Daily Medieval
A daily post on the Middle Ages by Tim Shaw.
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30 May 2014
Ivar the Boneless
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Ivar the Boneless, played by Vaclovas Kiselevicius in the TV show "The Dark Ages" The post on Vikings in Ireland mentioned I...
29 May 2014
Vikings in Ireland
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A sign of Viking presence in Ireland: a Viking ship built in Dublin c. 1042 As alluded to in the post on King Edmund I , Ireland was th...
28 May 2014
Edmund I
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from a genealogy of the kings of England Edmund I Edmund the Magnificent Edmund the Just Edmund the Deed-Doer It isn't often...
27 May 2014
Academic Regalia
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Because medieval universities were often designed as breeding grounds for educated clerics, clerical robes were a standard form of dress....
23 May 2014
What Skeletons Can Tell Us
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[ source ] Yesterday we mentioned Dr. Sharon DeWitte of the University of South Carolina, who examines skeletons from the Middle Ages ...
22 May 2014
Autopsying the Middle Ages
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When learning about people in the Middle Ages, you can only go so far with records and archaeology. Sometimes you have to go to the peopl...
21 May 2014
Dating
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Month of May from British Library MS Harley 2332 I don't mean locating a mate, but the practice of locating a particular event some...
20 May 2014
A King, a Cardinal, and a College
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Sancho in a contemporary manuscript King Sancho IV of Castile (1258 - 1295), also known as Sancho the Brave, ruled the combined Iberian...
19 May 2014
Mother and Wife of Kings
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Ælfgifu on the Bayeaux Tapestry Ælfgifu of Northampton was once mentioned here as the wife of King Cnut. When King Svein Forkbeard of ...
16 May 2014
My Lips Are Sealed
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Confidentiality is expected in many relationships: doctor-patient, lawyer-client, ... and priest-penitent. The so-called "Seal of th...
15 May 2014
More on Torture
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We've talked about torture before, regarding the Templars , and the "ultimate" torture of being hanged, drawn and quartered...
14 May 2014
Richard's Lionheart
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Box that held Richard's heart. The inscription reads: "Here is the heart of Richard, King of England." Once Richard the ...
13 May 2014
Richard the LionHeart's Death
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Richard's tomb at Fontevraud Abbey Richard the Lionheart (1157 - 1199) died from complications after being hit by a crossbow shot b...
12 May 2014
Child Lionheart
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The vineyards of Cognac Today is the 823rd wedding anniversary of King Richard I of England, called Lionheart, and Berengaria of Navarr...
09 May 2014
The Headless Saint
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How to keep your head? In you hands! Saint Solange was born in the 9th century near Bourges, France, to a family of poor but very devout...
08 May 2014
Saint John the Dwarf
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In the 5th century, a very short man was born in Egypt to a poor Christian family; he became known as John Kolobos, from the Greek Ιωάννης...
07 May 2014
Asbestos
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Lovely ceiling tiles at Cleeve Abbey with asbestos in them Pliny the Elder has a chapter in his Natural History on something he calls ...
06 May 2014
The Fighting Bishop
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Tomb of Remigius, Lincoln Cathedral [ link ] A "ship list" exists of the ships used by William of Normandy when he conquered E...
05 May 2014
Skincare for Women
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Madonna of the Recommended, Lippo Memmi (c.1291 - 1356) Cosmetics were known as far back as early Egyptian culture, so it is no surprise...
02 May 2014
May Day Quiche
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Baking, pulled from a neat food history site for kids The Earl of Bradford once produced a cookbook . That makes it sound more historica...
01 May 2014
The New Church
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Explanation of cross-in-square from this fascinating site. Today is May Day, and the anniversary of the consecration of the Nea Ekklesi...
30 April 2014
Assassins
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The scholar Steven Runciman tells us of the founding of the group now known as the Assassins. A Persian called Hasan as-Sabah (1050s - 11...
29 April 2014
Conrad of Montferrat
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[ source ] On 28 April in 1192, Conrad of Montferrat was assassinated. Conrad was an interesting character, a well-born European caugh...
28 April 2014
Grazing Rights
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In England there are still many "Commons" that are accessible by locals for grazing their animals. Their origin can be summed up...
25 April 2014
Letter to Mellitus
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St. Mellitus, converter of Anglo-Saxons We have the story, handed down from Bede, that Pope Gregory I sent a mission to England in 597 t...
24 April 2014
Isabella's Reforms
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Queen Isabella of Castile had a reputation for harshness when it came to crime and corruption. A Spanish writer and contemporary, Hernando...
23 April 2014
England's Best Hidden Treasure
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First page of the Textus Roffensis. The water damage is from the early 1700s. The Textus de Ecclesia Roffensi per Ernulphum episcopum ...
22 April 2014
Isabella of Castile
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Wedding portrait of Isabella and Ferdinand (1469) Everyone knows about Isabella of Castile and how she financed Columbus' excursion ...
21 April 2014
The Lisbon Massacre
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A memorial in Lisbon* We touched on the Lisbon Massacre, in which between 1000 and 2000 (and maybe more) Jews were slaughtered, in the p...
18 April 2014
Medieval Cannabis
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Cannabis sativa from the 6th-century De Materia Medica of Dioscorides I was contemplating a post about Easter, which takes place this Su...
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