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- Courtesy abstract "Courtesy comes from old French 'courteis' (12th century) and is gentle politeness and courtly manners. In the Middle Ages in Europe, the behaviour expected of the nobility was compiled in courtesy books. The apex of European courtly culture was reached in the Late Middle Ages and the Baroque period (i.e. roughly the four centuries spanning 1300–1700). The oldest courtesy books date to the 13th century, but they become an influential genre in the 16th, the most influential of them being Il Cortegiano (1508), which not only covered basic etiquette and decorum but also provided models of sophisticated conversation and intellectual skill.The royal courts of Europe did, of course, persist well into the 18th century (and to some limited extent to the present day), but in the 18th century, the notion of courtesy was replaced by that of gallantry, referring to an ideal emphasizing the display of affected sensitivity in direct contrast with the ideals of self-denial and dignified seriousness that were the Baroque norm. During the late medieval and early modern period, the bourgeois class tended to emluate the courtly etiquette of their betters. This changed in the 19th century, after the end of the Napoleonic Wars, with the emergence if a middle class with its own set of bourgeois etiquette, which in turn was mocked in the classist theory of Marxism as petite bourgeoisie.The analogue concept in the court culture of medieval India was known by the Sanskrit term dakṣiṇya, literally meaning "right-handedness", but as in English dexterity having a figurative meaning of "apt, clever, appropriate", glossed as "kindness and consideration expressed in a sophisticated and elegant way".".
- Courtesy wikiPageID "1101567".
- Courtesy wikiPageLength "2592".
- Courtesy wikiPageOutDegree "27".
- Courtesy wikiPageRevisionID "671826821".
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Baroque.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Baroque_period.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Bourgeois.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Bourgeoisie.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Category:Etiquette.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Category:Human_behavior.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Conversation.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Court_(royal).
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Courtesy_book.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Decorum.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Elegance.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Etiquette.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Galant.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Galant_style.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Gentleness.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Intellectual.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Kindness.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Late_Middle_Ages.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Manners.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Marxism.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Medieval_India.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Middle_Ages.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Middle_class.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Napoleonic_Wars.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Petite_bourgeoisie.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Politeness.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Sanskrit.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Sensitive_style.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink Sophistication.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLink The_Book_of_the_Courtier.
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLinkText "Courteousness".
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLinkText "Courtesy".
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLinkText "courtesy".
- Courtesy wikiPageWikiLinkText "discourteous".
- Courtesy hasPhotoCollection Courtesy.
- Courtesy wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Anthropology-stub.
- Courtesy wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Distinguish.
- Courtesy wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:EB1911_poster.
- Courtesy wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Redirect.
- Courtesy wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Courtesy subject Category:Etiquette.
- Courtesy subject Category:Human_behavior.
- Courtesy hypernym Politeness.
- Courtesy type Convention.
- Courtesy type Concept.
- Courtesy type Convention.
- Courtesy type Thing.
- Courtesy comment "Courtesy comes from old French 'courteis' (12th century) and is gentle politeness and courtly manners. In the Middle Ages in Europe, the behaviour expected of the nobility was compiled in courtesy books. The apex of European courtly culture was reached in the Late Middle Ages and the Baroque period (i.e. roughly the four centuries spanning 1300–1700).".
- Courtesy label "Courtesy".
- Courtesy differentFrom Etiquette.
- Courtesy sameAs m.0by0bn4.
- Courtesy sameAs Q16515017.
- Courtesy sameAs Q16515017.
- Courtesy wasDerivedFrom Courtesy?oldid=671826821.
- Courtesy isPrimaryTopicOf Courtesy.