In this installment of his lecture series on medieval perspectives, covering topics like love, family, women's roles, and the disruptions caused by war, Oleg Voskoboinikov focuses on those considered foreigners in medieval Europe. The third lecture explores the influence of roads, labor, and the sound of bells on the rhythm of medieval life, challenging common perceptions that the Middle Ages lacked scientific discoveries.
What can be more banal than a regular routine? However, it's not all that simple. Medieval historians, who recorded the events of the past or the ones of their own time for both themselves and for eternity, were interested in deeds, heroics, and catastrophes—much like our modern media. Painting and sculpture, only on the eve of the Renaissance, started reflecting elements of nature and ‘real’ human life. Yet, the art portrayed daily life with a particular idealization, as is characteristic of the nature of art. The mundane seemed either not too informative or not too poetic. The vast majority of people remained outside of the interest of those who took up a pen or a brush through the centuries. Hence, historians in our time, picking up a populist phrase coined by American President Richard Nixon in 1969, started calling them the ‘silent majority’. Among all medieval literature, perhaps only the Icelandic family sagas managed to elevate the simple life of a humble farmer to the ranks of full-fledged artistic prose.
And yet, many everyday practices, the material circumstances of life, and the resulting beliefs held by medieval individuals about themselves and the world around them are well-documented and warrant our consideration. Let's begin with the simplest aspect. Rhythm is at the core of human existence, from the beating of our pulse to the succession of seasons, from birth to death. Elias Canetti, a thinker who embraced sharp paradoxes, wrote that ‘rhythm is originally the rhythm of the feet’. Let's pay close attention to this.
The roads
Merchants and pilgrims traversed vast distances: on horseback, mules, donkeys, ships, and, of course, foot. The relationship between a traveler and their road was much more personal and natural than our modern experience. The road both connects and separates us, even when we travel in a leisurely fashion. It represents the distance between destinations, the lines on a map, and in recent years, the arrow on a mobile navigation screen. In the Middle Ages, roads were often uncomfortable and perilous. However, each road was a series of successive places, loci. Every village, crossroads, monastery, bridge, town, or hill encountered on the way became a meeting place, an event, and held significance.
The typical medieval road was primarily intended for pedestrians, or at most, horse-drawn carriages. Equestrians, such as royal squads, could gallop ahead across fields, if necessary, but commoners mostly traveled on foot, exploring the world along the path with their own eyes and relying on their physical strength. Strong legs and lungs were valued attributes for workers, travelers, and riders (remember, a horse is not a car). Distances were measured without a standardized system, typically on foot or, less frequently, on horseback, covering about 20 to 40 kilometers per day. In the latter centuries of the Middle Ages, pilgrimage routes crisscrossed Europe, and it is hard to overestimate the role of these pedestrian paths in shaping the continent's history.
Further, the roads leading to distant Compostela in Spanish Galicia 1
time
All through the year, the day was divided into unequal intervals. The monastic day was structured around prayer hours, which inherited both the Jewish practice during the day and the three-hour night watches (‘vigiliae’) of the Romans during the night. The first Christians followed the words of the psalm: ‘Seven times a day I have given praise to thee, for the judgments of thy justice.’ They engaged in communal prayer, rising every three hours during the night (night watches), akin to the practices of the Romans. However, this practice was not about conquering darkness, but rather a response to the fear it instilled. Christianity, originating in the Mediterranean world, spread to the north, where people experienced almost white nights in summer and black days in winter.
The medieval Church conveyed to the believer that the time was a divine creation, and it was the Church's role to manage it on Earth. While the concept of the week was inherited from antiquity, the Christian spirit reinterpreted its significance. Jesus, as we know, somewhat disregarded the Sabbath i
Initially, the clanging of metal beaters and later the resonant toll of bells served as reminders that people existed within the domain of the Church, much akin to the voices of muezzins in Islamic nations calling believers to prayer times. As their influence grew, descending from celestial realms to earthly affairs, and as their temporal pursuits began to clash with the cadences of faith, merchants and artisans also harnessed the power of bells. The distinction between them and the church lay in the fact that these bells marked the hours of paid labor. This transformation materialized only toward the close of the Middle Ages as urban communities began erecting tower clocks in the late thirteenth century. Interestingly, the English word ‘clock’ can be traced back to the Middle Latin ‘clocca’, signifying ‘bell’, which, in turn, was derived from Old Irish. For quite a span, the medieval scholars didn't concern themselves much with minutes, and this indifference extended to businesspeople. Thus, the use of the minute hand only gained traction towards the end of the fifteenth century, followed by the second hand a century later. Notably, while mechanical clocks continue to play a role in modern life, the factory buzzers, successors to the medieval shop bells, have faded into obsolescence. Today, the sound of a church bell, even if often regulated by electronic mechanisms, remains as familiar in the Western world as the wail of an ambulance siren.
labour
Let us now delve into the topic of labor. It's important to recognize that the conditions, outcomes, and significance of labor have varied across different epochs and regions worldwide. The very concept of labor, now widely accepted in European civilization, emerged during the early stages of the Modern Age, making it one of the legacies of the Middle Ages. Notably, the notion of wages became prevalent in certain countries during the fifteenth century. Simultaneously, the term ‘labor’ has undergone diverse developmental trajectories in various European languages, assimilating people's perceptions of their actions and endeavors.
