Search This Blog

Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Medieval May - a picture blog


My latest historical romance, "The Master Cook and the Maiden" takes place in early spring but mentions summer as a time for travel. May in particular for people in the Middle Ages was both very busy and a time of relaxation and pleasure. After the hard graft of winter and spring, May was a holiday month in early summer, with few tasks in the agricultural calendar. May Day, a blend of Christian and older pagan traditions, was celebrated by everyone, with dancing, revels and drink.

May was the time when people would go wandering in the fields and woodlands, to enjoy the fresh greenery and woodland flowers. It was also blossom time, when the fruit trees and hedgerows burst into bloom, wild cherries and wild apples following each other in glorious profusion.

Later summer was a harder task-master: if a peasant worked on the land, later summer was when the sheep were sheared, then the hay and wheat harvests were gathered in. Summer, too, was often the prime time for military activity, when knights might be called to fight for their overlord or king on campaign. However, even in these months there was merry-making.

Midsummer was marked by bonfires, a pagan ‘left-over’ from the earlier festival of Beltane and celebrated in the Middle Ages as the saint’s day of St John. Young couples would sometimes leap over the midsummer bonfire for luck. Wells could also be dressed with flowers around this time – a relic of earlier water-spirit worship, and still carried on today.

I touch on some of these customs in my novella "Midsummer Maid", part of "A Knight's Choice and Other Romances."
July was marked by St Swithin’s day, when the strewings in the churches would be changed from the winter rushes and straw to the summer hay and sedges, and August saw the feast time of Lammas – loaf mass – to give thanks for the hard-won harvest.

[Photo of oxeye daisies and cornflowers by Colin Smith, photo of well-dressing by Bob Embleton, both of geograph.org.uk. The fifteenth-century stained glass harvesting scene is from the Victoria and Albert Museum. All three sourced from Wikimedia Commons.]


Lindsay Townsend

4 comments:

  1. I love this kind of history, the day to day people and their joys and work. Thank you. Doris

    ReplyDelete
  2. I was glad to see all the fun things people enjoyed during the warmer months. he pleasantries they enjoyed were simple compared to what we have in these modern times, but I think their activities and entertainments were so much fun. What could be better than bonfires and the blossoming trees and fields coming to life?
    All the best to you, Lindsay. I love your Medieval romances.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Beautiful pictures of spring, and such fascinating history. Lovely post. I really enjoyed it.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Many thanks, Doris, Sarah and C.A.! Glad you enjoyed it.

    ReplyDelete