Manners, Customs, and Dress During the Middle Ages and During the Renaissance - Paul Lacroix - E-Book

Manners, Customs, and Dress During the Middle Ages and During the Renaissance E-Book

Paul Lacroix

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  • Herausgeber: JH
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2019
Beschreibung

A cultural history of the Middle Ages amd Renaissance Period, focussing on various aspects of public and private everyday life of society, such as hunting, games, guilds, costumes and many more.

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Preface.

The several successive editions of "The Arts of the Middle Ages and Period of the Renaissance" sufficiently testify to its appreciation by the public. The object of that work was to introduce the reader to a branch of learning to which access had hitherto appeared only permitted to the scientific. That attempt, which was a bold one, succeeded too well not to induce us to push our researches further. In fact, art alone cannot acquaint us entirely with an epoch. "The arts, considered in their generality, are the true expressions of society. They tell us its tastes, its ideas, and its character." We thus spoke in the preface to our first work, and we find nothing to modify in this opinion. Art must be the faithful expression of a society, since it represents it by its works as it has created them--undeniable witnesses of its spirit and manners for future generations. But it must be acknowledged that art is only the consequence of the ideas which it expresses; it is the fruit of civilisation, not its origin. To understand the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, it is necessary to go back to the source of its art, and to know the life of our fathers; these are two inseparable things, which entwine one another, and become complete one by the other.

 

The Manners and Customs of the Middle Ages:--this subject is of the greatest interest, not only to the man of science, but to the man of the world also. In it, too, "we retrace not only one single period, but two periods quite distinct one from the other." In the first, the public and private customs offer a curious mixture of barbarism and civilisation. We find barbarian, Roman, and Christian customs and character in presence of each other, mixed up in the same society, and very often in the same individuals. Everywhere the most adverse and opposite tendencies display themselves. What an ardent struggle during that long period! and how full, too, of emotion is its picture! Society tends to reconstitute itself in every aspect. She wants to create, so to say, from every side, property, authority, justice, &c., &c., in a word, everything which can establish the basis of public life; and this new order of things must be established by means of the elements supplied at once by the barbarian, Roman, and Christian world--a prodigious creation, the working of which occupied the whole of the Middle Ages. Hardly does modern society, civilised by Christianity, reach the fullness of its power, than it divides itself to follow different paths. Ancient art and literature resuscitates because custom insensibly takes that direction. Under that influence, everything is modified both in private and public life. The history of the human race does not present a subject more vast or more interesting. It is a subject we have chosen to succeed our first book, and which will be followed by a similar study on the various aspects of Religious and Military Life.

 

This work, devoted to the vivid and faithful description of the Manners and Customs of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, answers fully to the requirements of contemporary times. We are, in fact, no longer content with the chronological narration and simple nomenclatures which formerly were considered sufficient for education. We no longer imagine that the history of our institutions has less interest than that of our wars, nor that the annals of the humbler classes are irrelevant to those of the privileged orders. We go further still. What is above all sought for in historical works nowadays is the physiognomy, the inmost character of past generations. "How did our fathers live?" is a daily question. "What institutions had they? What were their political rights? Can you not place before us their pastimes, their hunting parties, their meals, and all sorts of scenes, sad or gay, which composed their home life? We should like to follow them in public and private occupations, and to know their manner of living hourly, as we know our own."

 

In a high order of ideas, what great facts serve as a foundation to our history and that of the modern world! We have first royalty, which, weak and debased under the Merovingians, rises and establishes itself energetically under Pépin and Charlemagne, to degenerate under Louis le Débonnaire and Charles le Chauve. After having dared a second time to found the Empire of the Caesars, it quickly sees its sovereignty replaced by feudal rights, and all its rights usurped by the nobles, and has to struggle for many centuries to recover its rights one by one.

 

Feudalism, evidently of Germanic origin, will also attract our attention, and we shall draw a rapid outline of this legislation, which, barbarian at the onset, becomes by degrees subject to the rules of moral progress. We shall ascertain that military service is the essence itself of the "fief," and that thence springs feudal right. On our way we shall protest against civil wars, and shall welcome emancipation and the formation of the communes. Following the thousand details of the life of the people, we shall see the slave become serf, and the serf become peasant. We shall assist at the dispensation of justice by royalty and nobility, at the solemn sittings of parliaments, and we shall see the complicated details of a strict ceremonial, which formed an integral part of the law, develop themselves before us. The counters of dealers, fairs and markets, manufactures, commerce, and industry, also merit our attention; we must search deeply into corporations of workmen and tradesmen, examining their statutes, and initiating ourselves into their business. Fashion and dress are also a manifestation of public and private customs; for that reason we must give them particular attention.

 

And to accomplish the work we have undertaken, we are lucky to have the conscientious studies of our old associates in the great work of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance to assist us: such as those of Emile Bégin, Elzéar Blaze, Depping, Benjamin Guérard, Le Roux de Lincy, H. Martin, Mary-Lafon, Francisque Michel, A. Monteil, Rabutau, Ferdinand Séré, Horace de Viel-Castel, A. de la Villegille, Vallet de Viriville.