The opening pages of the Book of Genesis seemingly established the notion of labor within the Christian mindset as a consequence of original sin. However, a pivotal transformation was ignited by monastic regulations and their extensive interpretations: physical labor was elevated to a virtue for monks, who occupied the apex of the spiritual hierarchy. This perspective endorsed the idea that any individual engaged in labor was treading a righteous path. The Cistercian Order, emerging at the close of the eleventh century, and renowned for their absolute asceticism i
The reevaluation of labor is unmistakable: from a form of punishment, a legacy of the enslaved and the downtrodden, it evolves into a virtuous and commendable act. The Protestant 2
Our textbooks often present the transition from slavery to feudal land tenure in oversimplified terms, masking the complexities beneath clichéd models and patterns of productive force evolution. Domestic slavery and slave markets did not vanish with the advent of feudalism. Additionally, the term ‘slavus’ or Slavonian, which contributed to the term ‘servus’ (slave) in modern western European languages, underscored the trading of Slavic individuals, especially before their political associations solidified. Yet, as antiquity drew to a close, slave labor gradually ceased to be the foundational force driving existence.
The medieval world, whether in the countryside or city, endured rather than thrived over the span of centuries. It grappled with the nature that surrounded it, carving out spaces for habitation. This is evident in the ‘bergs’ (mountains or hills), ‘dorfs’ (villages), fords, Italian ‘Villanova,’ and French ‘villeins’ and ‘châteauneufs’—designations for new cities, villages, and castles—all familiar aspects of the Western landscape. This includes the reclaimed polders of Flanders and Zealand, each a testament to land taken from forests, seas, or marshes and subsequently cultivated and built upon.
The village, as we recognize it today, is essentially a product of the medieval era, albeit with variations influenced by regional characteristics. To grasp this concept, we need to fine-tune the sensitivity of our collective memory. Why is this important? In the Middle Ages, land was the cornerstone of all aspects of life, serving as the fundamental material resource upon which economic and social structures were built. Any modifications to land cultivation techniques carried significant historical implications, altering daily routines for thousands.
Around a millennium ago, a pivotal shift occurred with the introduction of the asymmetric wheeled plow, featuring a moldboard and iron coulter, which supplanted the simpler plow. This innovation led to a remarkable enhancement in the efficiency of peasant labor. The advent of the four-wheeled ‘carucca’ facilitated the cultivation of heavy, stony, and dry soils, granting peasants and lords newfound possibilities for economic expansion. The plow's capacity to lift and throw the furrow to the side improved drainage, a vital factor in the damp northern climate, thereby reducing plowmen’s time and effort. Deeper furrows and looser soil allowed for better absorption of traditional fertilizers, such as household waste, manure, and ash. This optimized the environment and shielded seeds from wind and birds, ensuring higher crop yields.
In addition to these advancements, progress in harness design and the broader utilization of draft power became evident. Innovations ranging from clamps and horseshoes to the yoke and the first depiction of a harrow on the Bayeux Tapestry at the close of the eleventh century further underscored the transformative nature of medieval agricultural practices.
Innovation
The Middle Ages isn't an era that we readily associate with discovery or any progress, technological or any other. We are not them! We've sent dogs—Belka and Strelka and Gagarin—into outer space, launched Armstrong to the moon, built dams over the Yenisei and the Hudson rivers, harnessed steam power, invented barbed wire, and, by splitting the atom, created nuclear warheads. Unlike people of the Middle Ages, we have confronted plagues and cholera, even though we remain largely powerless against the age-old scourge of cancer and not everything is crystal clear about Covid-19.
It is easy to view the medieval world as a hopeless Arkanar 4
The truth is that modern Western civilization, recognizing the crucial role of technology in daily life, has established a system for documenting and validating discoveries made by scientific institutions or skilled artisans. And yet, not all of these discoveries find immediate application, even in our current era. It may take years, decades, or even centuries between a discovery and the moment when that discovery becomes a part of people's daily lives.
Historically, it has been noted that for a new discovery, modernization, or enhancement of a tool, technique, or practice to truly take root, several factors need to align. These include the receptivity of a specific historical context to embrace innovation, the prevailing cultural climate, the collective mindset of the society, and sometimes even an external necessity that drives the adoption of that discovery.
Why, for instance, did ancient thought, despite its intellectual audacity, resist embracing the heliocentric model of the universe, a discovery made during the Hellenistic era? Could the notion of residing on a rotating planet have posed discomfort? Similarly, why did the ancient windmill, which would wait nearly a millennium to become the recognizable, iconic vertical structure of the European skyline, as seen in the works of Dutch artists of the seventeenth century and even in the views of Montmartre, remain largely unrecognized in its time? Was it perhaps due to the comparative affordability of slave labor? In an era of decline, such a consideration could have contributed to desired savings in the economy. Moreover, the Romans exhibited a pronounced affinity for engineering expertise.
A millennium ago, Vikings voyaged to North America 5
Any phenomenon, object, or practice we consider commonplace often has a convoluted genealogy that traces back to the enigmatic heart of the Middle Ages. As early as the thirteenth century, the understanding of glass with specially polished properties to magnify objects emerged, and just a century later, an Italian preacher marveled at the art of eyeglasses—a curiosity that was already in existence. The concept of aeronautics was distant, and yet the roots of Leonardo's experimental designs for flight can be traced back to medieval aspirations of soaring through the skies. Remarkable advancements in shipbuilding and navigation techniques paved the way for the Portuguese and Spanish maritime explorations. By the end of the twelfth century, Alexander Neckam, an Englishman, depicted the low-wrap loom, a device that facilitated weaving. Craftsmen sat upon it like riders on horses, guiding it with a foot-driven pedal drive, making weaving faster and more efficient.