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MODULE 2
This module is concerned with the key developments in World History between about 1350 and 1600 CE. It argues that this period was
shaped most significantly by the rebuilding, indeed recreation, of new Empires after the devastation caused by a major pandemic, and
the growing connections and confrontations between those new empires. It argues that this period marks the key division between the
early modern and the modern period, when the global world we recognize today began to take clearly recognisable shape.
• The crisis of the ‘Black Death’ pandemic from the mid-1330s to the early 1400s. We look at its causes, spread and social responses in
global comparative context.
• Post-pandemic political recovery and revival that led to the birth of large centralized Empires in eastern Afro-Eurasia, with several
case studies from across 15th and 16th century Afro-Eurasia: Ming China, the Ottoman and Mughal Empires.
• How , by contrast, Christian Europe struggled to unify under any single dominant political authority, but nevertheless underwent
significant cultural and intellectual ferment. The results were contradictory: an outpouring of creative thought broke the hold of
Catholicism over European minds (see module 1) and gave rise to an alternative Protestant Christianity, a process shaped by almost
unrelenting religious violence between the two.
• The emergence of two Catholic kingdoms, Portugal and Spain, in the 1400s and their expansion, by 1500 CE, across the Indian and
Atlantic oceans . Their encounters with the indigenous American empires of the Aztec and the Incas – whom we meet for the first
time in this course – gave birth to the Atlantic World system, an epochal event in World History that brought the peoples and
products of the Americas into contact and conflict with Africa and Europe for the first time, with complex consequences for all
involved.
Lecture 3 turns from State-building in Asia to consider state-building in Europe in the 15 th and 16th century. In
this lecture, you’ll see how:
• New political powers began to emerge in the 1400s, in the shape of Italian city states (discussed briefly) and,
more enduringly, in the kingdoms of Portugal and Spain. However, the particularly complex dynamics of this
region meant no single authority came to truly dominate as the Ming, Ottoman or Mughals were doing
elsewhere.
• Despite sharp political fragmentation, artists, intellectuals and humanist writers, under the patronage of
newly wealthy dynasts, forged a radical new culture based on the recovery of ancient and Islamic learning:
the Renaissance.
• The Renaissance of the 15th century gave way to a century of great violence in the 16th century, as critical
thinkers and activists split Christianity into rival Protestant and Catholic spheres. This ‘Protestant
Reformation’ and the Catholic counter-reformation birthed vicious religious war across Europe.
Western Christendom, 1400–1500. Europe
was a region divided by dynastic rivalries
during the fifteenth century. Here, you can
locate the most powerful regional
dynasties, which we consider in this lecture:
Portugal, Castile, Aragon, France, England,
and the Holy Roman Empire, as well some
important ‘city-states’ (powerful,
independent urban centres). Using the
scale, you can contrast the sizes of political
units in this map with the Ming, Ottoman
and Mughal dynasties that were the subject
of lecture 1 in this module. Note also here
the many popular uprisings, which are
indicative of much social turmoil.
PORTUGAL
Portugal and ‘the Moors’
The Straits of Gibraltar
Fall of Moroccan Cuetta
Joao I (r. 1385-1433) and Henry the Navigator (r. 1433-1485)
The conquest of Castile
Trade with West Africa: Cape Verde, Sao Tome, Principe and Fernando Po
Land Grants and Sugar Colonization in the Mid-Atlantic Islands: Madeira, Azores
Spain
Political and Religious Diversity in Spanish Iberia
The Reconquista
Isabel & Ferdinand
Castile & Aragon
The Fall of Grenada (1492)
Conversos and the Inquisition
DEEPDIVE
A steady head and a steely spine helped
Isabella of Castile manoeuvre her way to
the throne. Outsmarting and outlasting
her rivals, she rose to become Spain’s
iconic queen in a masculine world. NatGeo
History (2018).
Elsewhere in Europe, dynasts sought to unite new kingdoms in the 1400s and 1500s.
