yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

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


3m read
·Nov 8, 2024

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?

The “Middle Ages” refers 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 called “On 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 not “lost”; 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 allegedly “terrible 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. The “Pear 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 term—along with the pejorative “Dark 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 thinkers—well—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.

More Articles

View All
Missing numbers in three digit subtraction
Let’s say that we are told that 495 is equal to 621 minus blank. What would blank be? Pause this video and see if you can figure that out. Okay, now let’s do this together. One technique is to try to visualize this on a number line. 495 is what you get w…
Inventing Graphics on Cave Walls | Origins: The Journey of Humankind
Early humans communicated with pictures and markings painted on cave walls and began to gradually work out symbols. As these markings spread and were understood and accepted, then you had the widespread transmission of ideas. We can see the very early day…
The Market Is About To Go INSANE
What’s up Graham? It’s guys here. So, in the midst of a new variant, a rollercoaster stock market, and the reveal that inflation may no longer be transitionary, there’s a chance that the entire market could soon be preparing for a topic that no one could …
Calculating confidence interval for difference of means | AP Statistics | Khan Academy
Kylie suspected that when people exercise longer, their body temperatures change. She randomly assigned people to exercise for 30 or 60 minutes, then measured their temperatures. The 18 people who exercised for 30 minutes had a mean temperature, so this i…
Tim Urban of Wait But Why
Is the purpose of Wait But Why to start kind of informing people to get them to care before it’s too late, or what is your intent with the whole, like, all the content you’re making? The purpose in general is for me to do something I’m having fun at. I s…
YC Startup Talks: Understanding Equity with Jordan Gonen, CEO & Co-founder of Compound
[Music] Well, thank you so much for the kind introduction. Um, it’s really great to meet everyone. Um, I’m Jordan, I’m one of Compound’s founders, and today I’m going to start by talking to you all about my hatred of personal finance. Um, I helped start C…