Theme Title

We have no photographs of life in the fourteenth century. We must develop our picture of it from illustrations done at the time, from surviving artefacts, archaeological information, and written sources such as chronicles, wills, inventories, and period instruction manuals. On rare, fortunate occasions, we can draw all four avenues of research together for a reconstruction. As much as possible we try to have at least two sources.

Whenever we can we use primary source documentation that dates from the first quarter of the fifteenth century. However, many of the illustrations from the time are sketchy or unclear. Some things are not illustrated at all. If we cannot find a visual reference for something that we have learned was used in our time frame, we look to both earlier and later sources and try to find a form that appears both before and after our time. If we have a vague image of an object, we try to match its silhouette to one depicted in another place that shows the object in greater detail. Thus we obtain insight into the construction of the object, allowing a plausible reconstruction.

Occasionally we experiment with variant reconstructions, trying alternative possibilities in materials and methods of construction. Such “field testing” can clarify reconstructive options, separating what is a practical from what turns out to be not such a good idea after all.

Projects

LBC have worked to add breadth and depth to our portrayals of camp life by undertaking research projects. Each project, such as ‘Medicine & Surgery,’ begins with research (reference materials for each project is summarized, below) after which the Compagnie manufactures or creates needed materials. The following projects have been originated over the last thirty years. Many are still ongoing as new research suggests changes to the way we present material culture of the period. These projects are broken down into major themes, such as ‘Armors & Armor, ‘Literature & Pastimes,’ etc. We regularly add to this section, so check back for updates.

Arms & Armor

Camp

Medicine & Surgery

Medieval Disease

Camp Activities

Camp and Furnishings


Medieval medical practice, including surgery, was more sophisticated and effective than commonly believed.  It was based on the classical writings of Hippocrates and Galen, supplemented by Muslim authors such as Avicenna, and richly developed in the medical schools of Salerno and Paris.  In the 14th and 15th centuries books by practitioners such as Guy de Chauliac and John Arderne were intended for professional use, but by the early 15th century books for laypeople circulated, for example the many versions of the Tacuinum Sanitatis and numerous herbals.

Medicines were based on plants, whose healing properties were known from centuries of empirical experience.  They could be used as simples (single substances) or formulated into compounds, sometimes with scores of ingredients.  Practitioners often compounded their own medicines, but spicers and apothecaries sold premade compounds as well.

Physicians were university graduates; for the most part surgeons were not, and their discipline was viewed as practical and therefore less valuable than the theory-based work of the physician.  But wise  physicians knew when to call upon the specialized knowledge of the surgeons, and often they worked in tandem.

Treatises for surgeons covered topics such as bleeding , operating , cautery, treating wounds, setting bones , and post-operative care.

Pictured below are reconstructions of surgical instruments and basic medical ingredients collected as part of LBC’s medica impression.

Surgical instruments: Retractors, curettes, scalpels and saws.

From Left to Right: Pliers, clamps, clyster, blood letting fleem, small clamp, cautery instruments

Surgical instruments: Forceps, syringe, Fleam (blood-letting knife), clamps and cautery irons.


Writing & Record Keeping


A penner is a leather case for protecting quills when travelling. This penner is stylistically dated to the 14th century. Note that this penner’s lid is distorted and no longer fits properly.

Clothing and Personal Items

Most pens were quills, but some were made of other materials such as reeds. Still others were made of more durable materials. Shown at left are (top to bottom) a sheet metal pen with a slit nib, a goose wing bone pen, and a cast copper alloy piece.

Cooking and Tableware

Materia Medica: Glass bottles contain pharmaceutical mainstays like wine, oil, vinegar, and rosewater. Beeswax-saturated linen is used to cover pots of lye, tallow, honey and salt.

Life before the discovery of penicillin, antisepsis, and germ theory necessarily meant that disease was a constant companion of medieval people. Fortunately, from the eighth through the mid-fourteenth centuries Europe was remarkably free from most epidemic diseases. There were still plenty of endemic diseases and poor health conditions related to famine and malnutrition. But these centuries of thriving allowed Europe’s population to grow to an estimated 75-80 million, to expand in every direction, to build densely-inhabited cities, and to establish trade routes with all parts of the known world, setting the scene for a new pattern of epidemic disease across Europe and Asia. Following are some of the important infectious diseases in Europe during the late fourteenth century. Some were epidemic; some endemic. Nearly all fell harder on the very young, the very old, and those whose resistance was weakened by poor diet, hard labor, or previous disease. Medieval physicians would have treated these illnesses one symptom at a time, with separate prescriptions for fever, cough, chills, and so forth.

Dysentery (the “bloody flux”)

An infection caused either by bacteria or amoebas, spread through contamination of food and water by infected fecal matter.

Symptoms: (Bacillary) After 1-6 days incubation, watery stools, fever, cramps, dehydration. In advanced stages, bloody stools, meningitis, conjunctivitis, and arthritis. (Amebic) Acute form: watery, bloody stools, cramps, fever, weakness. Chronic form: intermittent diarrhea, mild abdominal discomfort.

