HIST 192 Discussion Materials (Fall 2018 – Week 8)

CHILDHOOD AND ADOLESCENCE IN THE CASTLE

Tuesday:

Readings:

Gies and Gies, Marriage and the Family,  Chap. 10 (pp. 196-217): “Children in the Middle Ages”

Singman, Daily Life in Medieval Europe, pp. 17-27 (notes on p. 32)

Images:

Baby Moses and Bathsheba gives birth to a son, from the Maciejowski Bible, c. 1244-54

Virgin and swaddled Child, by Ambrogio Lorenzetti, 1340-45 (Milan, Pinacoteca di Brera)

Birth of the Virgin Mary to St. Anne (psalter, end of 13th cent.)

Toys:

Doll clothes from the Northern Caucasus, 8th or 9th cent. (St. Petersburg, Hermitage Museum)

Doll cradle (14th cent.)

fighting knight-puppets, end of 12th cent.  (Hortus deliciarum)

tops, dice, and balls, after 1278  (from excavations in Konstanz and Freiburg)

pewter knight on horseback, c. 1300  (Museum of London)

walking on stilts, c. 1350  (Voeux du paon: PML G.24, fol. 40r)

puppet show, 1338-44 (Romance of Alexander)

clay dolls, 14th cent. (Nuernberg, Germanisches Nationalmuseum)

clay dolls with “Kruseler” headdress, c. 1350-1425

ceramic toys, 14th-15th cent. (Esslingen, Germany)

riding stick-horses, early 15th cent.  (Blumen der Tugend)

clay doll, 15th cent. (Nuernberg, Germanisches Nationalmuseum)

baby and children, c. 1475-1500 (illus. of the 7 ages of man, from De proprietatibus rerum)

boy and girl playing, c. 1484-6 (book of heraldry, ÖNB 12820, fol. 182r)

Pieter Brueghel, Children’s Games, 1560 and detail (Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum)

Portrait of Arabella Stuart holding a doll, 1577

 

Week 8: Thursday

 

Assigned readings:

Shahar, Chap. 10 (first part), pp. 209-213 (with notes on pp. 320-322): “Education in the nobility”
Sophie Oosterwijk, “The Medieval Child: An Unknown Phenomenon?”

http://www.the-orb.net/non_spec/missteps/ch6.html

        Gies and Gies, Marriage and the Family, pp. 141-145
An aristocratic education, from John Harding’s Chronicle (c. 1457);
and the ideal squire, from Philippe de Remi, sire de Beaumanoir‘s Blonde of Oxford (Jehan et Blonde, c. 1250-65)

https://pantherfile.uwm.edu/carlin/www/Harding & Beaumanoir.Squires.htm

Discussion:

List fairy tales or nursery rhymes that might preserve medieval themes.
Identify possible medieval elements of these themes or stories.
(Example: “Little Red Riding Hood,” available in a 6-minute YouTube video; summaries of some well-known fairy tales)

Create the elements of a medieval fairy tale:
1.    Setting the scene:  There once was a knight who had three sons, Albert, Boris, and Carl . . . (Create the opening scene and describe the knight and his family.)
2.    The problem:  The three sons have to go out into the world with no resources . . . (Explain why, and say what each does.)
3.    The danger(s):  Each son must encounter danger . . . (Describe the danger, and how each son responds to it.)
4.    The conclusion:  The return home . . . (Who returns home?  What happens then?  How does the story end?)
5.    What is the moral or point of this story?