In the Middle Ages, men and common women, had the same offices or labours. There was no difference. There were women blacksmiths, merchants, and apothecaries.
Others were midwives, worked in the fields, or were engaged in creative endeavours such as writing, playing musical instruments, dancing, and painting.
The women had many offices, though the only that were exclusively feminine, were those where one was working with silk
Being a famous woman in The Middle Ages was difficult.
However we can find some of them, such as Christine de Pisan and Joan of Arc
Christine de Pisan
Christine was Italian, the daughter of an astrologer. Her father wanted her to be educated, so she learned French, Latin, Arithmetic, and Geometry.
At the age of 15, she married Etienne du
Castel, who was twenty-four. He died
two years later, leaving her with
three children and numerous relatives to
support. She used her skill as a writer and
poetess to earn a living.
She was one of the few
true feminists before
the modern era.
Joan of Arc
As a teenager, Joan believed she heard the
voices of angels telling her to help the
future Charles VII, who
had been deprived
of his inheritance
by the English and
the Burgundians,
to regain his throne.
Impressed, Charles sent her to raise the
siege at Orléans, which she did
successfully, driving the English from the
city and allowing Charles VII to be
crowned at Rheims
She was soon captured by Burgundians
and sold to the English, who found her
guilty of witchcraft and wearing a man's
clothes.
She was burned
at the stake in 1431
and canonized
in 1920.
The church was very powerful in The
Middle Ages.
They ruled everybody
including the kings and
emperors.
The church at this time
was the Roman Catholic
Church which was headed
by the Pope .
All the Pope had to do was tell a king,
"Do this or I will excommunicate you
and all your people”.
Excommunication was the biggest threat,
it meant that the king and
his people would not be
able to do the holy
sacraments and therefore
(according to the Catholics)
they would go to Hell instead of Heavens .
During the middle ages, the Church was a major part of everyday life. The Church served to give people spiritual guidance and it served as their government as well.
Now, in the 21th century, the church’s role has diminished. It no longer has the power that it used to have.
Women in the Inquisition
The Inquisition was a
Roman Catholic tribunal
for discovery and punishment
of heresy .
The role of women was very different from the role they have nowadays. In those days, women were submissive to men, we mean they didn´t take part in any issue. During the inquisition, they were blamed for everything and accused of witchcraft .
T hese prejudices against women made
them a major victim of the Inquisition and
women were considered prone to evil.
If they had some knowledge or cured
diseases, they were humiliated and
everyone said their work was the work of
evil .
Women could not even make decisions about their life, they didn´t decide whether they wanted to marry or not, since everything depended on their parents and husband. In exceptional cases in which women were emancipated, they were persecuted by society.
We can say that during the Inquisition in the Middle Ages, exchanges of cultures between different people from Europe were broken. The persecution of Jews and Arabs and all people who weren’t Christians, produced a decline in the world of culture .
The Minstrels and women in The Middle Ages
Their social function was one of the
most singular and extravagant of the
medieval days.
They were instrumentalists, right-handed
jugglers and acute poets. They also were
adventurous people without job neither
profit, that alternated their musical
exhibitions with the thefts in squares .
However, above all, the minstrels were
transmisors of fundamental culture during
the Middle Ages: they transmitted music
poetry, news, social events in a world of
illiterate people and impregnated of oral
tradition.
Women were active as menestrelles and
joglereusses. Permorfers themselves, they
travelled as part of small groups of
entertainers.
Entertainment for rich people centred
around the spectacles of jousting and feasts or banquets. The role of women
in the medieval parties
was that to prepare all the
necessary things for the
banquets and also
to entertain men.
Women's involvemente with medieval music took a variety of forms; they served at times as audience, as participant like singers and dancers, as sponsor, and as creator.
Perhaps the most famous of the medieval
women composers is Hildegard of Bingen.
She was a re markable woman, at a time
when few women wrote, she produced
many works of theology and visionary
writings.
Hildegard had a vision that changed the course of her life. A vision of god gave her instant understanding of the meaning of the religious texts, and commanded her to write down everything she would observe in her visions.
Hildegard was able to finish her first
visionary work Scivias ("Know the Ways
of the Lord") and her fame began to
spread through Germany and beyond.
In addition to Scivias she wrote two other
works of visionary writing:
- Liber vitae meritorum (1150-63) (Book of
Life's Merits)
- Liber divinorum operum (1163) ("Book of
Divine Works"), in which she wrote about
her theology of microcosm and macrocosm.
Man as a mirror through which the splendor
of the macrocosm was reflected.
She also wrote books on natural history
and curative power: Liber subtilatum
("The book of subtleties of the Diverse
Nature of Things").
Music was extremely important to
Hildegard.
She wrote hymns and sequences in honor
of saints and founded a vibrant convent,
where her musical plays were performed
Healers and witches in The Middle Ages
Healers and witches were like doctors that
used to do magic to cure people.
They were considered respectable, but
they were hated
and feared too .
They practiced black and white magic in
their rituals, because of this their rituals
were considered satanic so, for this reason,
those women were persecuted.
Witches were very prone to use certain
herbs and animal parts in order to make
potions which, they thought, could heal
the wounded or extend life as well as other
spells.
Medieval people were especially scared of
this because of natural disasters and
phenomena including eclipses,earthquakes.
Healers were considered witches. Perhaps
the church perceived these women, with
their special, often esoteric, healing skills,
as a threat to its supremacy in the lives of
its parishioners. The result was the brutal
persecution of unknown numbers of
mostly peasant women.
The medicine in the middle ages was a
mixture of existing ideas from antiquity and
spiritual influences. There was no tradition
of scientific medicine, and observations
went hand-in-hand with spiritual influences .
Ideas about the origin and cure of diseases were based on a world view in which factors such as destiny, sin, and astral influences played as great a part as any physical cause.
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