There are no limits in fiction.
Agreed, too bad journalists treated that book like it was the words of an oracle.
So, yall know about the principle of 'galanterie', right?
How it's linked to 'amour courtois' from Medieval times and everything.
It's heavily thought to be linked to Tristan & Yeseut, a french oral tradition or something.
Turns out that the oldest version we have of this story is from Chrétien de Troye (see Bnf for a copy online if you dare).
The version that is currently sold is one by an author of the XIXth century trying to recreate an aproximation of the original text through painstainking research on the sources he had at the time.
I can't say if it's accurate because I don't have a time machine (yet) but it's generally assumed that it is the most accurate version of the myth.
Well after read that, we really need to reevaluate what we mean by the whole chivalry thing because it's really different from what someone in the XXth/XXIth century would expect from what is hailed as the ideal of chivalry.