 

As in the volume of the Arts of the Middle Ages, engraving and chromo-lithography will come to our assistance by reproducing, by means of strict fac-similes, the rarest engravings of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, and the most precious miniatures of the manuscripts preserved in the principal libraries of France and Europe. Here again we have the aid of the eminent artist, M. Kellerhoven, who quite recently found means of reproducing with so much fidelity the gems of Italian painting.

 

Paul Lacroix

(Bibliophile Jacob).

 

Table of Contents.

Condition of Persons and Lands

 

Disorganization of the West at the Beginning of the Middle Ages.--Mixture of Roman, Germanic, and Gallic Institutions.--Fusion organized under Charlemagne.--Royal Authority.--Position of the Great Feudalists.--Division of the Territory and Prerogatives attached to Landed Possessions.--Freeman and Tenants.--The Læti, the Colon, the Serf, and the Labourer, who may be called the Origin of the Modern Lower Classes.--Formation of Communities.--Right of Mortmain.

 

Privileges and Rights (Feudal and Municipal)

 

Elements of Feudalism.--Rights of Treasure-trove, Sporting, Safe-Conducts, Ransom, Disinheritance, &c.--Immunity of the Feudalists.--Dues from the Nobles to their Sovereign.--Law and University Dues.--Curious Exactions resulting from the Universal System of Dues.--Struggles to enfranchise the Classes subjected to Dues.--Feudal Spirit and Citizen Spirit.--Resuscitation of the System of Ancient Municipalities in Italy, Germany, and France.--Municipal Institutions and Associations.--The Community.--The Middle-Class Cities (Cités Bourgeoises).--Origin of National Unity.

 

Private Life in the Castles, the Towns, and the Rural Districts

 

The Merovingian Castles.--Pastimes of the Nobles: Hunting, War.--Domestic Arrangements.--Private Life of Charlemagne.--Domestic Habits under the Carlovingians.--Influence of Chivalry.--Simplicity of the Court of Philip Augustus not imitated by his Successors.--Princely Life of the Fifteenth Century.--The bringing up of Latour Landry, a Noble of Anjou.--Varlets, Pages, Esquires, Maids of Honour.--Opulence of the Bourgeoisie.--"Le Ménagier de Paris."--Ancient Dwellings.--State of Rustics at various Periods.--"Rustic Sayings," by Noël du Fail.

 

Food and Cookery

 

History of Bread.--Vegetables and Plants used in Cooking.--Fruits.--Butchers' Meat.--Poultry, Game.--Milk, Butter, Cheese, and Eggs.--Fish and Shellfish.--Beverages: Beer, Cider, Wine, Sweet Wine, Refreshing Drinks, Brandy.--Cookery.--Soups, Boiled Food, Pies, Stews, Salads, Roasts, Grills.--Seasoning, Truffles, Sugar, Verjuice.--Sweets, Desserts, Pastry,--Meals and Feasts.--Rules of Serving at Table from the Fifteenth to the Sixteenth Centuries.

 

Hunting

 

Venery and Hawking.--Origin of Aix-la-Chapelle.--Gaston Phoebus and his Book.--The Presiding Deities of Sportsmen.--Sporting Societies and Brotherhoods.--Sporting Kings: Charlemagne, Louis IX., Louis XI., Charles VIII., Louis XII., Francis I., &c.--Treatise on Venery.--Sporting Popes.--Origin of Hawking.--Training Birds.--Hawking Retinues.--Book of King Modus.--Technical Terms used in Hawking.--Persons who have excelled in this kind of Sport.--Fowling.

 

Games and Pastimes

 

Games of the Ancient Greeks and Romans.--Games of the Circus.--Animal Combats.--Daring of King Pepin.--The King's Lions.--Blind Men's Fights.--Cockneys of Paris.--Champ de Mars.--Cours Plénières and Cours Couronnées.--Jugglers, Tumblers, and Minstrels.--Rope-dancers.--Fireworks.--Gymnastics.--Cards and Dice.--Chess, Marbles, and Billiards.--La Soule, La Pirouette, &c.--Small Games for Private Society.--History of Dancing.--Ballet des Ardents.--The "Orchésographie" (Art of Dancing) of Thoinot Arbeau.--List of Dances.

 

Commerce

 

State of Commerce after the Fall of the Roman Empire; its Revival under the Frankish Kings; its Prosperity under Charlemagne; its Decline down to the Time of the Crusaders.--The Levant Trade of the East.--Flourishing State of the Towns of Provence and Languedoc.--Establishment of Fairs.--Fairs of Landit, Champagne, Beaucaire, and Lyons.--Weights and Measures.--Commercial Flanders.--Laws of Maritime Commerce.--Consular Laws.--Banks and Bills of Exchange.--French Settlements on the Coast of Africa.--Consequences of the Discovery of America.