Holy Roman Empire. Although their efforts at state building pale in comparison with those of the empires rising in Asia, one family, the Habsburgs, established a long-lasting and
significant dynasty in central Europe. How had they emerged? After the collapse of Charlemagne’s Frankish Empire (see module 1 lecture 3) in the mid-9th century, much of central
Europe had splintered and fragmented into a dizzying variety of small rival states: principalities, dukedoms, archbishoprics, royal houses and ‘micro’ kingdoms. But among many,
particularly in the eastern parts of Charlemagne’s former empire, a dream persisted to unify Europe under one authority and to reclaim the cohesion and integration once enjoyed by
the Roman Empire in classical antiquity. In the late 13th century, a loose confederation of small rulers elected an ‘Emperor’ from the House of Habsburg (located in present-day
Austria). The territory over which he ruled they called the ‘Holy Roman Empire’. It was not the same as the Roman Empire, but the Habsburgs used the term to acquire legitimacy, to
signal their interest reviving the past, and to deepen their connection with the Catholic church. In theory, the Holy Roman Empire encompassed an enormous territory stretching from
its centre in present-day Austria and Germany to Belgium and Holland in the west, Italy and Switzerland in the south, and Poland and Croatia to the east. Successive rulers of this
empire (among the most important was Charles V who reigned 1519 to 1556) became enormously wealthy and eventually came into possession of Spain and Portugal late in the
1500s. However it was always a chimerical, elusive empire, far too loosely organised to centralise power as had occurred in the Ming, Ottoman and Mughal worlds. The Habsburgs
had constantly to defend their almost imaginary empire against revolts (notably in Netherlands) and as well as confront Ottoman harassment on their eastern borders. Despite an
attempt to ‘down-size’ the empire by ‘splitting’ it between two monarchs in the late 1500s, the size and wealth of Habsburg Empire continued to provoke enormous tension within
Europe.
Valois France. Meanwhile in the northwest of Europe, the great age of monarchy would take longer to dawn than in either Portugal, Spain or central Europe. Feudal rulers – the
House of Valois in France and Plantagenets in England – of the two neighbouring territories fought one another incessantly during the decades of plague, so that historians refer to
the bloody period between the 1340s and 1440s as ‘The Hundred Year War”. When Valois forces pushed the Plantagenets back across the English Channel during these
confrontations, they began a slow process of consolidating royal power across today’s France, Helped by diplomatic marriages and unifying memory of Joan of Arc, a female warrior-
saint who fought against helped the Valois crown expand its domain; the Kingdom’s population reached some 15 million by 1550. But its stability and cohesion was always
undermined by peasant revolts and religious conflict. This situation prevailed until the last Valois King was assassinated in 1589, paving the way for the House of Bourbon to take the
crown. Under the House of Bourbon, full unification of the Kingdom of France and the entrenchment of a powerful, absolutist monarchy there would be the work of the 17th century
(absolutism means a form of government where one body, usually the monarch, controls the right to tax, judge, make war, and coin money)
Tudor England. The situation in England at the end of the Hundred Years War (1440s) was similarly unpromising for state-builders. The Plantagenets fractured almost immediately
after failing to take northwestern France. This gave way to a thirty-year civil war between rival Houses of Lancaster and York in England’s north, settling little. Both families in this so-
called ‘War of the Roses’ ultimately lost out to the Tudors, who seized the throne in 1485. The Tudors spent the next century gradually strengthening the power of their monarchy
and the English economy, sufficient enough to withstand challengers from neighbouring Scots and religious interests. It was not until Queen Elizabeth I took power in 1558 that a
centralised state was secured. Elizabeth used her control of patronage (to grant privileges to favoured elites) and elaborate court festivities to secure her pre-eminence. Also, refusing
to share her power with a man, the “Virgin Queen” never married and exerted sole control over the church, military, and aristocracy. Tudor rule came close to being absolutist, except
that England’s population was small (a mere 3 million people compared to the tens of millions under Ming or Mughal rule) so to raise money the English monarchs needed the
support and consent of landowners. The landowners agreed, but only on the condition they retain a say in government, which they did so through a collective body called parliament.
