p-manners-msg - 5/24/08 Period manners. Period manners books. References. NOTE: See also the files: courtesy-msg, SCA-courtesy-art, hair-msg, perfumes-msg, p-sex-msg, p-hygiene-msg, bathing-msg, cosmetics-msg, p-dental-care-msg. ************************************************************************ NOTICE - This file is a collection of various messages having a common theme that I have collected from my reading of the various computer networks. Some messages date back to 1989, some may be as recent as yesterday. This file is part of a collection of files called Stefan's Florilegium. These files are available on the Internet at: http://www.florilegium.org I have done a limited amount of editing. Messages having to do with separate topics were sometimes split into different files and sometimes extraneous information was removed. For instance, the message IDs were removed to save space and remove clutter. The comments made in these messages are not necessarily my viewpoints. I make no claims as to the accuracy of the information given by the individual authors. Please respect the time and efforts of those who have written these messages. The copyright status of these messages is unclear at this time. If information is published from these messages, please give credit to the originator(s). Thank you, Mark S. Harris AKA: THLord Stefan li Rous Stefan at florilegium.org ************************************************************************ From: lisch at sun_dsdc.mentorg.com (Ray Lischner) Date: 21 Oct 91 22:15:16 GMT Organization: Mentor Graphics Corp., Wilsonville, OR > What sources can the good gentles of the Rialto suggest >for descriptions of general forms of manners and social >behavior in northern/western Europe during the Middle Ages? >Specifically, I'm interested in how to treat royalty, members >of the opposite sex and noble strangers. I suggest starting with Ruth Kelso's works: Doctrine for the Lady of the Renaissance (Urbana: U. of Illinois Press, 1956) and Doctrine for the English Gentleman in the Sixteenth Century (1929). Despite the titles, her work extends into the later Middle Ages. She has done a lot of reading on the topic, and it is unfortunate that she chose a format in which she does not give specific references. Her bibliographies, however, are vastly more extensive than any you can get in this forum. If you want something quick and easy, then try Edith Rickert's "The Babees' Book: Medieval manners for the young done into modern English from Dr. Furnivall's texts." (NY: Cooper Square, 1966). In her book you can find primary sources from fifteenth century England, rendered in modern English. The work that she modernized is F. J. Furnivall's "Babee's Book," which is also published under the title "Early English Meals and Manners." (London: Early English Text Society, 1868). Dr. Furnivall edited a number of significant manuscripts, including John Russell's Book of Nurture (c. 1460). There is another volume, edited by the same author, which includes more of the same, including works from other countries, entitled "Queene Elizabethes Achademy" (London: EETS, 1869). Modern reprints are currently published for both books. -- Peregrine Payne Dragon's Mist, An Tir From: sbloch at euler.ucsd.edu (Steve Bloch) Date: 20 Oct 91 00:02:28 GMT kenm at maccs.dcss.mcmaster.ca (...Jose) writes: > What sources can the good gentles of the Rialto suggest >for descriptions of general forms of manners and social >behavior in northern/western Europe during the Middle Ages? >Specifically, I'm interested in how to treat royalty, members >of the opposite sex and noble strangers. As this is an eminently period problem, let's look for period solutions. Lo! and behold, etiquette was a favorite subject of medieval and Renaissance writers. Perhaps the best single example is the Book of the Courtier, essentially a manual of etiquette and courtly "how-to"'s. And now I've forgotten the author -- Castiglione? and the date, which I think is c. 1500. Arbeau's famous dance book, Orchesography, includes quite a bit of discussion of the etiquette of the dance floor. And I found in a bookstore last month a 17th-c. book (reprint!) on "The Eighth Liberall Science", being the Art of Flattery. There are other primary-source examples, but I'm brain-dead today. Another approach is to immerse yourself not so much in period etiquette manuals as period fiction, which is more fun to read and provides a wealth of dialogue upon which to model your own. Boccaccio, Chaucer, Malory, and Chretien de Troyes spring to mind (but keep in mind not only the divers social classes of the characters but the circumstances of the writer -- e.g. a story presented in verse may involve more stilted dialogue than would actually have occurred). -- Stephen Bloch mar-Joshua ibn-Eleazar ha-Shalib >sca>Caid>Calafia>St.Artemas sbloch at math.ucsd.edu Date: Thu, 1 Jul 1999 17:27:06 -0700 (PDT) From: Laura C Minnick Subject: Re: SC - help needed on knightly virtues/Ideals of Chivalry Find this book in your local University library, or get the local library to get it via ILL.