 

Guilds and Trade Corporations

 

Uncertain Origin of Corporations.--Ancient Industrial Associations.--The Germanic Guild.--Colleges.--Teutonic Associations.--The Paris Company for the Transit of Merchandise by Water.--Corporations properly so called.--Etienne Boileau's "Book of Trades," or the First Code of Regulations.--The Laws governing Trades.--Public and Private Organization of Trades Corporations and other Communities.--Energy of the Corporations.--Masters, Journeymen, Supernumeraries, and Apprentices.--Religious Festivals and Trade Societies.--Trade Unions.

 

Taxes, Money, and Finance

 

Taxes under the Roman Rule.--Money Exactions of the Merovingian Kings.--Varieties of Money.--Financial Laws under Charlemagne.--Missi Dominici.--Increase of Taxes owing to the Crusades.--Organization of Finances by Louis IX.--Extortions of Philip lo Bel.--Pecuniary Embarrassment of his Successors.--Charles V. re-establishes Order in Finances.--Disasters of France under Charles VI., Charles VII., and Jacques Coeur.--Changes in Taxation from Louis XI. to Francis I.--The Great Financiers.--Florimond Robertet.

 

 

Law and the Administration of Justice

 

The Family the Origin of Government.--Origin of Supreme Power amongst the Franks.--The Legislation of Barbarism humanised by Christianity.--Right of Justice inherent to the Right of Property.--The Laws under Charlemagne.--Judicial Forms.--Witnesses.--Duels, &c.--Organization of Royal Justice under St. Louis.--The Châtelet and the Provost of Paris.--Jurisdiction of Parliament, its Duties and its Responsibilities.--The Bailiwicks.--Struggles between Parliament and the Châtelet.--Codification of the Customs and Usages.--Official Cupidity.--Comparison between the Parliament and the Châtelet.

 

Secret Tribunals

 

The Old Man of the Mountain and his Followers in Syria.--The Castle of Alamond, Paradise of Assassins.--Charlemagne the Founder of Secret Tribunals amongst the Saxons.--The Holy Vehme.--Organization of the Tribunal of the Terre Rouge, and Modes adopted in its Procedures.--Condemnations and Execution of Sentences.--The Truth respecting the Free Judges of Westphalia.--Duration and Fall of the Vehmie Tribunal.--Council of Ten, in Venice; its Code and Secret Decisions.--End of the Council of Ten.

 

Punishments

 

Refinements of Penal Cruelty.--Tortures for different Purposes.--Water, Screw-boards, and the Rack.--The Executioner.--Female Executioners.--Tortures.--Amende Honorable.--Torture of Fire, Real and Feigned.--Auto-da-fé.--Red-hot Brazier or Basin.--Beheading.--Quartering.--The Wheel.--Garotting.--Hanging.--The Whip.--The Pillory.--The Arquebuse.--Tickling.--Flaying.--Drowning.--Imprisonment.--Regulations of Prisons.--The Iron Cage.--"The Leads" of Venice.

 

Jews

 

Dispersion of the Jews.--Jewish Quarters in the Mediæval Towns.--The Ghetto of Rome.--Ancient Prague.--The Giudecca of Venice.--Condition of the Jews; Animosity of the People against them; Vexations Treatment and Severity of the Sovereigns.--The Jews of Lincoln.--The Jews of Blois.--Mission of the Pastoureaux.--Extermination of the Jews.--The Price at which the Jews purchased Indulgences.--Marks set upon them.--Wealth, Knowledge, Industry, and Financial Aptitude of the Jews.--Regulations respecting Usury as practised by the Jews.--Attachment of the Jews to their Religion.

 

Gipsies, Tramps, Beggars, and Cours des Miracles

 

First Appearance of Gipsies in the West.--Gipsies in Paris.--Manners and Customs of these Wandering Tribes.--Tricks of Captain Charles.--Gipsies expelled by Royal Edict.--Language of Gipsies.--The Kingdom of Slang.--The Great Coesre, Chief of the Vagrants; his Vassals and Subjects.--Divisions of the Slang People; its Decay, and the Causes thereof.--Cours des Miracles.--The Camp of Rogues.--Cunning Language, or Slang.--Foreign Rogues, Thieves, and Pickpockets.

 

Ceremonials

 

Origin of Modern Ceremonial.--Uncertainty of French Ceremonial up to the End of the Sixteenth Century.--Consecration of the Kings of France.--Coronation of the Emperors of Germany.--Consecration of the Doges of Venice.--Marriage of the Doge with the Sea.--State Entries of Sovereigns.--An Account of the Entry of Isabel of Bavaria into Paris.--Seats of Justice.--Visits of Ceremony between Persons of Rank.--Mourning.--Social Courtesies.--Popular Demonstrations and National Commemorations--New Year's Day.--Local Festivals.--Vins d'Honneur.--Processions of Trades.

