Daily Medieval
A daily post on the Middle Ages by Tim Shaw.
Pages
(Move to ...)
Home
This is I
The Walking Dead of Orderic Vitalis
▼
30 March 2018
Cassiodorus and Colleges
›
Yesterday's post mentioned Cassiodorus (c.485-c.585), a contemporary of Boethius, and his description of the relationship between Ari...
29 March 2018
The Philosophy of Music
›
Much of the medieval attitude about music and its forms came from Boethius (c.480-524 CE). In his de institution music [Latin: "On th...
18 July 2017
The Name of the Rose
›
When Gerard Segarelli was rejected by the Franciscans, he took matters into his own hands and formed the Apostolic Brethren in 1260. The B...
17 July 2017
The Apostolic Brethren
›
Mendicants In the later part of the 13th century, a new order was founded in northern Italy. Sort of. The founder, Gerard Segarelli...
14 July 2017
Damnation of Memory
›
The Roman Severan family, with Geta "erased" from lower left by orders of Caracalla [ link ] Memory is a tricky thing: it can...
13 July 2017
Magnus Maximus, Part 2
›
rom a 14th century Welsh Book of Hours, this is thought to depict Maximus [ link ] Yesterday we introduced Magnus Maximus, a general wh...
12 July 2017
Magnus Maximus, Part 1
›
Yesterday's post on St. Illide mentioned that he cured the daughter of Roman Emperor Magnus Maximus. Although Maximus was Emperor of We...
11 July 2017
Saint Illide
›
Yesterday's post featured a picture of the chapel of Saint Illide, belonging to the Château d'Alleuze. The chapel was built in th...
10 July 2017
The Castle above Saint-Flour
›
The picture below was posted on Facebook a few days ago by a long-time friend. (That's his daughter seen to the right of it. Hi, Kyrie!...
07 July 2017
The King of All Birds
›
The wren, O the wren, is the King of All Birds. On St. Stephen's Day he got caught in the furze. So goes a medieval carol. But why w...
06 July 2017
Protecting the Jews
›
The Plague, also called the Black Death, spread across Sicily shortly after the arrival of a fleet of a dozen Genoese galleys bringing go...
03 May 2016
Pets and the Clergy
›
Christine de Pizan and her dog [ link ] In Chaucer's Canterbury Tales , the Prologue describes the Prioress as having small lapdogs...
29 April 2016
The Brothers-in-law
›
Among the groups in history that have long since disappeared, there are the Pechenegs. They were a semi-nomadic group that spoke a Turkic l...
28 April 2016
St. Fructuosus of Braga
›
St. Fructuosus on Braga Cathedral It is not unknown for rulers who have been harsh to try to "buy their ay into Heaven" near ...
27 April 2016
Rebellion Among the Visigoths
›
In the 7th century, the Kingdom of the Visigoths covered much of the Iberian peninsula and a good chunk of what is now southern France. A G...
26 April 2016
The Death of William Rufus
›
Recent posts have talked about the sons of William the Conqueror: how he left the kingdom to his second son, William Rufus; how the eldest,...
25 April 2016
The Charter of Liberties
›
A copy of the Coronation Charter of Henry I/Charter of Liberties When William Rufus died, his younger brother Henry assumed the throne....
22 April 2016
Ralph Flambard, Robert, and Henry
›
The Battle of Tinchebray When Ralph Flambard escaped from the Tower of London, he fled to Normandy to the court of its duke, Robert Cur...
21 April 2016
The First Prisoner
›
Ralph Flambard was born in Bayeux, Normandy six years before William the Conqueror crossed the English Channel and became King of England. ...
20 April 2016
Sibling Rivalry
›
When William the Conqueror died in 1087, he decided to leave the throne of England to his second eldest, William Rufus. To his eldest, Robe...
19 April 2016
Robert Curthose
›
Yesterday's post mentioned Henry becoming king of England upon the death of his brother, William Rufus. Their father was William the C...
18 April 2016
Father of His Country
›
The phrase "Father of His Country" is usually reserved for George Washington, first President of the United States, for his role ...
14 April 2016
Saluzzo and England and Griselda
›
Saluzzo, a town and principality in northern Italy, had some interesting connections to England. It was a simple tribal city-state in Roman...
13 April 2016
Our Daily Bread
›
Bread has all the characteristics of a staple food: the plant is easy to grow, the product is relatively easy and cheap to produce, and it ...
11 April 2016
Outnumbered!
›
Memorial to Battle of Näfels Military engagements between England and France were a large part of the 14th century in Europe, but those...
01 April 2016
Aprille
›
It is the first of April, and while you might expect something about pulling pranks and acting the fool, instead we are going to talk about...
31 March 2016
Hug a Medievalist
›
This is worth knowing. A bear hunter hugging a bear? Early 16th c. German "Geese Book" Sarah Laseke, writer of a medieva...
30 March 2016
The Seventh Crusade
›
King Louis IX of France could not convince any of the rulers of Europe to accompany him on a Crusade to free Jerusalem, which had been reca...
29 March 2016
The Crusade Nobody Wanted
›
In 1244, allies of the Egyptian Mamluks, retreating westward from the advancing Mongols, stopped at Jerusalem long enough to recapture it f...
28 March 2016
The Saint Who Said "No"
›
Saint Isabella, at a church in Paris Isabella of France (1224 - 1270) was the daughter of King Louis VIII and Blanche of Castile. Her b...
25 March 2016
The Name Glastonbury
›
Glastonbury is a small town in Somerset, England, that has been inhabited since Neolithic times. A recent post discussed the discovery of ...
24 March 2016
Glass and Recycling
›
In 1977-79, a shipwreck off the southern coast of Turkey was investigated. It was determined to have sunk about 1025. The ship's hold c...
23 March 2016
The Biggest Guild
›
A 1568 German woodcut showing a shoe shop Which guilds were the biggest? Not the most powerful, but those with the most members? Let...
‹
›
Home
View web version