Showing posts with label Piast Dynasty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Piast Dynasty. Show all posts

Monday, January 22, 2024

Time for a Haircut

The legend of Piast the Wheelwright begins with a visit by strangers who ask to join the celebration of his son's (Siemowit) 7th birthday. A 7th birthday was significant in pre-Christian Poland because it was the time of the child's first haircut.

This early rite of passage was common in Slavic culture. The age of seven was a common age, but it could range from seven to ten. Some scholars believe the child had a temporary name until this time. It was part of the ritual to give the child a new and permanent name, often one more descriptive of his physical appearance or personality.

Part of the significance was the transference of the boy from his mother's to his father's care. Until that time, his hair could be left long like a woman's, and he would be raised in the home. The haircut would be administered by his father or a zerca, a Slavic priest, making it as much a magical turning point as well as a societal one. After the rite of passage, his hair would be burned and he would start following his father and learning non-home-based skills. The ritual was usually accompanied by a celebratory feast. In Poland this persisted until the 18th century.

The ritual haircut is found in other cultures. Mongolian babies had their first haircut between the ages of two and five, with boys receiving the cut in an odd-numbered year (age three or five) and girls in an even-numbered year. Many Orthodox and Hasidic Jewish boys get their first haircut at the age of three, called the upsherin ("shear of").

The Niuean of Polynesia let the hair on boys grow until they are teenagers. Until then, it is cared for by the whole family: sisters, mothers, and fathers. During a ceremony when teen age has been achieved, the women tend the hair for the last time. Then, while it is being cut, the extended family members give money to the young man.

Length of hair has had significance for a long time and in many cultures. The Merovingians prized long hair, associating it with kingship so closely that shearing a rival was one way for a ruler to deprive the rival of the feature required for rule.

Dealing with hair in the Middle Ages was far more widespread than just as a rite of passage for the young. Let's talk more about hair tomorrow.

Sunday, January 21, 2024

The Piast Dynasty

I suppose it starts with Piast the Wheelwright. According to Gesta principum Polonorum ("Deeds of the Princes of the Poles"), Piast and his wife, Rzepicha (the two are pictured here), are visited one day by two strangers who request to join them in a celebration of the 7th birthday of their son, Siemowit.

Piast agrees to this, and in return the strangers bless his cellar so that it is always full of food. This magical cellar so impressed Piast's neighbors that they made him a prince, ousting Prince Popiel.

For his part, Popiel deserved ousting. He was a 9th century ruler of two proto-Polish tribes, the West Polans and the Goplins. A cruel man who cared only for his own pleasure, with a wife equally corrupt and power-hungry, he had twelve uncles poisoned at a feast because he heard they were going to depose him. He refused to give the bodies a proper burial. The townspeople, learning this , rebelled, and Popiel and wife fled to a tower. Miraculously, a mass of mice and rats that were feeding on the corpses of his uncles went to the tower, gnawing through the walls and devouring the corrupt couple.

Piast is unique in Polish annals, and its precise origin is unknown. It could come from Polish piasta, meaning "hub"; the could be what led to him being called a wheelwright. It could also mean he was a "hub" of activity/goods to support his people. Another theory relates the name to Polish piastun, "custodian." The theory there is that he was a steward or custodian of sorts for the ruler, who wound up replacing him. Something similar happened with the Carolingian Mayors of the Palace replacing the weakening Merovingians in Frankish Gaul.

Whatever the case, the first ruler of an independent Poland was Mieszko I (c.930 - 992), and he was a proud member of the Piast Dynasty, the first official one in a line that lasted until Casimir the Great, who died without a heir.

So ... what was the deal about the 7th birthday? Was that a special occasion? In pre-Christian Slavic tradition, it was time for a haircut, but I'll explain that next time.