 

Costumes

 

Influence of Ancient Costume.--Costume in the Fifteenth Century.--Hair.--Costumes in the Time of Charlemagne.--Origin of Modern National Dress.--Head-dresses and Beards: Time of St. Louis.--Progress of Dress: Trousers, Hose, Shoes, Coats, Surcoats, Capes.--Changes in the Fashions of Shoes and Hoods.--Livrée.--Cloaks and Capes.--Edicts against Extravagant Fashions.--Female Dress: Gowns, Bonnets, Head-dresses, &c.--Disappearance of Ancient Dress.--Tight-fitting Gowns.--General Character of Dress under Francis I.--Uniformity of Dress.

 

Table of Illustrations.

I. Chromolithographs.

1. The Queen of Sheba before Solomon. Fac-simile of a Miniature from the Breviary of Cardinal Grimani, attributed to Memling. Costumes of the Fifteenth Century.

 

2. The Court of Marie of Anjou, Wife of Charles VII. Fac-simile of a Miniature from the "Douze Perilz d'Enfer." Costumes of the Fifteenth Century.

 

3. Louis XII. leaving Alexandria, on the 24th April, 1507, to chastise the City of Genoa. From a Miniature in the "Voyage de Gênes" of Jean Marot.

 

4. A Young Mother's Retinue. Miniature from a Latin "Terence" of Charles VI. Costumes of the Fourteenth Century.

 

5. Table Service of a Lady of Quality. Fac-simile of a Miniature in the "Roman de Renaud de Montauban." Costumes of the Fifteenth Century.

 

6. Ladies Hunting. From a Miniature in a Manuscript Copy of "Ovid's Epistles." Costumes of the Fifteenth Century.

 

7. A Court Fool. Fac-simile of a Miniature in a Manuscript of the Fifteenth Century.

 

8. The Chess-players. After a Miniature of the "Three Ages of Man." (End of the Fifteenth Century).

 

9. Martyrdom of SS. Crispin and Crépinien. From a Window in the Hôpital des Quinze-Vingts (Fifteenth Century).

 

10. Settlement of Accounts by the Brotherhood of Charité-Dieu, Rouen, in 1466. A Miniature from the "Livre des Comptes" of this Society (Fifteenth Century).

 

11. Decapitation of Guillaume de Pommiers and his Confessor at Bordeaux in 1377 ("Chroniques de Froissart").

 

12. The Jews' Passover. Fac-simile of a Miniature in a Missal of the Fifteenth Century of the School of Van Eyck.

 

13. Entry of Charles VII. into Paris. A Miniature from the "Chroniques d'Enguerrand de Monstrelet." Costumes of the Sixteenth Century.

 

14. St. Catherine surrounded by the Doctors of Alexandria. A Miniature from the Breviary of Cardinal Grimani, attributed to Memling. Costumes of the Fifteenth Century.

 

15. Italian Lace-work, in Gold-thread. The Cypher and Arms of Henri III. (Sixteenth Century).

 

II. Engravings.

Aigues-Mortes, Ramparts of the Town of

Alms Bag, Fifteenth Century

Amende honorable before the Tribunal

America, Discovery of

Anne of Brittany and the Ladies of her Court

Archer, in Fighting Dress, Fifteenth Century

Armourer

Arms of Louis XI. and Charlotte of Savoy

Arms, Various, Fifteenth Century

Bailiwick

Bailliage, or Tribunal of the King's Bailiff, Sixteenth Century

Baker, The, Sixteenth Century

Balancing, Feats of, Thirteenth Century

Ballet, Representation of a, before Henri III. and his Court

Banner of the Coopers of Bayonne

" " La Rochelle

" Corporation of Bakers of Arras

" " Bakers of Paris

" " Boot and Shoe Makers of Issoudun

" Corporation of Publichouse-keepers of Montmédy

" Corporation of Publichouse-keepers of Tonnerre

" Drapers of Caen

" Harness-makers of Paris

" Nail-makers of Paris

" Pastrycooks of Caen

" " La Rochelle

" " Tonnerre

" Tanners of Vie

" Tilers of Paris

" Weavers of Toulon

" Wheelwrights of Paris

Banquet, Grand, at the Court of France

Barber

Barnacle Geese

Barrister, Fifteenth Century

Basin-maker

Bastille, The

Bears and other Beasts, how they may be caught with a Dart

Beggar playing the Fiddle

Beheading

Bell and Canon Caster

Bird-catching, Fourteenth Century

Bird-piping, Fourteenth Century

Blind and Poor Sick of St. John, Fifteenth Century

Bob Apple, The Game of

Bootmaker's Apprentice working at a Trial-piece, Thirteenth Century

Bourbon, Constable de, Trial of, before the Peers of France

Bourgeois, Thirteenth Century

Brandenburg, Marquis of

Brewer, The, Sixteenth Century

Brotherhood of Death, Member of the

Burgess of Ghent and his Wife, from a Window of the Fifteenth Century

Burgess at Meals

Burgesses with Hoods, Fourteenth Century

Burning Ballet, The

Butcher, The, Sixteenth Century

Butler at his Duties

Cards for a Game of Piquet, Sixteenth Century

Carlovingian King in his Palace

Carpenter, Fifteenth Century

Carpenter's Apprentice working at a Trial-piece, Fifteenth Century

Cast to allure Beasts

Castle of Alamond, The

Cat-o'-nine-tails

Celtic Monument (the Holy Ox)

