.鈥

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