• Is everything you assumed about the Middle Ages wrong?

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Thu Mar 7 09:53:22 2024
    from https://www.economist.com/culture/2024/02/21/is-everything-you-assumed-about-the-middle-ages-wrong

    Is everything you assumed about the Middle Ages wrong?
    There was more to the period than violence, superstition and ignorance,
    argues a new book
    A drawing of a man showing his wife her reflection in a mirror in the 1500s. image: getty images
    Feb 21st 2024

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    “In public, your bottom should emit no secret winds past your thighs. It disgraces you if other people notice any of your smelly filth.” This
    useful bit of advice for young courtiers in the early 13th century
    appears in “The Book of the Civilised Man”, a poem by Daniel of Beccles.
    It is the first English guide to manners.

    Ian Mortimer, a historian, argues that this and other popular works of
    advice that began appearing around the same time represent something
    important: a growing sense of social self-awareness, self-evaluation and self-control. Why then? Probably because of the revival of glass mirrors
    in the 12th century, which had disappeared from Europe after the fall of
    Rome. The mirror made it possible for men and women to see themselves as
    others did. It confirmed their individuality and inspired a greater
    sense of autonomy and potential. By 1500 mirrors were cheap, and their
    impact had spread through society.

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