- F.J.Furnivall, ed. _Early English Meals and Manners_. London, Early English Text Society, 1868. In the Furnival you will find these very useful texts: The Boke of Curtasye_ (Sloane MS, 1986, British Museum, 1430-1440) Wynkyn de Worde's _The Boke of Kervynge_, 1413 John Russell's _The Book of Nurture_ (Harleian MS. 4011, BrM, mid 15th c.) _Ffor to Serve a Lord_ early 16th century These are all manners and training books- the sort used in a large noble house to teach the young men. Very, Very useful. There is also a good deal of material on serving etc., in : Bridget Ann Henisch's _Fast and Feast_ (University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1976) If you have more questions, please ask- I did a term project on servers and serving for a class I took on Medieval Ceremony and Ritual, and somewhere I still have the materials. (Probably under the rock, like everything else...) 'Lainie - - Laura C. Minnick Date: Sat, 16 Oct 1999 00:08:03 -0700 From: "David Dendy" Subject: Re: SC - Looking for John Russell From: Christina Nevin >I'm trying to find a copy of John Russell's Book of Nurture. I have The >Babees Book 1908 imprint, but I want the unabridged text of the BON. Does >anyone know if this has been reprinted this century? And if so, by whom? > >I've seen a copy of the 1894 imprint advertised for sale, but don't really >want to shell out $250 for it! Any leads appreciated. > >Lucretzia What you want is Original Series Volume 32 published by the Early English Text Society (originally published in 1866). The title is rather confusing; the title pages gives a lengthy title of the contents*The Babees Book . . .* etc which lists all the items in it; the half-title says *Meals and Manners of Olden Time*; while for some reason the publisher of the current re-print apparently calls it *Early English Meals and Manners* (Huhh???). At any rate, it is the original edition which all the others since are ripping off. Lord John Russell's Boke of Nurture is pp. 115-239. The latest reprint (1997) by the Early English Text Society is distributed by Boydell and Brewer (in the UK, PO Box 9, Woodbridge, Suffolk IP12 3DF; there's a different address for the US, but you are in Britain). The list price is US$ 72; I don't have the UK price available. The ISBN is 085991819X. Yours bibliophilically, Francesco Sirene Date: Sun, 26 Mar 2000 16:02:21 EST From: RuddR at aol.com Subject: SC - Re: table eating utensils Stefan quotes and writes: > > << The fundraiser also featured no silverware, as they thought > > medieval man ate without utensils. >> > > > > Actually, they did eat without utensils other than a knife until relatively > > late in period. This is the reason why you only use your right hand to serve > > yourself food with (your left being used for personal cleansing). > > Hmm. Yes, I believe this left-handed thing was a tradition in the Middle East. > Do you have any evidence that this was ever done with any consistancy in > the non-Moslem parts of Europe? I have recently been looking at medieval illuminations of diners at table, trying to answer this very question. For the most part, diners are eating with their right hands, but every now and then, with their left hands (see: http://www.50megs.com/matterer/medpix/gallery1/mpix18.htm). In some pictures the diners are reaching into the dishes with one hand while holding morsels of food in the other (http://www.50megs.com/matterer/medpix/gallery4/mpix115.htm). So it seems as though the Islamic stricture against eating with the left hand did not apply in medieval Christendom. Perhaps the custom of public hand washing before dinner had something to do with this. Rudd Rayfield Date: Mon, 17 Apr 2000 02:10:17 -0400 From: Christine A Seelye-King Subject: SC - Table manners Hello all, I am almost through wading through my backlog of emails, and found this one I though you might like. Christianna - --------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Mark Mettler To: meridian-ty at egroups.com On Manners: When Sir Ector delivered the Elegy for Lancelot in Le Morte Darthur he said, "Thou was the meekest man and the gentelist that ever ate in a hall among the ladies." Some simple rules from historical documents: Do not pet the dog during dinner. If thou do no drink, even though, offer it unto thy guests and humor them by pretending to partake. In all humility and friendship partake from a common plate and cup. Do not appear gluttony, nor ravenous, nor as a hog a trough, but be reserved in thy partaking that you seem grateful for the gifts you partake. Your bones, and shells and other things not fit for thy stomach, throw upon the floor and do not appears to be wasteful, but having cleanly removed the worthy before displaying your gratefulness on the floor. It is best to serve they guest at feast a sauce of bitter taste, a vinegar sauce and pepper too shall satisfy the tongue oft your food is