Ian Mortimer’s The Time Traverls Guide to 14th Century England My Review

One of my first blog posts was an essay on time traveling. NPR asked listeners if they could, where would they go? My answer was not too surprisingly Jerusalem during the time of Christ. There are many reasons for this time period: I want to see just how the Romans and Jewish people behaved towards each other, I want to know if a man named Jesus of Nazareth was crucified (not that I wanted to see it; I saw Mel Gibson’s Passion, that was enough for me thank you very much) and I want to see just how people lived back in the Roman era. Why the Roman era? Well besides wanting to see how people lived before there were climate controlled markets, department stores and toothbrushes this is the only pre-modern era that had proper plumbing and hot baths. If I am going to time travel I at least want a nice hot bath once I get there.
As a medieval scholar I am curious about life between 1000-1500 B.C.E. but do not relish the idea of using chamber pots and would like more than one bath per year. Still, I love reading anything I can get my hands one that discusses life in medieval Europe. I read Michael Crichton’s Timeline in one day. Not for its wining plot line (it was awful) but for his detailed account of a medieval French village.  Bernard Knight can describe the smells and weather so well you feel as if you need air freshener and an umbrella while Barbra Tuchman can offer more than a glimpse into why medieval people lived as they did. Yet none of them can really pull the reader into the life and times of medieval Europe. None of them can make their readers feel like a time traveler.
Enter Ian Mortimer’ The Time Traveler’s Guide to Medieval England a Handbook for Visitors to the 14th century. The book jacket says “This radical new approach shows us the past is not just something to be studied: it is also something to be lived”. In no other book will you find a more complete narrative on how 14th century people ate, dressed, talked, traveled and how they survived in a pre-modern world. A world of chamber pots (if you are lucky), cumbersome clothing,  religious based medicine and a hierarchy that is so involved one needs notes on how to walk into a Lord’s manor (never put your back to a person of higher status).
The book is written in the style of the modern guide book, though without the usual tourist attraction stops. The narrative is engaging but not humorous. Always one for humor I was a little disappointed that Mortimer did not use humor in passages that cried out for it. Instead it is more of a how to book. I learned more from this book than I have in the years I have spent reading and studying Medieval Europe. Here are a few things I learned: I classify them as dispelling myths.
Peasants dressed in drab clothing and colors because of a Sumptuary law added to the books in 1337, not because this is all they could afford. There was a hierarchy to clothing styles. Each class had their own rules or dress codes. Peasants could not wear fur or bright clothing. Wealthy town’s people could wear fox or rabbit fur, but not Sable or Mink. Wealthy Knights could wear fabric worth no more than 6 marks, but no cloth of gold or lined with ermine or stones. Less wealthy Knights and noblemen could wear fabric costing no more than 5 marks, and so on. Even in fashion, class status is everything.
When entering anyone’s home you are expected to give up your sword; there is no pulling it out for a quick fight over crossed words. All swords are hung out of sight for the duration of a visit. If you die in someone’s home they get all of your belongings. It is your way of saying “sorry for the mess”.
Homes, even castles have little furniture. Visitors are left standing for long periods of time. Stools come out at dinner and will remain for the entire evening. There are no knights sitting around a King. The best thing to do is to stand against a wall so that your back is never to a superior ( cannot stress this enough)
Do not throw your leftover food from the table. This will clearly get you kicked out of a house! In fact do not eat all of the food placed in front of you. There should always be food left for the poor; they line up around dinner time waiting for their share. All trenchers (the bread that serves as plates) are given to the pigs.
If you are sick, bloodletting is the least of your worries. As a matter of fact be thankful a doctor is taking the time to look at you. Many doctors in this period us complicated math formulas based on your name, the name of the servant who brought you to the doctor and birth sign as a way to figure out if you will live or die. Even numbers you will not live (so why treat you) odd numbers you live. If you get sick during your stay the best thing to do is to stay away from doctors. You will have a better chance at survival.
There is so much more to this book that I could go on and on. Instead I will go over it again and come up with a top 10 things you need to know when visiting 14th century England. If you want to time travel to the period right before the Age of Enlightenment, I highly recommend picking up this book. This is the closest we will get to actually being there. 
By the way; two people asked so oviously I did not explain the contest very well. All of my followers are already entered. What I am asking you to do is spread the word about my blog. When your friends sign up to follow me have them post a comment on the contest page. This let’s me know who is now following me and who sent them here. You will be entered a second time if one of your friends mentions your name. 
Hope this clears it up. I am looking foward to giving a way a box of books!

