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Analysis Of The Book ' The ' Of Ivanhoe ' By Sir Walter Scott

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The wrongdoings in Ivanhoe In the text of Ivanhoe, by Sir Walter Scott, there is quite a bit of discrimination. Most of the discrimination are geared towards the minorities in the text, some of those being a Jewish man named Isaac, some servants that come from Palestine and were brought over by Brian de Bois-Guilbert, and the Serfs and Peasants that are seen in the text, more specifically the serfs who serve Cedric the Saxon. Now, the ones being discriminatory are none other than the Nobles and the Normans, who, according to history, have a higher standing in society and get far more privileges than those below them, or the ones being discriminated. Many say that Sir Walter Scott had inaccuracies in his work, it even being called uneven …show more content…

530)” (Moss 188). In another part of the same text, it is also stated, “Perhaps Sir Walter Scott was unaware of this historical event when he wrote Ivanhoe; one of his characters, Isaac, is a Jew who lives in the town of York during the reign of Richard” (Moss 183). So, seeing as he himself understands that yes, his work is not the most accurate, he still tried his best to stay as true to history as he possibly could. Back during the Renaissance, there was an event known as the Crusades. During the Crusades, millions of people were slaughtered by crusaders, those fighting to reclaim the Holy Land. In the text of Ivanhoe, the knight Brian de Bois-Guilbert, who had just returned from fighting in the Crusades in Palestine. Now, when he comes back, he does not come back alone, as stated in this quote from the text, “These two squires were followed by two attendants, whose dark visages, white turbans, and the oriental form of their garments, showed them to be natives of some distant Eastern Country” (Scott 40). This clearly shows that these two attendants were not of English or Norman descent, but from another country, more than likely being that of Palestine,

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