cold. - -- Ld. Gryffri de Newmarch http://www2.gasou.edu/SCA Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2000 12:27:02 -0400 From: "Jeff Gedney" Subject: Re: SC - feast catapults Baltahzar writes: > What makes us think they didn't have food fights? Consider: Lots of people, > lots of wine, and lots of food... Hmmmm... Only one or two full outfits in the entire wardrobe... Washing done entirely by slapping with a wood paddle... A wool cloak the equivalent of a months labor... Lots of people with real swords, and knowing how to use them... Powerful people entirely concerned with "face" and personal standing in court... Position at Feasts being the chief method of showing status in a highly status conscious society... Loss of dignity being equated with ineffectiveness... Feasts being highly formalized societal events... Challenges to the death for lesser offenses common... Nope... no reason not to throw that Leche lumbardys... none at all... Riiiiight.... Sheesh!! Think "Feast = Your Sisters Wedding" and you might get the idea of how important in a person's social life feasts were, and how likely a person would toss that gobbet of Venysoun in Cameline Sauce. Where do you manage to get such arrant supposition? Watching Roger Corman videos? Brandu Date: Sat, 1 Mar 2004 14:50:30 -0800 From: "Laura C. Minnick" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] cooks-list To: Cooks within the SCA At 12:57 PM 3/13/2004, you wrote: > my e-mail is captaincuisine at yahoo.com. I enjoy preparing food in the > medieval style. I am a professional Chef, and have read, and cooked, in > the medieval style. I would like to have some advice about some of the > tableside manners from the medieval age. > Thank you, Adam Well, here's a start- the bibliography from my serving handout: A Generall Rule to teche every man that is willynge for to lerne, to serve a lorde of mayster in every hyng to his plesure. Edited by R.W. Chambers, a XVth c. MS in the British Museum (MS Addl. 37969) (Published as A Fifteenth-Century Courtesy Book by the Early English Text Society, London, 1914) Book of Curtasye. (Sloane MS. 1986, British Museum. c. 1460.) Boke of Kervynge. Wynkyn de Worde, printed in London, 1513. and Ffor to serve a lord. (15th c English text) may be found in: Early English meals and manners : John Russell's Boke of nurture, Wynkyn deWorde's Boke of keruynge, The boke of curtasye, R. Weste's Booke of demeanor, Seager's Schoole of vertue, The babees book, Aristole's A B C, Urbanitatis, Stans puer ad mensam, The lytylle childrenes lytil boke, For to serve a lord, Old Symon, The birche school_boy, &c., with some forewords on education in early England / Edited by Frederick J. Furnivall Publisher London : Pub. for the Early English Text Society by Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co., 1868, reprinted 1894 Boke of Kervynge is also aailable on-line at: http://milkmama.tripod.com/kervynge2.html There is a second copy of the Sloane MS 1986 text, edited by James O. Halliwell, and printed in London by the Percy Society, in 1916. The body of the text in both editions is idetical. The picture referred to in note 41 may be found in: Fast and Feast, by Bridget Ann Henisch (Penn State, 1976) pg 167. Look for "Early English Meals and Manners_- it is not just the one text I've cited, but a number of them. Keep looking. Hassle our librarian and use ILL with great abandon. And feel free to contact me on or off list. I'm happy to help. 'Lainie Date: Mon, 16 May 2005 21:53:08 -0400 From: Robin Carroll-Mann Subject: [Sca-cooks] What Not to Eat To: Cooks within the SCA I was hunting through the _Arte de Cortar_, a 1423 Spanish carving manual, and came across something unexpected. The author is discussing the ideal habits and qualities of young men who are to serve the King at table. They should be clean, respectful, decorous, etc. Then he says, "Concerning this, they must keep themselves from things contrary to the said conditions and customs; especially, from eating garlic, onions, leeks, and cilantro, shallots, and the electuary of hemp leaf, which the Moors call alhaxixa." An electuary is a medical compound, made into a paste with honey, or with sugar and water. (De Nola has a recipe for an electuary of sour cherries, meant to stimulate the appetite of invalids.) The 1729 RAE dictionary says that hemp leaves have an "abominable odor". So, is electuary of hemp a cause of bad breath? -- Brighid ni Chiarain Barony of Settmour Swamp, East Kingdom Date: Wed, 18 Jan 2006 10:02:56 -0500 (GMT-05:00) From: Christiane Subject: [Sca-cooks] Paul LaCroix's book on Project Gutenberg To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org The Project Gutenberg EBook of Manners, Custom and Dress During the Middle Ages and During the Renaissance Period, by Paul Lacroix http://www.gutenberg.org/files/10940/10940-h/10940-h.htm Some interesting nuggets of information, and lots of period illustrations. Gianotta Edited by Mark S. Harris p-manners-msg Page 7 of 7