Chamber of Accounts, Hotel of the

Chandeliers in Bronze, Fourteenth Century

Charlemagne, The Emperor

" Coronation of

" Dalmatica and Sandals of

" receiving the Oath of Fidelity from one of his great Barons

" Portrait of

Charles, eldest Son of King Pepin, receiving the News of the Death of his Father

Charles V. and the Emperor Charles IV., Interview between

Château-Gaillard aux Andelys

Châtelet, The Great

Cheeses, The Manufacture of, Sixteenth Century

Chilpéric, Tomb of, Eleventh Century

Clasp-maker

Cloth to approach Beasts, How to carry a

Cloth-worker

Coins, Gold Merovingian, 628-638

" Gold, Sixth and Seventh Centuries

" " Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries

" Gold and Silver, Thirteenth Century

" " Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries

" Silver, Eighth to Eleventh Centuries

Cologne, View of, Sixteenth Century

Comb in Ivory, Sixteenth Century

Combat of a Knight with a Dog, Thirteenth Century

Companion Carpenter, Fifteenth Century

Cook, The, Sixteenth Century

Coppersmith, The, Sixteenth Century

Corn-threshing and Bread-making, Sixteenth Century

Costume of Emperors at their Coronation since the Time of Charlemagne

" King Childebert, Seventh Century

" King Clovis, Sixth Century

" Saints in the Sixth to Eighth Century

" Prelates, Eighth to Tenth Century

" a Scholar of the Carlovingian Period

Costume of a Scholar, Ninth Century

" a Bishop or Abbot, Ninth Century

" Charles the Simple, Tenth Century

" Louis le Jeune

" a Princess

" William Malgeneste, the King's Huntsman

" an English Servant, Fourteenth Century

" Philip the Good

" Charles V., King of France

" Jeanne de Bourbon

" Charlotte of Savoy

" Mary of Burgundy

" the Ladies of the Court of Catherine de Medicis

" a Gentleman of the French Court, Sixteenth Century

" the German Bourgeoisie, Sixteenth Century

Costumes, Italian, Fifteenth Century

Costumes of the Thirteenth Century

" the Common People, Fourteenth Century

" a rich Bourgeoise, of a Peasant-woman, and of a Lady of the Nobility, Fourteenth Century

" a Young Nobleman and of a Bourgeois, Fourteenth Century

" a Bourgeois or Merchant, of a Nobleman, and of a Lady of the Court or rich Bourgeoise, Fifteenth Century

" a Mechanic's Wife and a rich Bourgeois, Fifteenth Century

" Young Noblemen of the Court of Charles VIII

" a Nobleman, a Bourgeois, and a Noble Lady, of the time of Louis XII

" a rich Bourgeoise and a Nobleman, time of Francis I

Counter-seal of the Butchers of Bruges in 1356

Country Life

Cour des Miracles of Paris

Court Fool

" of Love in Provence, Fourteenth Century

" of the Nobles, The

" Supreme, presided over by the King

" of a Baron, The

" Inferior, in the Great Bailiwick

Courtiers amassing Riches at the Expense of the Poor, Fourteenth Century

Courts of Love in Provence, Allegorical Scene of, Thirteenth Century

Craftsmen, Fourteenth Century

Cultivation of Fruit, Fifteenth Century

" Grain, and Manufacture of Barley and Oat Bread

Dance called "La Gaillarde"

" of Fools, Thirteenth Century

" by Torchlight

Dancers on Christmas Night

David playing on the Lyre

Dealer in Eggs, Sixteenth Century

Deer, Appearance of, and how to hunt them with Dogs

Deputies of the Burghers of Ghent, Fourteenth Century

Dice-maker

Distribution of Bread, Meat, and Wine

Doge of Venice, Costume of the, before the Sixteenth Century

" in Ceremonial Costume of the Sixteenth Century

" Procession of the

Dog-kennel, Fifteenth Century

Dogs, Diseases of, and their Cure, Fourteenth Century

Dortmund, View of, Sixteenth Century

Drille, or Narquois, Fifteenth Century

Drinkers of the North, The Great

Druggist

Dues on Wine

Dyer

Edict, Promulgation of an

Elder and Juror, Ceremonial Dress of an

Elder and Jurors of the Tanners of Ghent

Eloy, St., Signature of

Empalement

Entry of Louis XI. into Paris

Equestrian Performances, Thirteenth Century

Estrapade, The, or Question Extraordinary

Executions

Exhibitor of Strange Animals

Falcon, How to train a New, Fourteenth Century

" How to bathe a New

Falconer, Dress of the, Thirteenth Century

" German, Sixteenth Century

Falconers, Thirteenth Century

" dressing their Birds, Fourteenth Century

Falconry, Art of, King Modus teaching the, Fourteenth Century

" Varlets of, Fourteenth Century

Families, The, and the Barbarians

Fight between a Horse and Dogs, Thirteenth Century

Fireworks on the Water

Fish, Conveyance of, by Water and Land

Flemish Peasants, Fifteenth Century

Franc, Silver, Henry IV.