A Cultural Renaissance, c. 1450-1550
What was the European Renaissance?
Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper depicts Christ’s disciples reacting to his announcement that one of them will betray him. Da Vinci used the technique of perspective and classical
treatments of the body to give vivacity and three-dimensionality to even religious paintings, which until then had been somewhat abstract and flat.
RENAISSANCES EXEMPLARS: MICHEALANGELO
DeepDive
Lauri Fedi takes you
through all the panels of
the Sistine Chapel the
peak of Renaissance art,
in a lavishly illustrated
article
RENAISSANCES EXEMPLARS: BOTTICELLI
DEEPDIVE
Not all Renaissance artists where men, even though gender hierarchies were pronounced in 15th century
Europe. Sofonisba Anguissola was an Italian Renaissance painter who gained recognition for her portraits of
nobility and prominent figures. Her painting "Lady in Ermine“ (left) reflects Renaissance values by portraying
the sitter as an individual with a distinct personality, emphasizing naturalism and realism in the lifelike
rendering of her features and clothing, and using classical ideals and aesthetics.
DEEPDIVE
A profile of Sofonisba
Anguissola. Appointed
as a court painter to
the king of Spain, the
Italian artist became
Europe’s first female
superstar artist.
NatGeo History (2022)
RENAISSANCE EXAMPLAR:
FLORENCE CATHEDRAL
DeepDive
The Renaissance was not only an embrace of the arts. It was also a vehicle that enabled the more direct study of
worldly power. Close reading of the ancient Greek and Roman political treatises emboldened 16th century
Rennaiscance scholars to address more forthrightly the conditions under which power could be maintained or
undermined. New forms of governance were invented—and older forms buttressed. The Florentine Niccolò
Machiavelli wrote the most famous text on authoritarian power, arguably the foundational text of modern political
science.
In his book The Prince (1513, pictured left), Machiavelli argued, in contrast to the Civic Humanists (addressed earlier),
that political leadership was not about obeying God’s rules but about mastering the amoral means of modern
statecraft. Holding and exercising power were ends in themselves, he claimed; civic virtue was merely a pretense on
the part of the elite who simply wanted to keep the upper hand. Machiavelli was also renowned for his essay The Art
of War (1521). Here, he argued that ancient Roman military tactics, including the deploying of trained, armed citizens,
would make for a more trustworthy army than the use of mercenary soldiers. The enrolment of the broad citizenry in
the defence of the state, he insisted, would also make for political stability. These ideas – initially wholly radical given
that most 16th century monarchs put little trust in the own citizens - circulated widely and would gradually catch on
and inspire military reforms across Europe. As we will see in later lectures, this produced enormous consequences in
Europe and elsewhere in the world.
Meanwhile, specialized military engineers produced a wave of publications – most of them as easy-to-share pamphlets
- devoted to proper fortification design. In a Europe so frequently at war, these found a ready audience. The writers
advocated the construction of defences not pleasing to the eye but to best able to absorb the force of modern
cannons. Machiavelli’s fellow Italian Niccolò Tartaglia was one military thinker who had noticed the upsurge in cannon
usage from the 15th century, and produced an important treatise on ballistics in which mathematics was applied, for
the very first time, to the trajectory of projectiles. This work too provided influential. Thus began a long-lasting battle
between military architects seeking to construct invincible defence works and artillery makers seeking to destroy
them. As we’ll see, the inhabitants of coastal East Africa and south Asia were soon to get first-hand experience of
these new theories.
Surviving years in the snake pit of Renaissance politics and a torturous stint in jail, Niccolò
Machiavelli penned The Prince, his landmark study of the mechanisms of power. Andrea
DeepDive Frediani offers a fuller portrait of his life and times during the making of this seminal
political theory text. NatGeo History (2020).
