Part 20 (1/2)
A full suit of combat armor in the early Middle Ages could weigh between forty-five and eighty pounds.
Early jousts were often held in lieu of actual battles. Combatants would get together, joust to the death, and the winners could be home by dark. By the twelfth century, those battles had evolved into ”melees,” in which a group of knights would charge into each other all at once, with the winner being the last guy still on his horse.Melees, in turn, more often became one-on-one contests. By 1292, a Statute of Arms for Tournaments set rules to limit bloodshed. The contests became more tests of skill and less of brute force.Although condemned by the Church and frowned on by some royalty, jousting remained a popular spectator sport through the mid-sixteenth century. It began to lose steam in 1559, however, after King Henry II of France was killed in a joust. It seems a lance splinter got through the viewing slot in his helmet and penetrated his brain.Belts and Bridles It's a common scene in many ribald tales of the Middle Ages: The macho Crusader, off on his way to a few years in the Holy Land, has his wife, daughters, or any other women he feels protective toward (or possessive of) fitted with a chast.i.ty belt. You know, those things that sort of look like metal underwear, only with a lock on them to prevent hanky panky.Trouble is, it didn't happen, at least not among medieval knights. The earliest such devices that have been found date from the sixteenth century, well after the Crusades and the Age of Chivalry. It appears that linking chast.i.ty belts to knights and Crusaders was dreamed up by nineteenth-century writers who loved to romanticize about courtly love during the Middle Ages.Far more common, and somewhat less romantic, was the brank, also known as the scold's bridle. It was sort of an iron cage with a tongue depressor. Women who were deemed nags or gossips were forced to wear the thing as punishment. Fortunately for radio talk show hosts, use of the device faded out in the seventeenth century.BY THE NUMBERS [image]
3.
number of books in Dante's The Divine Comedy The Divine Comedy ( (Inferno, Purgatorio, and and Paradiso Paradiso)
7.
number of oxen considered equal in value to one pound of nutmeg, according to a 1393 German table of prices
10.
estimated percentage of the population of Nuremberg, Germany, killed by the Black Death (believed by some historians to be the lowest death rate from plague of any major European city)
12.
period of apprentices.h.i.+p, in years, that a medieval European craftsman might have to serve before being considered a master
13.
number of years it took to build Westminster Abbey, which was finished in 1065
17.
number of years the Venetian trader and explorer Marco Polo spent at the court of Kublai Khan
21.
minimum age for being a knight
23.
number of years in the thirteenth century when the Holy Roman Empire had no emperor (a period, between 1250 and 1273, known as ”The Great Interregnum”)
30.
approximate number of Mongol tribes united by Genghis Khan into a unified fighting force
100.
number of cantos, or divisions, in The Divine Comedy The Divine Comedy 116.
length in years of the Hundred Years' War between France and England, from 1337 to 1453 400.
number of years spent building the spectacular royal palace of Great Zimbabwe in southeastern Africa 2,000.
number of Jews hanged simultaneously at Strasbourg, Germany, in 1348 because they were held responsible for the Black Death 5,000.
number of flour mills in England in 1086, according to the Domesday Book, a census of the country's a.s.sets ordered by William I 30,000.
number of Scotsmen under the command of Robert Bruce VIII, who defeated an English force of one hundred thousand and took the last English-held castle in Scotland at the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314 100,000.
estimated number of men and women who volunteered for the First Crusade in 1095 110,000.
approximate maximum size of Genghis Khan's army, which was pretty small by medieval standards 500,000.
approximate population of Kyoto, j.a.pan, in 1185 1,000,000.
approximate population of the Song Chinese city of Hangzhou in the late 1200s