Franks, Fourth to Eighth Century

" King or Chief of the, Ninth Century

" King of the, dictating the Salic Law

Frédégonde giving orders to assassinate Sigebert, from a Window of the Fifteenth Century

Free Judges

Funeral Token

Gallo-Roman Costumes

Gaston Phoebus teaching the Art of Venery

German Beggars

" Knights, Fifteenth Century

" Soldiers, Sixth to Twelfth Century

" Sportsman, Sixteenth Century

Ghent, Civic Guard of

Gibbet of Montfaucon, The

Gipsies Fortune-telling

" on the March

Gipsy Encampment

" Family, A

" who used to wash his Hands in Molten Lead

Goldbeater

Goldsmith

Goldsmiths of Ghent, Names and Titles of some of the Members of the Corporation of, Fifteenth Century

" Group of, Seventeenth Century.

Grain-measurers of Ghent, Arms of the

Grape, Treading the

Grocer and Druggist, Shop of a, Seventeenth Century

Hanging to Music

Hare, How to allure the

Hatter

Hawking, Lady setting out, Fourteenth Century

Hawks, Young, how to make them fly, Fourteenth Century

Hay-carriers, Sixteenth Century

Herald, Fourteenth Century

Heralds, Lodge of the

Heron-hawking, Fourteenth Century

Hostelry, Interior of an, Sixteenth Century

Hôtel des Ursins, Paris, Fourteenth Century

Hunting-meal

Imperial Procession

Infant Richard, The, crucified by the Jews at Pontoise

Irmensul and Crodon, Idols of the Ancient Saxons

Iron Cage

Issue de Table, The

Italian Beggar

" Jew, Fourteenth Century

" Kitchen, Interior of

" Nobleman, Fifteenth Century

Jacques Coeur, Amende honorable of, before

Charles VII

" House of, at Bourges

Jean Jouvenel des Ursins, Provost of Paris, and Michelle de Vitry, his Wife (Reign of Charles VI.)

Jerusalem, View and Plan of

Jew, Legend of a, calling the Devil from a Vessel of Blood

Jewish Ceremony before the Ark

" Conspiracy in France

" Procession

Jews taking the Blood from Christian Children

" of Cologne burnt alive, The

" Expulsion of the, in the Reign of the Emperor Hadrian

" Secret Meeting of the

John the Baptist, Decapitation of

John the Fearless, Duke of Burgundy, Assassination of

Judge, Fifteenth Century

Judicial Duel, The

Jugglers exhibiting Monkeys and Bears, Thirteenth Century

" performing in Public, Thirteenth Century

King-at-Arms presenting the Sword to the Duc de Bourbon

King's Court, The, or Grand Council, Fifteenth Century

Kitchen, Interior of a, Sixteenth Century.

" and Table Utensils

Knife-handles in Ivory, Sixteenth Century

Knight in War-harness

Knight and his Lady, Fourteenth Century

Knights and Men-at-Arms of the Reign of Louis le Gros

Labouring Colons, Twelfth Century

Lambert of Liége, St., Chimes of the Clock of

Landgrave of Thuringia and his Wife

Lawyer, Sixteenth Century

Leopard, Hunting with the, Sixteenth Century

Lubeck and its Harbour, View of, Sixteenth Century

Maidservants, Dress of, Thirteenth Century

Mallet, Louis de, Admiral of France

Mark's Place, St., Venice, Sixteenth Century

Marseilles and its Harbour, View and Plan of, Sixteenth Century

Measurers of Corn, Paris, Sixteenth Century

Measuring Salt

Merchant Vessel in a Storm

Merchants and Lion-keepers at Constantinople

Merchants of Rouen, Medal to commemorate the Association of the

Merchants of Rouen, Painting commemorative of the Union of, Seventeenth Century

Merchants or Tradesmen, Fourteenth Century

Metals, The Extraction of

Miller, The, Sixteenth Century

Mint, The, Sixteenth Century

Musician accompanying the Dancing

New-born Child, The

Nicholas Flamel, and Pernelle, his Wife, from a Painting of the Fifteenth Century