RELIGIOUS REFORMATION FROM C. 1520
THE COUNTER-REFORMATION
Reaffirmation of Catholicism
Reform in the Papacy: piety and prudence
The Jesuits
Persecution: Exorcisms, Witch-Burning & Censorship
RELIGIOUS WAR
Protestant Peasant Uprisings
Civil Wars
Toward the Thirty Years War (from 1618).
Protestant Reformation. Following Luther’s lead, many reformers created inexpensive pamphlets to increase the
circulation of their message. Pictured here is a woodcut from one such pamphlet, which shows Luther and his followers
fending off a corrupt Pope (Leo X)
DEEPDIVE: THE REFORMATION
Tales of wives shaming errant husbands, brides
forcing lovers to marry them and maidservants
taking their rapists to court emerge from
Suzannah Lipscomb’s research into the female
residents of Reformation France. So, she asks,
does this mean that women in 16th-century
Europe wielded more power than we previously
thought? Histories (2019)
Witch-hunters
PERSPECTIVES: THE THIRTY YEARS’ WAR (1618-1648)
The religious conflict that erupted in the 16th century spilled over well into the 17th,
climaxing (though not completely ending) with the Thirty Years’ War (1618–1648). The
brutal conflict began as a struggle between Protestants and Catholics within the Holy
Roman Empire (see earlier slide), but it soon became a war for pre-eminence in all of
continental Europe It became a complex, multi-actor conflict between Protestant princes
and the Catholic Holy Roman emperor for religious predominance in central Europe; a
struggle for regional supremacy among different Catholic powers (the Spanish, Austrians
and French); and a bid for independence by the Protestant Dutch, who wanted to trade
and worship as they liked, against their Catholic Spanish overlords.
In the course of a war fought heavily by ill-paid and poorly fed mercenaries, both sides
committed many atrocities against civilians. Most famously, in 1631, Catholic forces
besieged and then destroyed the beautiful German town of Magdeburg, killing three-
quarters of the civilian inhabitants. In total, fighting, disease, and famine wiped out a third
of the German states’ urban population and two-fifths of their rural population. The war
also depopulated Sweden and Poland.
Ultimately the Treaty of Westphalia (1648) concluded hostilities. It stated, in essence, that
as there was a rough balance of power between Protestant and Catholic states, they would
simply have to put up with each other. The Dutch won their independence, but the war’s
enormous costs provoked severe discontent elsewhere. Central Europe was so devastated
that it did not recover in economic or demographic terms for more than a century.
The Thirty Years’ War also transformed war making. Whereas most medieval struggles had
been sieges between nobles leading small armies, centralized states fielding standing
armies now waged decisive, grand-scale campaigns. The war also changed the ranks of The mercenary armies of the Thirty Years’ War were renowned for pillaging and tormenting
soldiers: as the conflict ground on, local enlisted men defending their king, country, and civilians. Here the artist Jacques Collot, from Nancy in eastern France, depicts the officially
faith gave way to hired mercenaries or criminals doing forced service. Even officers, who sanctioned punishment of renegade soldiers before an orderly group of townspeople. The
previously obtained their stripes by purchase or royal decree, now had to earn them. caption that appeared with the image indicted the soldiers as “damned and infamous thieves
Gunpowder, cannons, and handguns became standardized: Europe’s wars were now [hanging] like bad fruit, from this tree.”
beginning to feature huge standing armies boasting a professional officer corps, deadly
artillery, and long supply lines bringing food and ammunition to the front. The costs—
material and human—of war began to soar.
ADDITIONAL MATERIALS
DEEPDIVE: ACCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIP
Bois, Guy, The Crisis of Feudalism: Economy and Society in Eastern Normandy, c. 1300–1550 (1984). A
good case study of a French region that illustrates the turmoil in fourteenth-century Europe
Hale, John, Renaissance Europe, 1480-1520 (1994). A beautifully crafted account of the politics,
economics, and culture of the Renaissance period in western Europe
Jones, E. L., The European Miracle (1981). A provocative work on the economic and social recovery
from the Black Death.
Hackett, H. The Elizabethan Mind: Searching for the Self in an Age in Uncertainty (2022). Charts the
changing ways in which the mind was understood, and the thought processes of Reformation society
in an age of upheaval.
