Mothers, space, and power in Athelston

Bolton K

The late fourteenth-century Middle English romance Athelston explores the extent and propriety of monarchic power. Integral to this exploration are the characters of two women in the text whose enactments of motherhood reveal the very human failings of the divinely elected king and contribute to the romance’s advocation of law and the church to temper monarchic power. This article focuses on the use of space in relation to power, authority, gender, and motherhood, arguing that the writer of Athelston uses the disruption of gendered spaces, particularly in relation to pregnant women, to comment on systems of power and authority in the late fourteenth-century. It argues that the author of Athelston uses public enactments of motherhood to challenge the concept of infallible royal power.

Keywords:

power

,

mothers

,

gender

,

motherhood

,

monarchy

,

London

,

authority

,

space