Nobility, Costumes of the, from the Seventh to the Ninth century

" Ladies of the, in the Ninth Century

Noble Ladies and Children, Dress of, Fourteenth Century

Noble Lady and Maid of Honour, Fourteenth Century

Noble of Provence, Fifteenth Century

Nobleman hunting

Nogent-le-Rotrou, Tower of the Castle of

Nut-crackers, Sixteenth Century

Occupations of the Peasants

Officers of the Table and of the Chamber of the Imperial Court

Oil, the Manufacture of, Sixteenth Century

Old Man of the Mountain, The

Olifant, or Hunting-horn, Fourteenth Century

" " details of

Orphaus, Gallois, and Family of the Grand Coesre, Fifteenth Century

Palace, The, Sixteenth Century

Palace of the Doges, Interior Court of the

Paris, View of

Partridges, Way to catch

Paying Toll on passing a Bridge

Peasant Dances at the May Feasts

Pheasant-fowling, Fourteenth Century

Philippe le Bel in War-dress

Pillory, View of the, in the Market-place of Paris, Sixteenth Century

Pin and Needle Maker

Ploughmen. Fac-simile of a Miniature in very ancient Anglo-Saxon Manuscript

Pond Fisherman, The

Pont aux Changeurs, View of the ancient

Pork-butcher, The, Fourteenth Century

Poulterer, The, Sixteenth Century

Poultry-dealer, The

Powder-horn, Sixteenth Century

Provost's Prison, The

Provostship of the Merchants of Paris, Assembly of the, Sixteenth Century

Punishment by Fire, The

Purse or Leather Bag, with Knife or Dagger, Fifteenth Century

Receiver of Taxes, The

Remy, St., Bishop of Rheirns, begging of Clovis the restitution of the Sacred Vase, Fifteenth Century

River Fishermen, The, Sixteenth Century

Roi de l'Epinette, Entry of the, at Lille

Roman Soldiers, Sixth to Twelfth Century

Royal Costume

Ruffés and Millards, Fifteenth Century

Sainte-Geneviève, Front of the Church of the Abbey of

Sale by Town-Crier

Salt-cellar, enamelled, Sixteenth Century

Sandal or Buskin of Charlemagne

Saxony, Duke of

Sbirro, Chief of

Seal of the Bateliers of Bruges in 1356

" Corporation of Carpenters of St. Trond (Belgium)

" Corporation of Clothworkers of Bruges

" Corporation of Fullers of St. Trond

" Corporation of Joiners of Bruges

" " Shoemakers of St. Trond

" Corporation of Wool-weavers of Hasselt

" Free Count Hans Vollmar von Twern

" Free Count Heinrich Beckmann

" " Herman Loseckin

" " Johann Croppe

" King Chilpéric

" United Trades of Ghent, Fifteenth Century

Seat of Justice held by Philippe de Valois

Secret Tribunal, Execution of the Sentences of the

Sémur, Tower of the Castle of

Serf or Vassal, Tenth Century

Serjeants-at-Arms, Fourteenth Century

Shepherds celebrating the Birth of the Messiah

Shoemaker

Shops under Covered Market, Fifteenth Century

Shout and blow Horns, How to

Simon, Martyrdom of, at Trent

Slaves or Serfs, Sixth to Twelfth Century

Somersaults

Sport with Dogs, Fourteenth Century

Spring-board, The

Spur-maker

Squirrels, Way to catch

Stag, How to kill and cut up a, Fifteenth Century

Staircase of the Office of the Goldsmiths of Rouen, Fifteenth Century

Stall of Carved Wood, Fifteenth Century

Standards of the Church and the Empire

State Banquet, Sixteenth Century

Stoertebeck, Execution of

Styli, Fourteenth Century

Swineherd

Swiss Grand Provost

Sword-dance to the Sound of the Bagpipe, Fourteenth Century

Sword-maker

Table of a Baron, Thirteenth Century

Tailor

Talebot the Hunchback

Tinman

Tithe of Beer, Fifteenth Century

Token of the Corporation of Carpenters of Antwerp

Token of the Corporation of Carpenters of Maëstricht

Toll under the Bridges of Paris

Toll on Markets, levied by a Cleric, Fifteenth Century

Torture of the Wheel, Demons applying the

Tournaments in Honour of the Entry of Queen Isabel into Paris

Tower of the Temple, Paris

Trade on the Seaports of the Levant, Fifteenth Century

Transport of Merchandise on the Backs of Camels

University of Paris, Fellows of the, haranguing the Emperor Charles IV.

Varlet or Squire carrying a Halberd, Fifteenth Century

View of Alexandria, Sixteenth Century

Village Feast, Sixteenth Century

Village pillaged by Soldiers

Villain, the Covetous and Avaricious

Villain, the Egotistical and Envious

Villain or Peasant, Fifteenth Century

Villain receiving his Lord's Orders

Vine, Culture of the

Vintagers, The, Thirteenth Century

Votive Altar of the Nautes Parisiens

Water Torture, The

Weight in Brass of the Fish-market at Mans, Sixteenth Century

Whale Fishing

William, Duke of Normandy, Eleventh Century

Winegrower, The

Wire-worker

Wolves, how they may be caught with a Snare

Woman under the Safeguard of Knighthood, Fifteenth Century

Women of the Court, Sixth to Tenth Century

Woodcock, Mode of catching a, Fourteenth Century

Manners, Customs, and Dress During the Middle Ages, and During the Renaissance Period.