Tuchman, Barbara W., A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous Fourteenth Century (1978). A book that
shows, in a vigorous way, how war, famine, and pestilence devastated Europeans in the fourteenth
century.
Brady, Thomas A., Heiko A. Oberman, and James D. Tracy (eds.), Handbook of European History 1400–
1600: Late Middle Ages, Renaissance, and Reformation, vol. 1, Structures and Assertions (1996). A
good synthetic survey of recent literature and historiographical debates.
Febvre, Lucien, The Problem of Unbelief in the Sixteenth Century: The Religion of Rabelais (1982). A
tour de force of intellectual history by the man who moved the study of the Reformation away from
great men to the broader question of religious revival and new mentalities.
Pelikan, Jaroslav, Reformation of Church and Dogma (1300–1700) (1988). An important overview of
major religious controversies.
Roper, Lyndal, Martin Luther: Renegade and Prophet (2016). A magisterial biography that
demonstrates the ways in which Luther was a rebel but also a man of his time.
DeepDive: Documentaries
The Reformation (2006) - This BBC documentary series Revolution of Conscience: The Life, Convictions, and Legacy
examines the Protestant Reformation in Europe, focusing on key of Martin Luther (2003, 56 minutes): This documentary
figures such as Luther, John Calvin, and Huldrych Zwingli. The chronicles Martin Luther’s life using a variety of primary
series explores the impact of the Reformation on European documents and expert analysis. Expands on many of the
society and politics, and includes interviews with historians and theological questions of the day, questions that had
theologians. prompted Luther to post his famous ninety-five theses on the
doors of the cathedral at Wittenberg
"Calvinist (2017) - This documentary film explores the history Cities of Light: Rise and Fall of Islamic Spain (120 minutes,
and beliefs of Calvinism, a branch of Protestantism that 2007). This documentary was created by Unity Productions
originated in Switzerland in the 16th century. The film includes Foundation to promote dialogues about religious diversity
interviews with theologians and historians, and examines the and coexistence. There also is a website with background
impact of Calvinism on European and American culture and information on the making of the film along with info about
politics. geography, literature, technology transfer, and religion.
The Medici: Godfathers of the Renaissance (2004) - Directed by Renaissance Unchained (2016). Waldemar Januszczak
Justin Hardy, this documentary series explores the role of the challenges the traditional notion of the Renaissance having
Medici family in the cultural and political developments of fixed origins in Italy, looks at the importance of religious
Renaissance Italy. The series won a Primetime Emmy Award for narrative in art, and focuses on Venice and its extraordinary
Outstanding Nonfiction Series. impact on art history.
The Renaissance
Annenberg Foundation interactive and in-depth resources on the Renaissance, as well as
numerous other topics.
www.learner.org/exhibits/renaissance/
TIMETRAVEL: WATCH
Luther (2003) - This historical drama stars Joseph Fiennes as Martin Luther,
the German theologian who challenged the Catholic Church in the 16th Queen Margot (1994) - Directed by Patrice Chéreau, this film is set
century. The film explores Luther's life, beliefs, and struggles, and also in 16th-century France and tells the story of the St. Bartholomew's
depicts the social and political climate of the time. Nominated for three Day massacre, a pivotal event in the French Wars of Religion. The
Canadian Screen Awards (including Best TV Movie) and won two Gemini film won the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival.
Awards (Best Performance by an Actor and Best Direction in a Dramatic
Program or Mini-Series).
Elizabeth (1998) - Directed by Shekhar Kapur and starring Cate Blanchett, The Devils (1971) - Directed by Ken Russell, this classic film is set
this film is set during the 1590s, the early years of Queen Elizabeth I's reign, in 17th-century France and is a fictionalized account of the events
and explores her rise to power. Nominated for seven Academy Awards surrounding the Loudun possessions. The film won the Special Jury
(including Best Picture), won one Academy Award (Best Makeup), and won Prize at the Cannes Film Festival.
four BAFTA Awards (including Best British Film).
