Daily Medieval
A daily post on the Middle Ages by Tim Shaw.
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The Walking Dead of Orderic Vitalis
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29 November 2013
Cooking the Bird
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There are several collections of medieval recipes in existence, both in printed form and online; this blog has referenced them before. A n...
28 November 2013
A Medieval Thanksgiving
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In a document of 1051, the former Queen of Poland, Richeza, grants to her nephew, the palatine count Henry I, the possession of Cochem Cas...
27 November 2013
Christian Buddha
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The Middle Ages loved stories about saints finding God. Here is one of them, that was repeated through the centuries: Many inhabitants o...
26 November 2013
The King That Almost Was
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I mentioned here that, after the Battle of Hastings, another claimant to the throne of England had to flee to Scotland in the face of Wil...
25 November 2013
The Second Pope
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Clement being thrown into the sea, by Bernardino Fungal of Siena (1460-1516) If Clement truly was the second pope, following Peter (the...
22 November 2013
Viking Urban Renewal
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When we think of the Viking invasions of England, we usually think of the destruction of villages and people's lives. This is understa...
21 November 2013
Deer Park
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Deer park at Kentchurch Court, UK A royal prerogative in many eras and cultures was to be able to hunt where and when the ruler wished. ...
20 November 2013
The Walking Dead
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Orderic Vitalis (1075-c.1142) has been mentioned here and here for his history writing. The 13 books of his Historia ecclesiastica [...
19 November 2013
Medieval Benghazi
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The port at Benghazi, where it all began Benghazi has been much in the news lately. As with any part of the Eastern Hemisphere, it has b...
18 November 2013
William Tell: The True Story
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...and by "true story" I mean "the myth." Today is the anniversary of William Tell's famous feat in which he sh...
15 November 2013
The Alchemist
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Albertus Magnus and a hermaphrodite from Symbola aureæ mensæ We haven't talked about Albertus Magnus since his birthday last year....
14 November 2013
Hysteria
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from a Latin copy of Gynæcology by Soranus of Ephesus Hysteria describes two different states: exaggerated or uncontrollable emotion o...
13 November 2013
Iconoclasm
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The word "iconoclast" today usually denotes someone who challenges tradition, but the origin of the word was in the religiously ...
12 November 2013
The First Abolitionist
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St. Theodore of Stoudios (759-11 November 826 CE) was a highly educated member of a well-connected family in Constantinople. His father an...
11 November 2013
Making Parchment
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The term parchment is often applied to any animal skin used for writing on, but historically it was used for sheep or goat skin. Cow or c...
08 November 2013
More About Books
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We know that books were rare prior to the development of the movable type printing press, but they weren't unknown. They could be a st...
07 November 2013
Medieval Meteors
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Woodcut showing meteorite coming to Ensisheim. Today is the anniversary of the first meteorite the exact date of whose fall to Earth has...
06 November 2013
The Gorleston Psalter
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A friend dared me to comment on this article on vulgar scenes from illuminated medieval manuscripts. Never one to avoid a challenge, I pi...
05 November 2013
The Ransom of Captives
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St. Felix of Valois Among other accomplishments, the Crusades created a large number of Christians held captive by non-Christians. These...
04 November 2013
Al-Gebra
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Recent stamp commemorating al-Khwārizmī Algebra—a method for doing computations using non-number symbols (such as " x " and ...
01 November 2013
Marshmallow
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Yes, marshmallow. (Maybe Halloween has put me in mind of sweets.) Althaea officinalia (the "marsh mallow") is a perennial tha...
31 October 2013
The First Witch Trial
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Well, not exactly. It is the first recorded witch trial. That is, the first whose details are written down, rather than a terse "ha...
30 October 2013
Weird Alphabets
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Even those of us who have studied some classical Greek would be surprised when first running across a pattern/practice called antistoichia...
29 October 2013
Chaucer's Enemy
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William Thorpe before Arundel, 1407; a case of heresy Yesterday's post discussed Thomas Arundel, Archbishop of Canterbury, and sugg...
28 October 2013
Thomas Arundel
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Thomas Arundel, Lambeth Palace Collection Let us talk about the "Worst Briton" of the 15th century, according to a 2005 poll o...
25 October 2013
The Death of Chaucer
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The 25th of October 1400 is the date of the death of Geoffrey Chaucer. Based on the records that exist from 14th century England that refe...
24 October 2013
Cross-referencing an Eclipse
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Diagram of an eclipse from a modern translation of Hipparchus It is not always easy to figure out dates from classical or medieval writi...
23 October 2013
Suidas: Stronghold of Learning
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Albrecht Durer's illustration for a copy of the Lexicon The Catholic Encyclopedia says of Soudas/Suidas: Author of, perhaps, the m...
22 October 2013
Duns Scotus
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I shocked myself the other day when I mentioned Duns Scotus in the post on St. Ivo and found that I had nothing in this blog to which to ...
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