Condition of Persons and Lands.

Disorganization of the West at the Beginning of the Middle Ages.--Mixture of Roman, Germanic, and Gallic Institutions.--Fusion organized under Charlemagne.--Royal Authority.--Position of the Great Feudalists.--Division of the Territory and Prerogatives attached to Landed Possessions.--Freemen and Tenants.--The Læti, the Colon, the Serf, and the Labourer, who may be called the Origin of the Modern Lower Classes.--Formation of Communities.--Right of Mortmain.

 

The period known as the Middle Ages, says the learned Benjamin Guérard, is the produce of Pagan civilisation, of Germanic barbarism, and of Christianity. It began in 476, on the fall of Agustulus, and ended in 1453, at the taking of Constantinople by Mahomet II., and consequently the fall of two empires, that of the West and that of the East, marks its duration. Its first act, which was due to the Germans, was the destruction of political unity, and this was destined to be afterwards replaced by religions unity. Then we find a multitude of scattered and disorderly influences growing on the ruins of central power. The yoke of imperial dominion was broken by the barbarians; but the populace, far from acquiring liberty, fell to the lowest degrees of servitude. Instead of one despot, it found thousands of tyrants, and it was but slowly and with much trouble that it succeeded in freeing itself from feudalism. Nothing could be more strangely troubled than the West at the time of the dissolution of the Empire of the Caesars; nothing more diverse or more discordant than the interests, the institutions, and the state of society, which were delivered to the Germans (Figs. 1 and 2). In fact, it would be impossible in the whole pages of history to find a society formed of more heterogeneous or incompatible elements. On the one side might be placed the Goths, Burgundians, Vandals, Germans, Franks, Saxons, and Lombards, nations, or more strictly hordes, accustomed to rough and successful warfare, and, on the other, the Romans, including those people who by long servitude to Roman dominion had become closely allied with their conquerors (Fig. 3). There were, on both sides, freemen, freedmen, colons, and slaves; different ranks and degrees being, however, observable both in freedom and servitude. This hierarchical principle applied itself even to the land, which was divided into freeholds, tributary lands, lands of the nobility, and servile lands, thus constituting the freeholds, the benefices, the fiefs, and the tenures. It may be added that the customs, and to a certain degree the laws, varied according to the masters of the country, so that it can hardly be wondered at that everywhere diversity and inequality were to be found, and, as a consequence, that anarchy and confusion ruled supreme.

 

Figs. 1 and 2.--Costumes of the Franks from the Fourth to the Eighth Centuries, collected by H. de Vielcastel, from original Documents in the great Libraries of Europe.

 

Fig. 3.--Costumes of Roman Soldiers.

 

Fig. 4.--Costume of German Soldiers.

 

From Miniatures on different Manuscripts, from the Sixth to the Twelfth Centuries.

 

The Germans (Fig. 4) had brought with them over the Rhine none of the heroic virtues attributed to them by Tacitus when he wrote their history, with the evident intention of making a satire on his countrymen. Amongst the degenerate Romans whom those ferocious Germans had subjugated, civilisation was reconstituted on the ruins of vices common in the early history of a new society by the adoption of a series of loose and dissolute habits, both by the conquerors and the conquered.

 

Fig. 5.--Costumes of Slaves or Serfs, from the Sixth to the Twelfth Centuries, collected by H. de Vielcastel, from original Documents in the great Libraries of Europe.

 

In fact, the conquerors contributed the worse share (Fig. 5); for, whilst exercising the low and debasing instincts of their former barbarism, they undertook the work of social reconstruction with a sort of natural and innate servitude. To them, liberty, the desire for which caused them to brave the greatest dangers, was simply the right of doing evil--of obeying their ardent thirst for plunder. Long ago, in the depths of their forests, they had adopted the curious institution of vassalage. When they came to the West to create States, instead of reducing personal power, every step in their social edifice, from the top to the bottom, was made to depend on individual superiority. To bow to a superior was their first political principle; and on that principle feudalism was one day to find its base.

 

Servitude was in fact to be found in all conditions and ranks, equally in the palace of the sovereign as in the dwellings of his subjects. The vassal who was waited on at his own table by a varlet, himself served at the table of his lord; the nobles treated each other likewise, according to their rank; and all the exactions which each submitted to from his superiors, and required to be paid to him by those below him, were looked upon not as onerous duties, but as rights and honours. The sentiment of dignity and of personal independence, which has become, so to say, the soul of modern society, did not exist at all, or at least but very slightly, amongst the Germans. If we could doubt the fact, we have but to remember that these men, so proud, so indifferent to suffering or death, would often think little of staking their liberty in gambling, in the hope that if successful their gain might afford them the means of gratifying some brutal passion.

 

Fig. 6.--King or Chief of Franks armed with the Seramasax, from a Miniature of the Ninth Century, drawn by H. de Vielcastel.