Result: Generally weakened condition.

Note: Endemic in medieval armies and pretty common in cities. Infantile diarrhea was a leading cause of death for infants. After the Black Death, many urban areas instituted public health reforms to improve sanitation and prevent these enteric fevers.

Ergotism (“St. Anthony’s fire,” “holy fire,” “evil fire,” “devil’s fire,” “saints’ fire”)

Poisoning from a fungal infection of grain, especially rye.

Symptoms: (Convulsive) Degeneration of the nervous system causes anxiety, vertigo, aural/visual hallucinations, and the sensation of being bitten or burned; stupor, convulsions, and psychosis. (Gangrenous) Constriction of the blood vessels causes reddening and blistering of skin, then blackening, with itching and burning, and finally necrosis.

Result: 40% mortality. Lingering symptoms, including mental impairment, among survivors.

Note: Ergotism was known as a rural disease, particularly of marshy areas, and one that followed crop damage or famine; especially after a severe winter and a rainy spring. Children are more susceptible because of their smaller body weight. Because England did not rely on rye as much as populations on the continent, it suffered fewer cases of the convulsive type.

Gonorrhea

A bacterial infection of the genital tract, transmitted through sexual contact.

 Symptoms: (Male) After 2-8 days incubation, urgency and burning sensation on urination, profuse discharge of pus. Inflammation of prostate and seminal vesicles may lead to fever and urinary retention. (Female) After 2-8 days incubation, mild urethritis; or may be entirely asymptomatic. If infection spreads to the upper tract, acute fever and abdominal pain. Bacteria may invade the bloodstream and produce infections in other parts of the body, most commonly arthritis; the sufferer develops fever and hot, swollen, painful joints.

Results: In males, symptoms subside in several weeks; in females, a month or two. Serious infections may result in infertility for both males and females.

Note: Sufferers may remain infectious for months following an attack. Not a nice disease.

Influenza

An acute, extremely contagious viral infection of the upper respiratory tract, spread by inhalation.

Symptoms: After 1-2 days, a sudden onset of chills and fever, headache, backache, muscular aches, and general malaise; weakness, prostration, nausea, eye pain, mental confusion. After 1-5 days the respiratory symptoms become more prominent: dry or sore throat, cough, runny nose. Serious complications include bronchitis and bacterial pneumonia.

Results: A few months, maximum, of resistance to repeated infection.

Note: Flu was not a major worry in the 14th century but became a scourge in the 15th. Because flu is very contagious it often forms epidemics, generally occurring in the winter or early spring.

Leprosy (“lepry”)

A bacterial infection, transmitted by respiration or contact, leading to disfigurement.

Symptoms: After a variable but possibly years-long period of latency, facial features begin to coarsen and the voice becomes hoarse. Eruptions of the skin and eyes begin as pale spots that turn into red, raised, firm nodules. Skin spots are insensitive to cold, touch, and pain; hands and feet lose feeling and eventually muscle weakness and paralysis set in, usually in the face and hands. Secondary infections of lesions or unnoticed wounds become gangrenous. Blindness often occurs. The nose decays. The hands and feet become clawed.

Results: Eventual, ugly, lingering, friendless death, sometimes taking over 20 years.

Note: Most people are immune. Individual resistance causes much variation in the form and pace of the disease. The disease may have assumed its worst form among the upper classes, as the organism requires cholesterol as a growth factor. Lepers were forbidden to mingle with the unafflicted; their religious, legal, and social status was complex.

Malaria (“the ague”)

A parasitic disease spread by mosquitoes.

Symptoms: Shaking chills, then fever to 104 degrees, severe headache. After several hours the sufferer begins sweating profusely; then the headache and fever disappear. Attacks recur every 48 hours (a “tertian” fever) or 72 hours (a “quartan” fever). Weakness, some anemia.

Results: Survivable. Limited immunity.

Notes: Chronic in southern and low-lying areas of Europe, including southern and eastern England. The name “malaria” comes from the Italian for “bad air,” which was believed to cause the disease before the agency of mosquitoes was understood. The only type of malaria that occurs in England is rarely fatal.

Measles

A mild, highly contagious viral disease transmitted via respiration.

Symptoms: After 7-14 days, coldlike symptoms develop (runny nose, dry cough, fever to 105 degrees, aching), plus inflamed and sensitive eyes. Around the third day, bright red spots appear inside the mouth. Day four: characteristic red rash; slightly raised and mildly itchy; starts on face and spreads over the rest of the body. Fever and rash begin to depart after a few more days.

Results: Survivable; complications can include blindness and heart or brain damage. Survivors have complete immunity.

Notes: Occurs mostly in late winter and early spring. The disease is so ancient in Europe that humans tend to survive it. Primarily a childhood disease (since most adults had been exposed to it), but infants younger than 6 months have a temporary immunity from their mother.

Plague

A bacterial infection, transmitted by flea bites (or secondarily by respiration), that takes several different forms.

