Week 14: DAILY LIFE; HARDSHIPS
Tuesday
Videos:
Plowing with oxen at Sturbridge Village, Massachusetts, 2009 (1:24 min.):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xuytRXRfyeI
How to mow with a scythe (Wilson, Wisconsin, 2009; 3:36 min.):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YzdjOkLQw1s
Reaping wheat with a sickle (2011; 6:16 min.):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXey-x3eCxc
Threshing with flails (0:21 min.):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lAmyKYPE3vo
Readings:
Riché, pp.47-56, 61-3 (demography, sex, and marriage), 159-77 (housing, clothing, hygiene, food)
Tripartite society (“the three orders”):
- Those who fought (aristocracy)
- Those who prayed (clergy)
- Those who worked (peasants and artisans)
Seasonal labors included:
Winter months: | (from Carolingian “labors of the months,” c. 818, Vienna, Österreichische Nationalbibliothek; Codex 387, fol. 90):
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Spring months: |
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Summer months: |
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Autumn months: |
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Walafrid Strabo (“squinty”), scholar, poet, and gardener, tutor to Charles the Bald, and abbot of Reichenau (d. 849), wrote a poem describing his garden; click here for a plan of his garden (in Latin and French)
Artisanal crafts included:
- Metalwork: Carolingian sword; Viking sword hilt (from Hedeby boat burial, 9th cent.);
- front cover and back cover of Lindau Gospels (c. 870; J. P. Morgan Library, New York City)
- Building construction: Carolingian gatehouse at Lorsch, and a detail of the construction; carved wooden church portal (Norway, 11th cent.)
- Textile production: remains of tools and textile fragments and from the Oseberg ship burial of a Viking queen, 9th cent.;
Demographic factors included:
- Famine
- Malnutrition
- Pestilence
- Abortion and infanticide
- Contraception (illegal) and sexual abstinence (required on many holy days)
- (click here for Prof. James Brundage’s flow-chart on when it was licit to have sex, based on early-medieval penitential manuals)
Important primary source on early medieval sexuality:
- Penitentials
Marriage requirements:
- Betrothal
- Dower
- No consanguinity between spouses (click here for a table of consanguinity from the late 1100’s, and a modern table in English)
- Public nuptials
- Morgengab (“morning-gift”)
Furnishings included:
- Beds
- Benches
- Stools
- Chairs
- Chests
- Cradles
- Tables
- Wooden and pottery dishes
- Pottery and metal cookware
- Cushions, curtains and wall-hangings
- Pottery oil lamps (especially in S. Europe) or torches and tallow candles (especially in N. Europe)
- Miscellaneous tools and utensils (wood, stone, horn, metal, bone, etc.)
Male clothing:
- Linen shirt and drawers, leggings or stockings, shoes, short belted tunic, trousers, mantle
Female clothing:
- Linen shift (chemise, smock), stockings, shoes, long belted tunic, veil (if married), mantle
Some examples of clothing:
- Monks presenting bible to Charles the Bald (“Vivian Bible,” Tours, 846)
- Man, woman, and two fighters (English, 10th cent.?)
- Warrior (English, 10th cent.?)
- “Patience,” from the Psychomachia of Prudentius (English, late 10th cent.)
- Adam and Eve (English, c. 1000)
- King Cnut and Queen Emma of England (Winchester, 1031)
- Two women and a man, Biblical scene (English, 11th cent.)
- Farmers digging and sowing seed (English, 11th cent.)
Health practices included:
- Baths (click here to see a strigil), bleeding (phlebotomy and leeches), medicinal herbs, laxatives, emetics, diet, charms
Food and drink included:
- Bread, porridge, gruel
- Meat, poultry, fish
- Eggs, butter, cheese, milk, cream
- Legumes (beans, peas, lentils)
- Root vegetables (leeks, onions, parsnips)
- Fruits and nuts
- Wine, ale, mead, cider
Thursday:
Videos:
Sheep-shearing with hand clippers (5:00 min.):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L62EmEsacEY
Spinning wool into yarn with a drop spindle (Tibet, 1:03 min.):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tUodkNJ4lqI
Spinning wool into yarn with a distaff and spindle (Romania, 0.30 min.):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ShSIOF0o5js
Weaving on a warp-weighted (vertical) loom, from the beginning of Utlaginn (Gisli the Outlaw: 1:40:29 min.; view 3:09-4:56 min.):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=76AlJZuywXo
Readings:
Riché, pp. 24-8 (landscape), 76-81 (war), 249-54 (hardships)
Aelfric, Colloquy (“On Laborers”), c. AD 1000
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/1000workers.asp
Topics:
Forests and wild spaces dominated the landscape
Forest animals were game to aristocrats, but dangerous to others
- damaged or destroyed the harvest
- caused floods
- made roads, fords, and bridges unusable
Warfare was constant; the victors looted, destroyed, massacred, and enslaved unrestrainedly
All free laymen (after 807, holders of c. 80 acres or more) were liable to army service each summer
Epidemics and plagues ravaged human and livestock populations
Beggars — many disabled, invalid, or elderly — were ubiquitous
Brigands infested the roads and were often protected by powerful landowners
Physical brutality was common (see, e.g., lists of mutilations covered by Germanic laws)
Important primary source on daily work:
Aelfric, Colloquy (“On Laborers”), c. AD 1000 (Aelfric, a monk, wrote this as a dialogue for teaching Latin.
Click here to see part of a manuscript of Aelfric’s Latin grammar. British Library, Harley MS 107, fol. 63r, English, c. 1025-75.)
Click here to see a drawing of a medieval wheeled plow and a reconstruction of a Roman plow