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ridderlijke

Ridderlijke is a Dutch adjective meaning knightly or chivalrous, used to describe qualities, behavior, or things associated with knights and the medieval code of chivalry. The term derives from ridder (knight) with the ending -lijke, producing forms such as ridderlijk or ridderlijke when describing a noun.

Historically, ridderlijke denoted the ideals upheld by medieval chivalry, including courage, loyalty, justice, generosity, and protection

In contemporary Dutch, ridderlijke is relatively formal or literary and is often considered archaic outside specialized

of
the
weak.
In
medieval
and
early
modern
texts,
phrases
such
as
ridderlijke
daden,
ridderlijke
hoffelijkheid,
and
ridderlijke
zeden
appear
to
characterize
actions
or
manners
that
align
with
the
knightly
ideal.
The
word
is
commonly
found
in
historical
narratives,
romances,
and
scholarly
discussions
of
knighthood
and
court
culture.
or
stylistic
contexts.
More
common
modern
variants
include
ridderlijk,
used
in
similar
ways,
or
phrases
that
describe
knightly
behavior
without
the
stagnant
tone.
The
concept
remains
part
of
discussions
of
medieval
culture,
literature,
and
chivalric
tradition,
and
is
sometimes
employed
to
evoke
a
period
atmosphere
in
translations
or
historical
writing.