Placeholder Image

字幕表 動画を再生する

  • Medieval Europe.

  • Where unbathed, sword-wielding knights ate rotten meat,

  • thought the Earth was flat, defended chastity-belt wearing maidens,

  • and tortured their foes with grisly gadgets.

  • Except... this is more fiction than fact.

  • So, where do all the myths about the Middle Ages come from?

  • And what were they actually like?

  • TheMiddle Agesrefers to a 1,000-year timespan,

  • stretching from the fall of Rome in the 5th century

  • to the Italian renaissance in the 15th.

  • Though it's been applied to other parts of the world,

  • the term traditionally refers specifically to Europe.

  • One misconception is that medieval people were all ignorant and uneducated.

  • For example, a 19th century biography of Christopher Columbus

  • incorrectly purported that medieval Europeans thought the Earth was flat.

  • Sure, many medieval scholars describe the Earth as the center of the universe

  • but there wasn't much debate as to its shape.

  • A popular 13th century text was literally calledOn the Sphere of the World.”

  • And literacy rates gradually increased during the Middle Ages

  • alongside the establishment of monasteries, convents and universities.

  • Ancient knowledge was also notlost”;

  • Greek and Roman texts continued to be studied.

  • The idea that medieval people ate rotten meat and used spices to cover the taste

  • was popularized in the 1930s by a British book.

  • It misinterpreted one medieval recipe

  • and used the existence of laws barring the sale of putrid meat

  • as evidence it was regularly consumed.

  • In fact, medieval Europeans avoided rancid foods

  • and had methods for safely preserving meats,

  • like curing them with salt.

  • Spices were popular.

  • But they were oftentimes pricier than meat itself.

  • So if someone could afford them, they could also buy unspoiled food.

  • Meanwhile, the 19th century French historian Jules Michelet

  • referred to the Middle Ages as “a thousand years without a bath.”

  • But even small towns boasted well-used public bathhouses.

  • People lathered up with soaps made of things

  • like animal fat, ash, and scented herbs.

  • And they used mouthwash, teeth-scrubbing cloths with pastes and powders,

  • and spices and herbs for fresh-smelling breath.

  • So, how about medieval torture devices?

  • In the 1890s, a collection of allegedlyterrible relics of a semi-barbarous age

  • went on tour.

  • Among them: the Iron Maiden, which fascinated viewers with its spiked doors

  • but it was fabricated, possibly just decades before.

  • And there's no indication Iron Maidens actually existed in the Middle Ages.

  • ThePear of Anguish,” meanwhile, did exist

  • but probably later on and it couldn't have been used for torture.

  • It may have just been a shoe-stretcher.

  • Indeed, many ostensibly medieval torture devices are far more recent inventions.

  • Medieval legal proceedings were overall less gruesome than these gadgets suggest.

  • They included fines, imprisonment, public humiliation,

  • and certain forms of corporal punishment.

  • Torture and executions did happen,

  • but especially violent punishments, like drawing and quartering,

  • were generally reserved for crimes like high treason.

  • Surely chastity belts were real, though, right?

  • Probably not.

  • They were first mentioned by a 15th century German engineer, likely in jest,

  • alongside fart jokes and a device for invisibility.

  • From there, they became popular subjects of satire

  • that were later mistaken for medieval reality.

  • Ideas about the Middle Ages have varied

  • depending on the interest of those in later times.

  • The termalong with the pejorativeDark Ages”—

  • was popularized during the 15th and 16th centuries

  • by scholars biased toward the Classical and Modern periods

  • that came before and after.

  • And, as Enlightenment thinkers celebrated their dedication to reason,

  • they depicted medieval people as superstitious and irrational.

  • In the 19th century, some Romantic European nationalist thinkerswell

  • romanticized the Middle Ages.

  • They described isolated, white, Christian societies,

  • emphasizing narratives of chivalry and wonder.

  • But knights played minimal roles in medieval warfare.

  • And the Middle Ages saw large-scale interactions.

  • Ideas flowed into Europe along Byzantine, Muslim, and Mongol trade routes.

  • And merchants, intellectuals, and diplomats of diverse origins

  • visited medieval European cities.

  • The biggest myth may be that the millennium of the Middle Ages

  • amounts to one distinct, cohesive period of European history at all.

  • Originally defined less by what they were than what they weren't,

  • the Middle Ages became a ground for dueling ideas

  • fueling more fantasy than fact.

Medieval Europe.

字幕と単語

ワンタップで英和辞典検索 単語をクリックすると、意味が表示されます

B2 中上級

6 myths about the Middle Ages that everyone believes - Stephanie Honchell Smith

  • 30 5
    shuting1215 に公開 2023 年 03 月 26 日
動画の中の単語