Isabel (2011-2014) - This Spanish television series tells the story of Queen "The Witch" (2015) - Directed by Robert Eggers, this critically
Isabella I of Castile and explores the politics and religious conflicts of 15th- acclaimed horror film is set in 17th century New England, but
century Spain. It has won numerous awards, including Best Fiction Series at deals with themes of witchcraft and witch persecution that were
the 2013 Ondas Awards and Best Historical Production at the 2014 Magnolia also prevalent in Europe during the 15th and 16th centuries. The
Awards. film won numerous awards and nominations, including the Best
Director prize at the Sundance Film Festival.
TimeTravel: Listen (the Renaissance)
Text on this and following slides adapted from J. Staines, Rough Guide to Classical Music (2010)
Madrigals
The outstanding vocal group La
Vocal compositions described as madrigals were written and
Venexiana is the perfect introduction to
performed throughout the Renaissance: as early as the 1320s, when
the beauties of the Italian Renaissance
a homespun style of secular music first emerged in northern Italy,
madrigal, here showcasing pieces by
and were still being composed as late as the early 1600s, when
Monteverdi.
madrigals reached a pinnacle of expressiveness and sophistication.
The origins of the word itself are obscure: it’s most likely to derive
from “mother” – indicating that the songs were sung in Italian dialect
(the “mother” tongue), rather than Latin, the language of Church. The
earliest surviving fourteenth-century madrigals are two- or three-
voice pieces, with little ambition to seriousness, but by the end of the
16th century they stretched musical boundaries, containing five or six
voices and experimenting with imaginative, often audacious,
polyphonic structures. They were taken up by brilliant singers and This album comprises settings of
became a species of enjoyable concert music. Guarini’s influential verse drama Il
pastor fido (The Faithful Shepherd)
by madrigalists ranging from the
well-known (Marenzio and
Monteverdi) to the more obscure
(Casentini and Saracini).
TimeTravel: Listen (the Renaissance)
The Sopranos and the Concerto di Donne. The exalted status of the soprano
voice in Western music can be partly traced to the personal obsession of one Musica Secreta are a group of highly
man. In the small dukedom of Ferrara in northern Italy, Duke Alfonso II d’Este experienced singers dedicated to
(1533–97) gathered together a select group of virtuoso female musicians to researching and performing Renaissance
perform at his court. His fascination with the female voice led him to search music for female vocal ensemble.
out exceptional singers, and to bring them to Ferrara. The resulting consort of Dangerous Graces offers a selection of
women – the concerto di donne – was Alfonso’s “musica secreta” (secret songs by four composers with strong
music), hidden away from the public eye and the pomp of the court. They links to Ferrara – de Rore, Ignegneri,
would perform in the duke’s private apartments for distinguished guests or for Luzzaschi and de Wert – in beautifully
Alfonso’s pleasure alone. judged and often exquisite performances.
Castrato.
Throughout the Middle Ages the Church had upheld Saint Paul’s If you want to know what an actual castrato
injunction to “Let your women keep silence in the churches” by using sounded like, this is the only place to go.
children for choral music. It’s not known exactly when their ranks were Alessandro Moreschi, first soprano of the
joined by castrated adult males, but they seem to have become Sistine Chapel for thirty years, was in his
commonplace by the middle of the sixteenth century. Castration was forties when he made these recordings in
usually carried out by parents, even though castration of one’s offspring Rome in 1902 and 1904. The ethereal voice
was technically punishable by death or excommunication. The Church that emerges over the crackle is like nothing
was prepared to believe the stories of childhood mishap – a kick from a you’ll have heard before. But be prepared: it
horse or a bite from a wild pig – that virtually every castrated soprano as disturbing to listen to as it is poignant.
offered to explain his mutilation. Powerless to reverse the dreadful
deed, choirmasters took the view that the unfortunate child might as
well be put to good use. These uses were initially exclusively
churchbound, and a top-class castrato could earn good money. By some
estimates, some four thousand children were being castrated annually in
Italy alone, although only a tiny number of castrated children ever found
fame or fortune. After 1600 the castrato became an essential
component of opera (see later lectures). Another aspect of the adult
castrato’s life remains controversial. Marriage for castrati was banned by
both Catholics and Protestants, but many of them seem to have been
singularly popular as consorts for both sexes, and some enjoyed a
thriving parallel career as high-class prostitutes.
