Monday, April 7, 2014

Meeting the 11th Century Englishman

     

     Have you ever wondered why we've always heard that we're taller than our predecessors? I've read and heard that our ancestors were short and just assumed that meant every generation before us, but that just isn't the case.

     According to The Year 1000 by Robert Lacey & Danny Danziger, one of the first things noticed about people living in or around the year 1000 is they were tall--very much like we are today. The truth is we are taller than most of our more recent ancestors (1700-1900). Georgian and Victorian England residents, who were malnourished and overcrowded, did not have the good health nor the stature by the end of the twentieth century that we share today with our access to food and medicine.

     So when we picture those knights in shining armor as tall and muscular,
good news, you are correct! According to Lacy & Danzinger, nine out of ten people lived in the country. A lush green and unpolluted land that provided plentiful food and nourishment, allowing the medieval man to grow strong limbs and very healthy teeth. So that knight who is the hero, guess what? He really does have a full set of white teeth! 


     If these people were so healthy one would think they'd live as long as we do, but here the differences are drastic. Life was short. A simple cut or wound could take a person's life. In the medieval time period, an illness or childhood disease that today we can stop with a visit to the doctor could spread like a fire and wipe out a whole village. 

     Because of this, a boy of twelve years of age was considered old enough to swear an oath to the king. Young girls were married off in their early teens to much older men. Life expectancy was almost half of what it is today. Most people died in their forties, and for a person to reach into their fifties was quite impressive and they were revered. 

     Life for the average person was hard, but pretty simple. There obviously wasn't the local grocery or clothing stores for running down to get the needed item as we have today. That being said, television often depicts the medieval man like he only wore brown clothes and lived in a drab world. But that couldn't be farther from the truth. They may not have had the rich dyes that produce the vibrant colors we have today, but that didn't keep them from having colored clothes. They used vegetation to dye fabric and with those dyes they were able to produce bright yellows, greens, and reds.

By Muhammad Mahdi Karim - Own work, GFDL 1.2, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6699147
     Speaking of grocery stores, what do you think might be a valuable food commodity in the year 1000? This food was considered so valuable it was even used to pay taxes. The food was honey. The 11th century man was known to say, It is a lucky day when a swarm of bees settled in your

By user:Abalg - Own work, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=2834782
thatch. Thatch of course being what the medieval person used as a roof. For those who were lucky enough to have a swarm in their roof, not only received honey, but propolis, a building material, that is a reddish resin used by the worker bees. Propolis was a great healing balm used for treating wounds and was highly valued. But those bees nesting in the home owner's thatch, not only gave the owner honey and propolis, but the beeswax brought an even higher price than an equal amount of honey. 

     I love the medieval time period, although I don't believe I'd like to have lived during that time. Life was hard. But it is a fun time period to write about. Most medieval authors take writer liberties such as, our heroes and heroines take regular baths, life isn't depicted quite as hard as it most likely was, and our heroines are not twelve years old marrying thirty year old men. So what do you think? Would you rather have writers take a few liberties and make their hero and heroine an exception to the rule or would you prefer to see history portrayed exactly as it was?

Debbie Lynne Costello is represented by Tamela Hancock Murray of the Steve Laube Agency. She attended Heritage University, where she studied Journalism and worked in the editing department.


She has completed five full length novels set in the Charleston, SC and Savannah, GA area in the late 19th century along with one Medieval, and is now seeking homes for them.


She and her husband have four children and two grandbabies. They live in upstate South Carolina with their family. She spent thirteen years coaching cheerleading and trying to make a difference in young girls’ lives. Debbie Lynne has raised Shetland sheepdogs for eighteen years. In her spare time, she sews, paints, knits, camps, and enjoys the grandbabies.
WEBSITE: www.debbielynnecostello.com BLOG:  www.theswordandspirit.blogspot.com BLOG: www.fictionaddictionfix.blogspot.com                                                                                                      Bee and propolis picture from Wikipedia.                                                                                                    

10 comments:

  1. I'd actually prefer to read about people as they really are-size, height, etc. Thanks for your interesting post. I liked the part about honey used as money. sharon, CA wileygreen1(at)yahoo(dot)com

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hey Sharon, Thanks for coming by. The first part of the blog mentioned size. They were around the height of men today. Six feet tall was normal. Weight, they ate healthy and had plenty so the assumption is they were not malnourished. So I'd assume that means a good healthy weight. Something I didn't put in there is that (I'm not sure how Lacy & Danzinger got this information unless from paintings) is that again like today the desired figure for a woman was slender.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Debbie, what a fascination blog! I prefer reading (and writing) about exceptional people. I don't want to know that my heroine took a bath six months ago or the hero smelled to high heaven when he took off his armor. I read to escape reality. Thank you for sharing,

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. LOL! I'm with you, Margaret! I prefer to forget some aspects because I too, read to escape. Thanks for sharing.

      Delete
  4. Great post, Debbie Lynne. I love to see the way things really were, except without unnecessary forays into hygiene issues, for example. When you asked which item we might think was valuable, my guess was salt, for that was also used as money in ancient times. As a person who loves honey, however, I liked finding that out. (All the more reason to protect the bees, today!)

    ReplyDelete
  5. Yes! Salt was very precious in ancient times. I found it so interesting myself, Linore. But more than the honey I thought it interesting about the propolis and also that the wax was worth as much as the honey! I love honey, too, So good in tea. Hmmm It's a cold rainy day here today. Tea and honey sound good. Just may go fix a cup. :o)

    ReplyDelete
  6. Loved this interesting post. I didn't know the worth and uses of honey and other by-products of the bees. I do prefer the history in fiction books to be as authentic as possible, so I'd rather see topics omitted or skirted than to blatantly portray things in a way that was totally not true. On the other hand, I don't mind showing the hero and heroine as exceptions to the norm, if that is somehow portrayed to the reader. I often chuckle to myself over the hygiene thing of times gone by, as I'm reading of romantic interludes--for example, on ship's voyage of several weeks.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. LOL! Yes, I know what you mean, Kay. But who wants to read she gazed into his eyes and then almost gaged. LOL>

      Delete
  7. Thank you for this interesting post! I have to admit, even though I consider myself a historian and generally prefer history to be portrayed as it was, there are definitely some instances in which I would prefer fiction authors take some liberties in their writing and make their hero and heroine exceptions to the rules. I would probably imagine them in my head as exceptions even if the author didn't write them that way. I mean, I personally would feel uncomfortable reading a novel where the main characters are a girl in her younger teens marrying a man in his upper twenties or thirties. And as Margaret said, I read to escape--I'd rather not think about the hygiene of the day. Eww! :-)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Heehee. I'm with you, Mallori! Eww! Nothing romantic about that is there? Thanks for coming by and for sharing.

      Delete