Medieval Mystery Hour.

NOTE: This post is NOT directly about woodworking (per say) and sawdust posts have been few and far between here lately, but I did promise I would chronicle some of my work and research going into the process of writing my book and I've vowed to set everything else aside until I finish a rudimentary first draft. 
A big part of that process is collecting and organizing the various sources and research from a scattering of ideas into something real. It's also about following up on leads that were too deep down the rabbit hole to chase the first time through. If you're only here for the sawdust - hold on, it will return. 


Eugene Viollet-le-Duc casts a long shadow over any research into medieval architecture and furniture. He was a French architect who lived between 1814 and 1879 who developed a fascination with medieval buildings and furnishings, going as far as to "renovate" or "rebuild" some medieval structures in the manner he believed correct. Wikipedia lists his attempts as combining "historical fact with creative modification."

Towards the end of his career he set to writing. Particularly of interest to my work is two tomes: "The Dictionary of French Architecture From the 11th to the 16th Centuries," and "The Dictionary of French Furnishings From The Carolingian Period To The Renaissance."  Every book I have referenced along my path, from Victor Chinnery, to Penelope Eames, to Eric Mercer and beyond sites Viollet-le-Duc's work extensively. In some instances this is the only source work available.

Unfortunately for me I am a failure of higher education and culture in that I am distinctly uni-lingual, (and barely so at that) and though the Architecture Dictionary has been translated and is available, the Furniture Dictionary is still stranded in French. This leaves the unsatisfying task of filtering the book through Google Translate followed further deciphering of what has passed through.

This morning I started work on the chapter on Beds.

Bed shown in Morgan Bible Folio 38 Recto shows Ishbosheth, Son of Saul, Slain in his bed 
by two of his own captains after the support for his kingship had eroded away. 

The beds shown in the Morgan Bible are frustratingly without substance beyond their bulbous feet. Every one is heavily draped in textiles. When the bible denies me enough detail to work from I am forced to search for other credible and connected sources.

The first and best clue came from the stained glass windows of Chartres Cathedral. They were created in the same window of time as the Bible and you'll notice a similarity in style that has lead some to speculate the artisans who illustrated the Book were truly stained glass artisans who were "moonlighting."

The Charlemagne Window- Bay 7 Panel 3 -  in Chartres Cathedral.

Now I have some idea of what a headboard, footboard, and side rails might look like. Unsurprising it's similar to the construction of the chairs shown in the Bible. It still doesn't tell me anything about the suspension of the mattress. I had this image from "The Illustrated History Of Furniture" by Frederick Litchfield (1893) showing a "Saxon State Bed"


But the image seemed weird and out of context. It does show a rope suspension system for underneath the mattress, something I suspected to be, but was struggling for documentation on, but Litchfield doesn't give the source or location for the original image. How can I trust or work with it then?

This morning, working through Viollet-le-Duc's tome I same across this image ;


The complete image! Obviously Litchfield had borrowed from Viollet-le-Duc in a way not all that unusual. Better yet Viollet mentions the source! I gleefully began to click around the internet, there are many archives of medieval manuscripts about and the trick is finding access to the right one through strong Google-Fu.

The manuscript is called the Hortus Delicarium, started in 1167 as an illustrated encyclopedia by the Abbess Herrad of Landsberg. What a source! An illustrated encyclopedia? How Had I not heard of this before?

Breath.

Unfortunately the manuscript itself was lost to history. In 1870, during the Franco-Prussian War, German bombs on the boarder town of Strasbourg destroyed the Municipal Library. The manuscript (and many other valuable historical treasures and documents) burned. All that remains are some of the images copied by those able to study it. You can find a taste in the Digitized Archives of the British Library.

Morgan Bible Folio 42 Verso  showing Bathsheba abed with the son she bore King David in the cradle. 

The end of this is both happy and sad. I gathered enough circumstantial documentational evidence to move forward on a piece that's been difficult to figure out, and in the process I've learned about yet one more fantastic bit of knowledge removed from our consciousness through the useless aggression of mankind. We often talk about the cost of two World Wars in terms of cultural history but forget the shit did not start or end there.

Still, I am decidedly not a lament what's past kind of guy. Remember no matter where you go, there you are. but if we go here, then what.


This is Viollet-le-Duc's illustration of a Carolingian Era (8th to 9th century) daybed taken from a manuscript and cleaned up for perspective by his artist. I'm having trouble deciphering the source, but I've seen representations with a side rail from this time before too, and this could be an answer as well. a bare bones frame held all around with ropes, and check out those far out corner brackets. . .

It's always interesting.

Ratione et Passionis
Oldwolf

Comments

  1. I love these posts, even when no sawdust is flying. Do all those kings sleep with their crown on their head? Seems mighty uncomfortable. (just kidding, I know about the symbolic nature of the art in the middle ages).

    The rope suspension is very plausible. That or they were sleeping on hard wooden boards. When visiting Asia you see all people sleeping on very hard surfaces. Even when you get a matress it is often rock hard. Do you know what kind of matress they had in the middle ages? A straw filled sack is the usual answer, but maybe the kings had something a little better.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. All I have in notes or books in reference to the mattress or cushions refers to the material making up the cover. colored, "painted," woven, those type of terms. I may have passed by the information at one point with some books I've only been able to find in libraries and didn't see fit to take notes.

      I have a specific suspicion connected to the making of linen cloth. the retting, breaking and scutching of flax plants into fibers suitable to spin linen thread created a soft, fluffy byproduct called toe. As I understand it takes an acre of flax to produce one linen tunic, this would make a lot of byproduct to sell as stuffing.

      Other guesses I have would be hair, feathers and wool. All of which would be vastly superior to straw.

      D

      Delete
  2. I love these posts, even when no sawdust is flying. Do all those kings sleep with their crown on their head? Seems mighty uncomfortable. (just kidding, I know about the symbolic nature of the art in the middle ages).

    The rope suspension is very plausible. That or they were sleeping on hard wooden boards. When visiting Asia you see all people sleeping on very hard surfaces. Even when you get a matress it is often rock hard. Do you know what kind of matress they had in the middle ages? A straw filled sack is the usual answer, but maybe the kings had something a little better.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Quite an enjoyable read Sir! I do enjoy reading of the fruit of your efforts. I love this time in history and love the furniture... but I lack the love of true research and the digging. I would rather read the results from someone who knows how to research!!! Thanks :)

    ReplyDelete

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