TimeTravel: Listen (the Reformation)
Pentiment (2022).“An evocative recreation of 16th-century Bavaria Kingdom Come: Deliverance (2018) - Set in 15th-century
examines how the tide of history crashes against the lives of Bohemia, this action role-playing game follows the story
everyday people, all framed by an intriguing crime story…. You are a of Henry, a blacksmith's son who becomes embroiled in a
manuscript illuminator at time which saw the rise of Protestantism civil war, in an environment filled with historically
following the radical teachings of Martin Luther, the popularisation accurate weapons, characters, and buildings. Players
of printed books, the uprising of peasants against cruel landowners need to eat, drink and sleep to stay healthy. Furthermore,
and the blasphemous revelation that the Earth revolves around the armor, clothing, and perishable food deteriorate as time
sun… the whole thing looks like a cross between a tapestry and an passes. The game won several awards
early-modern illustrated manuscript”.
.
Ingredients Method
For the pastry 1, To make the pastry, rub the butter into the flour, work in egg and water, and knead lightly.
500g Flour Use half to line a 10-inch metal flan dish.
150g Butter
1 Egg 2. Remove the coarse stalks of the greens, shred leaves thinly, mix with other ingredients (add
black pepper) pack into the dish.
For the filling
250g Mixture of spinach, cabbage, lettuce, chard 3. Cover with pastry, keeping some back to make decorations for the top.
50g Raisins
30g Hard cheese, grated 4. Bake at 150°C for 50-60 mins, brushing the top with a little butter and sprinkling on a little
60g Fresh breadcrumbs fine sugar before serving.
½tsp Salt
1tsp Sugar
3 Egg yolks, raw
1 Egg yolk, hard boiled
30g Butter, melted
Black pepper, to taste
TimeTravel: Taste
The elderberry blossoms, berries and young shoots have been used in the kitchen for centuries. The oldest elder recipe comes from Italy. The recipe can be found in the
Roman cookbook De re coquinaria (About the art of cooking) from the first century AD. It is an oven dish of elderberries mixed with eggs, wine, oil, pepper and garum, the
famous Roman fish sauce. The elder was also used extensively in the Middle Ages. Herbal teas, fresh drinks, omelets, cakes and fried snacks were made from the blossoms.
In the Renaissance, elderflower appears to have been a favorite seasoning in Italy at the courts of popes and cardinals. The following recipe comes from the the Liber de arte
coquinaria by Maestro Martino (ca. 1465).
The original reads, in translation: “Take some good fresh cheese and a little aged cheese, and crush well, adding a bit of sifted flour to them and the necessary amount of egg
whites; likewise, a little milk and some sugar; and grind all these things well together, remove from the mortar, and add a sufficient amount of elderflowers at your own
discretion; they should not be crushed or crumbled, so as not to make the mixture too clear, that is, too liquid, so that you can form the round fritters using your hands, or in
whatever shape you like, and then fry them in good rendered lard or butter, or in good oil; and serve very hot”
Modernized, it reads:
Method
1. Beat the egg white in a bowl until stiff.
2. Grate the cheese.
3. In another bowl, put the ricotta, cheese, flour, milk and sugar and mix vigorously. Lightly fold the egg white into the mixture until it is completely absorbed and the mixture
has become visibly more airy.
4. Gently stir in the elderflowers.
5. Put a layer of about 2 centimetres of vegetable oil in a frying pan and heat. Take a tablespoon of the batter and let it slip into the oil.
6. Bake them on both sides until golden brown and then drain them on kitchen paper.
7. Eat them warm, sprinkled with a little salt.