Symptoms: (Bubonic): After 2-6 days, necrosis of the flea bite and heat and swelling in the nearest lymph nodes (neck, groin, or armpit); buboes can be as large as an orange and extremely painful. Headache, fever, delirium. 20% go on to develop the pneumonic form. (Pneumonic) less common but more infectious: A lung infection, with coughing and sneezing. (Septicemic) rare: Infection spreads throughout body in the bloodstream; death occurs too fast (within hours) for buboes to form.

Results: Bubonic form: 50% to 70% mortality; other forms:100% mortality. No immunity.

Notes: The horror of plague was in not only its virulence but the frequency of its recurrence. After the 1347-51 European pandemic, which killed 25-40% of Europe’s population, further attacks struck England in 1361-62 (the “Children’s Plague,” killing 20% of the population of England, primarily the young), 1369 (10-15% of the population), 1375, 1379 (north country), 1381-82 (midlands), 1383 and 1387 (southeast), 1390 and 1399-1400 (over 10% of the national population), 1405-6 (national), 1410-11 (Wales and the west country), 1411-12 and 1413-14 (national), 1420 (East Anglia), 1423 (national), 1426 (London), and 1428-29 (national). It took Europe until the 19th century to recover its early 14th-century population levels.

Puerperal fever (“childbed fever”)

A bacterial infection of the female reproductive organs following childbirth.

Symptoms: Chills, high fever, abdominal pain, nausea; possible spread of infection to rest of body.

Results: Chances of mortality depend on what kind of bacteria caused the infection; it can be nearly anything. Tetanus or gas gangrene are especially bad bets. Possible infertility in survivors.

Notes: Susceptibility to infection is increased by prolonged labor in childbirth, rupture or retention of the placenta, and other unfortunate occurrences.

 Smallpox (the “red plague”)

A severe, highly contagious viral disease transmitted by inhalation.

Symptoms: After 12 days incubation, high fever, chills, severe headache and backache, and general malaise. Hemorrhages may occur in lungs or other organs. After 4 more days a distinctive itchy rash of red lesions appears on face, arms, legs, and sometimes the trunk. The bumps become pus-filled blisters; if secondary infections do not occur, they break and begin to dry up in about 9 days.

Results: Mortality 25-30% for the severe form; 1% for the mild form. Survivors have distinctive pitted scars and complete immunity to further infection.

Notes: Varies in severity from a mild form with few skin lesions to a highly fatal hemorrhagic form. The majority of deaths occur in the second week of the disease. It was a horror in the 15th century; during the 1440s in France smallpox may have killed more people than plague. (It came to be known as “smallpox” later, to distinguish it from the “great pox,” syphilis.) It became primarily a childhood disease, since most adults had already been exposed.

Typhoid fever

Bacillary infection transmitted via feces.

Symptoms: Diarrhea, abdominal pain, fever to 105 degrees, blinding headache, cough, exhaustion. Patches of red on the abdomen. Symptoms can last for weeks. Complications include pneumonia, intestinal hemorrhage, and coma.

Results: 10-20% mortality.

Notes: Another of the enteric diseases.

Sources and References

Bleeding: Luttrell Psalter, English, c. 1340 (British Library, Add. Ms.42130, f. 61r)

Surgical tools: John of Arderne, Medical Treatise, English, 2nd quarter 15th century (British Library, Sloane 6, f. 177v)

Medical equipment: John of Arderne, Medical Treatise, English, 2nd quarter 15th century (British Library, Sloane 6, f. 175v)

Apothecary shop: Roger Frugard of Parma, Chirurgia, French, 1st quarter 14th century (British Library, Sloane 1977, f. 49v)

Boneset: Sarapion the Younger, Carrara Herbal, northern Italy, between c. 1390 and 1404 (British Library, Egerton 2020, f. 53v)

Hospital: Avicenna, Canon, 15th century, (Biblioteca Laurenziana, Gaddi 24, folio 247v)

Splinting: Roger Frugard of Parma, Chirurgia, French, 1st quarter 14th century (British Library, Sloane 1977, f. 9v)

The Dictionary of the Middle Ages. “Black Death” and “Plagues, European,” by Robert S. Gottfried. “Leprosy,” by Stephen R. Ell. Edited by Joseph R. Strayer. New York: Scribners, 1982.

Record keeping was an important part of running a medieval household. Notes on daily expenses could be taken on wax tablets for later transfer to more permanent records. Expenses for a trip might be re-corded on paper (considered a perishable material) but any important documents would be recorded on parchment.

Medieval inkhorns were usually just that: pieces of horn used to hold ink. The one in our camp is only slightly modified to allow it to stand on its own. Some were more highly modified and decorated, like this surviving pair.

A surviving leather case containing waxed tablets and having a slot for the stylus.

Sources and References

Survivals strongly inform our reconstructed objects in this area. 

Additional material comes from written sources including Theophilus’ recipe for ink. We have also referred to material in collections of the Museum of London  and the York Archaeological Trust. Biddle 1990; British Museum/de Hamel 1992; Theophilus 1979

Reconstructions