Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
PowerPoint: Medieval Life
1.
2.
3. The Battle of Carnival and Lent has subject matter that can be found in Medieval
Literature and plays.
This painting depicts a common festival of the period, as celebrated in the Southern
Netherlands. It presents the contrast between two sides of contemporary life, as can
be seen by the appearance of the inn on the left side - for enjoyment, and the church
on the right side - for religious observance. The busy scene depicts well-behaved
children near the church and a beer drinking scene near the inn. Other scenes show a
well in the centre (the coming together of different parts of the community), a fish stall
and two competing floats.
A battle enacted between the figures Carnival and Lent was an important event in
community life in early modern Europe, representing the transition between two
different seasonal cuisines: livestock that was not to be wintered was slaughtered, and
meat was in good supply. As the period of Lent commenced, with its enforced
abstinence and the concomitant spiritual purification in preparation for Easter, the
butcher shops closed and the butchers travelled into the countryside to purchase cattle
for the spring.
In this painting the figure of Carnival is a large man riding a wine barrel, wearing a huge
pie as a head-dress; he is wielding a long spit, complete with a pig’s head, as a weapon
(for jousting) for the fight with Lent.
4. In the foreground, two opposing processions, the one to the left led by the replete
figure of Carnival and the one to the right by the haggard figure of Lent, are about to
confront each other in a burlesque parody of a joust. Here, on either side of the
picture, are feasting and fasting, winter and spring (the trees to the left are
leafless, those to the right have leaves), popular jollity and well-ordered charity, the ill-
famed tavern and the church as the refuge of the pious soul. Whilst the father's work
was not lacking in humour, the son's emphasises the encyclopaedic aspect: the many
scenes accompanying the "battle" are all ceremonies or customs attached to the rites
of carnival and lent, which succeed each other from Epiphany until Easter.
The Web Gallery
5. The Luttrell Psalter is an illuminated manuscript written by monks in Medieval Times.
One of England's greatest art treasures is the Luttrell Psalter. Sir Geoffrey Luttrell was a
wealthy Lincolnshire landowner who commissioned the Luttrell Psalter around 1320.
It's an illuminated manuscript considered to have taken approximately ten years to
complete. A Psalter (the "p" is silent) takes its name from the psalms (songs) and
meditations contained within its pages. In the wide margins around the edge of the tidy
calligraphy are delicate decorations, not too unlike what we would call "doodles"
today, though infinitely more complex and beautiful. The artist/calligrapher of the Luttrell
Psalter is, of course, totally unknown.
Of course it's not the Latin Psalms that interest us today, but the decorating extrania. The
Luttrell Psalter is considered by art and literary experts to be the best surviving pictorial
documentation of everyday life in England during the Middle Ages.
14. In Pairs:
• How do these pictures show how hard life was for the
peasant farmers in medieval times?
• For what purpose are these pictures intended for? ie, to
show off to other Lords, or to record farming at the time?
• How reliably do they show life in Medieval times?
• Once you have finished looking at the pictures, state what
you think they say about the Lord of the Manor?