Daily Medieval
A daily post on the Middle Ages by Tim Shaw.
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31 January 2014
A New Plough
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A diagram of the heavy plough with mouldboard One of the tools that most shaped European culture and improved life in the Middle Ages wa...
30 January 2014
Imbolc
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The first of February is the date of the Irish quarter-year festival called Imbolc. Imbolc is Old Irish for "in the belly"; it ...
29 January 2014
Cold Weather
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Okay, it wasn't that bad Much of the United States is experiencing lower-than-usual temperatures recently—and the forecast is that ...
28 January 2014
Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi, Astronomer
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MS. Marsh 144, fol. 135v, Bodleian The contributions of the Muslim world to astronomy are many, and I have only briefly touched on some ...
27 January 2014
Regarding the Burning of Heretics
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In 1401, during the reign of King Henry IV of England, Parliament passed a law known by the phrase, De heretic comburendo ["Regardin...
24 January 2014
Charlemagne's Enemy
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Much is made of Charlemagne and his unification and christianization of much of Western Europe. What is the other side of the story, however...
23 January 2014
The Irminsul
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Remains of an irminsul in Friedrichsgrund The Royal Frankish Annals have an entry for 772: The most gracious Lord King Charles then h...
22 January 2014
Assembly Line
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Detail of the Venetian Arsenal from the Civitates Orbis Terrarum [1572] When we think of Venice and boats, we think of gondolas being...
21 January 2014
Æther or...
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[I am on a brief vacation, so here is a post from the past. This post first appeared 25 August 2012.] Speaking of æther ...* In Greek my...
17 January 2014
Scholar of the Supernatural
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[I am on a brief vacation, so here is a post from the past. This post first appeared 23 August 2012.] In Dante's Inferno , the eighth ...
16 January 2014
Princess, not Empress
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[I am on a brief vacation, so here is a post from the past. This post first appeared 2 December 2012.] When Anna Comnena was born in 10...
15 January 2014
Gravity
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Climbing Lucifer in Dante's Inferno A long time ago (it seems) I touched on gravity and said "there was no working theory of g...
14 January 2014
Old New Year
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Clearly, Old New Year is still a big deal! Happy New Year! Today, 14 January,* is the "original" New Year's Day in the J...
13 January 2014
St. Mungo
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Today presents many opportunities to tie into previous posts. It is the date of the deaths of St. Rémy in 533, of Abbot Suger in 1151. I...
10 January 2014
Traveling to Canterbury
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St. Adrian of Canterbury Yesterday's post on the Leiden Glossary mentioned its two chief contributors, Adrian of Canterbury and The...
09 January 2014
The Leiden Glossary
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You can get your own copy here The Leiden University Library in the Netherlands, founded in 1575, was an important part of the Enlighten...
08 January 2014
Conjoined Twins
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from a 1499 woodcut by Jacob Locher Hippocrates was aware of the phenomenon of conjoined twins, and offered an explanation: the male pr...
07 January 2014
Emperor Justinian
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The results of Justinian's plan for re-unifying the Empire The Byzantine Emperor Justinian was known for—among other things—establis...
06 January 2014
Treating Corpses
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A medieval reliquary from the collection in the Metropolitan Museum of Art Over a year ago I touched on funeral practices . A recent com...
03 January 2014
...and Sometimes It Works
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Holding hot iron in a Trial by Ordeal. In the post on Margaret Eriksdottir we saw an example of how Trial by Ordeal doesn't always ...
02 January 2014
Margaret of Sweden
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Retrieving an object from boiling water without suffering burns would prove innocence. Margaret (or Margareta) Eriksdottir of Sweden (c....
01 January 2014
Changing the Year
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[ Notate bene : this post is based on one that originally appeared on 30 June 2012. ] Pope Paul III, as played by Peter O'Toole in ...
31 December 2013
Evesham Abbey
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The early history of the founding of religious buildings goes hand-in-hand with visions and miracles, such as the August snowfall in Rome ...
30 December 2013
Saint Benedict
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Benedict holding his Rule; you can see the raven that saved him from poisoned bread. In the discussion of time I mentioned Benedict of ...
27 December 2013
Statutes of William the Conqueror
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William , Duke of Normandy, who won the Battle of Hastings and conquered England, has been brought up many times in this blog. He ruled f...
26 December 2013
Our Lady of the Snows
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Art over the door of the Santa Maria Maggiore basilica I said on Monday that Pope Liberius was usually known for one thing—his part in t...
25 December 2013
Merry Christmas!
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24 December 2013
Christmas Eve(nts)
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The week, as you can imagine, is very hectic around the world for many people, and I am no exception. In lieu of a regular post, here is a ...
23 December 2013
The Date of Christmas
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Way back here we mentioned Pope Liberius, sent into exile by Constantius II because he wouldn't censure St. Athanasius for condemning...
20 December 2013
The Sacrament of Marriage
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A medieval marriage, from a British Library ms. The Christian churches that have survived until the modern era (Roman Catholicism, Easte...
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