1 / 14

The Middle Ages

The Middle Ages. ≈ 1000s – 1400s CE. Medieval England vs Contemporary New York. Contemporary New York Capitalist : making $$$ Individualistic : you are special and unique Mobile : we travel Literate : we can read Secular : we don’t think about religion all the time. Medieval England

javier
Download Presentation

The Middle Ages

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Middle Ages ≈ 1000s – 1400s CE

  2. Medieval England vs Contemporary New York • Contemporary New York • Capitalist: making $$$ • Individualistic: you are special and unique • Mobile: we travel • Literate: we can read • Secular: we don’t think about religion all the time • Medieval England • Manorialist: surviving on the manor • Communal: you’re not important as an individual (e.g. last names didn’t exist until 1200s); you’re part of a category of people • Immoble: you would live and die within 5 square miles • Illiterate: almost no one can read • Religious: The Church and dreams of heaven would have been important

  3. Manor House

  4. Serfs’ houses • Farm animals slept indoors to provide extra warm during cold weather • Always dark and smoky, because the fire was in the middle of the house

  5. Inside a serf’s house

  6. Food For the lord and lady • Bread • Beef • Lamb • Beer and wine • Chicken • Eggs • herring (fish) • Cheese • Being fat was a sign of wealth • Giving away food was a sign of wealth and kept the serfs happy For serfs • Porridge • Bread • Beer (at every meal) • Peas and beans were only source of protein • A little bacon or salt pork • Onion and garlic • Sometimes eggs or cheese for richer serfs • In summer, cabbage, lettuce, etc • Raw fruit was considered unhealthful • Lacking lipids, calcium, vitamins A, C, and D. Low in calories • Sometimes crops failed, which means less food

  7. Childhood • Childbirth was dangerous for both mother and child. • Infants are usually left alone in the house, in swaddling clothes, while parents work. • Younger children are looked after by older girls. Young children play and maybe help out a bit with chores. • As a teenager, you would work a full day with your parents.

  8. Marriage • A dowry(money or property) was paid by the father or the bride to the husband. • The lord normally gave his consent to the marriage. • Premarital sex was common, to prove a woman’s fertility . • Wedding rings were exchanged at the church door and small amount of money was given to charity. • A feast would follow • No divorce for peasants.

  9. Celebrations • Christmas and Easter each last 14 days; during which time, the peasants don’t have to work. • Halloween is celebrated with bonfires • Harvest time also brings a huge feast. • All holidays are celebrated with extra food and beer, from the lord and lady.

  10. Bathing and sleeping • You would bathe would about four times a year • You and your family would use a barrel without a lid. • Father would bathe first and the youngest child last, all in the same water. • You would sleep on a straw bed on the floor. Siblings would share and so would husbands and wives.

  11. Clothing • Men wore • a tunic ( a long shirt) • hose (like modern leggings, but not stretchy) • a belt • a hood or cloth cap. • Shoes were made of leather with wooden soles. • Underwear was not always worn and was made of linen • Women wore • a long, loose dress • a belt • A wimple (a light hat)

  12. Medicine • Doctors were for nobles and rich merchants. • Barbers would have treated the serfs. • Main form of treatment (until the mid-1800s) was blood-letting • The average person lived to be 45 years old.

  13. New Vocabulary • manorialism : the economic system where everything is based on and comes from the manor • self-sufficiency: when you produce everything you need, like on the manor. • knight: a son of nobleman, who was loyal to the lord and could be asked to fight for the king • noble: someone born into a wealthy, land-owning family • serf: someone who works the land, can be sold with the land, does not have a lot of rights • Feudalism: when power is decentralized; held by lords and not the king • Chivalry: the code of behavior for knights, emphasizing honor, courage, loyalty, etc.

More Related