Libraries in the digital age; the death of reference books?


We have been talking about e-books and what they mean to our beloved print books. Some people think e-books are the death of print books while others scoff at such notions. Let me tell you a sad tale my local librarian told me this weekend. It really made me stop and wonder if those who think e-books are the death of print are on to something.

For one of my finals I am to research scholarly articles and books; we are not to use what we find surfing the web. As I tried to maneuver through my school’s library website I recalled what we students did in the old days. We used to go to the library to use their reference books. Many of you may groan at the memories of sitting at a table taking notes from large texts. Others may smile at the memory of the friendly reference desk librarian who would spend countless hours helping you find just what you were looking for. I remember both.

Saturday I took pen and paper to the library. I went over the information center and asked for help. I had no idea where I would find information on the evolution of the Victorian education system. The librarian jumped up and whisked me over to the reference section. Oh she was so excited someone was asking for help and wanted to see the reference collection. What a collection it is! There are tomes on history, religion (oh I would kill for some of these books), cooking, gardening, mechanics, math and many more. I stopped more than once to admire the encyclopedias and books with so much information they needed volumes. Remember volumes? As I admired the books the librarian sighed. No one looks at these books anymore she told me. Students now rely on the internet and online editions of these books. She no longer orders reference books and wonders if she should get rid of these to make more room for fiction. I felt a tremendous loss and sadness for these books. How terrible that they sit collecting dust forgotten and unappreciated. I asked if she ever sold books from this collection, and was told from time to time she does. I wanted to whip out my checkbook and offer money for many of them. I would take them home and love them! If I had the money this is what I would do, but since I do not, all I can do is visit them more often.

After we looked for what I wanted to no avail we ended up standing in front of a computer screen. Here the friendly librarian showed me how to log onto their larger online reference collection and how to find what I am looking for. Sadly I will have to use the internet library for my research and wonder what this means for students worldwide. Will the large reference collections disappear? Will we be forced to always find scholarly information online? What will happen to these wonderful books? Slowly they will disappear and someday people may forget there was a time when we students sat at tables scribbling notes from books that were full of information and delight. Sigh…I feel old and wonder what e-books mean to print.

So dear Readers, the next time you are in the library go over to the reference collection and ask yourself if these books deserve to disappear. Ask yourself if books may one day be a thing of the past.

Amazing Waste

Repurposing Food and Reducing Waste

measurestillformeasure

Shakespeare, Classics, Theatre, Thoughts

Nerd Cactus

Quirky Intellect for the Discerning Nerd

Sillyverse

Stories of magic and mystery

Commonplace Fun Facts

Mind-Blowing Facts You Didn’t Know

Fictionophile

Fiction reviews, Bookblogger, Fiction book reviews, books, crime fiction, author interviews, mystery series, cover, love, bookish thoughts...

Patrick W. Marsh

monsters, monsters, everywhere

Shakespeare for Kids Books

Opening the door for kids to love Shakespeare and the classics

desperatelyseekingcymbeline

The 10-year Shakespeare New Year Resolution

Katzenworld

Welcome to the world of cats!

booksandopinions.com

The Book Reviews You Can Trust!

The Book Review Directory

For Readers and Writers

thelitcritguy

screams from the void

Author Adrienne Morris

Step Into the Past—Lose Yourself in the Story.

crafty theatre

ideas inspired by crafty characters

Critical Dispatches

Reports from my somewhat unusual life

The Nerd Nebula

The Nucleus of the Universe for all Nerd Hacks!