The Middle Ages: Myth and Reality
The Middle Ages: Myth and Reality
The Middle Ages: Myth and Reality
We think of knights in
shining armor, lavish
banquets, wandering
minstrels, kings, queens,
bishops, monks, pilgrims,
and glorious pageantry.
In film and in literature,
medieval life seems
heroic, entertaining, and
romantic.
The Manor
Self-Sufficiency
Isolation
The Peasants
MEDIEVAL LIFE
Cooperation and
Mutual
Obligations
KING
MANORIALISM:
ECONOMIC SYSTEM
FEUDALISM:
POLITICAL SYSTEM
Fief and Peasants
Decentralized, local
government
Dependent upon the
relationship between
members of the nobility
Lord and his vassals
administered justice
and were the highest
authority in their land
Military Aid
Loyalty
LORDS (VASSALS TO KING)
Food
Protection
Shelter
Military Service
Homage
KNIGHTS (VASSALS TO LORDS)
Food
Protection
Farm the
Land
PEASANTS (SERFS)
Shelter
Pay
Rent
Other Occupations
Others were
midwives, worked in
the fields, or were
engaged in creative
endeavors such as
writing, playing
musical instruments,
dancing, and painting.
Bishops
Parish Priests
Monasteries
Monks
Nuns
Monastic Life
Education
Pilgrimages
Pilgrimages were an
important part of religious
life in the Middle Ages.
Many people took
journeys to visit holy
shrines such the
Canterbury Cathedral in
England and sites in
Jerusalem and Rome.
Chaucer's Canterbury
Tales is a series of
stories told by 30
pilgrims as they
traveled to Canterbury.
Homes
Windows
Peasants Homes
Many peasant
families ate, slept,
and spent time
together in very small
quarters, rarely more
than one or two
rooms. The houses
had thatched roofs
and were easily
destroyed.
House Construction
Medieval Village
Fenestral Windows
Sources of Meat
Womens Clothing
Monks Clothing
Nuns Clothing
Peasant Clothing
Chaucer's prioress in
the Canterbury Tales
wore a brooch with
the inscription Amor
vincit omnia (Love
conquers all), not a
particularly
appropriate slogan for
a nun.
Diamonds became
popular in Europe in the
fourteenth century. By the
mid-fourteenth century
there were laws to control
who wore what jewelry ,
and knights were not
permitted to wear rings.
Sometimes clothes were
garnished with silver, but
only the wealthy could
wear such items.
As the populations of
medieval towns and
cities increased,
hygienic conditions
worsened, leading to a
vast array of health
problems.
Medicine
Four Humors
Bloodletting
Medical Treatment
Remedies
Surgery
Musical Instruments
Drama
Costumes
Town Life
Peddlers
Businessmen
Tradesmen
Boroughs
Town Governments
As the townspeople
became "free" citizens,
powerful families,
particularly in Italy,
struggled to gain control
of the communes or
boroughs. Town councils
were formed.
Guilds
Masons
Apprentices
The inventions of
Leonardo da Vinci and
the voyages of
discovery in the
fifteenth century
contributed to the birth
of the Renaissance.
Urban Life
References