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EASTER IN CAMELOT

3/21/2016

6 Comments

 
PictureAn armored fish for a medieval king
If we choose to believe in the Arthur of Malory and Tennyson, then we choose to believe that he was a Christian king who celebrated Easter. (We'll talk about Pagan celebrations another day). So what did the Easter season mean to a medieval monarch, or noble, or even a peasant?

FISH, FISH, AND MORE FISH, WITH A SIDE OF EELS, AND MORE FISH (and no sex). WHY?  Because before a Christian could enjoy Easter, he had to fast his way through Lent.  And fasting meant FISH and very little else.  One meal a day eaten at noon, and consisting mainly of salt herring.  Because so much fish was eaten during Lent, catching and salting the herring was a year-round occupation. The army even carried portable leather boats that they used for fishing expeditions so that they would be sure to have enough fish set aside. 


PictureNo sex please, it's Lent
The Lent fast also applied to Sex.  Co-habiting was forbidden on fast days, holy days, and Lent.  In fact it was forbidden on so many occasions that it's surprising any children were born at all.  So the King and his court would have been "enjoying" salted herring and their own company for forty days leading up to Holy Week.  And then things got serious.

PicturePenitents on Maundy Thursday
 On the Thursday of Holy Week, hooded penitents were allowed into the church to confess their sins, to extinguish all but one of the candles and to wait for the darkness of Good Friday.   This had nothing to do with chocolate bunnies and Easter eggs.  From now until Easter morning, Camelot would be a place of darkness...and fish!  Here is a recipe for cooking salted herring - enjoy. And remember no potatoes, they had not yet come from the New World.

PictureThe story of the crucifixion
On Good Friday the castle might have formed the stage for a performance of one of the mystery plays that tell the story of Jesus from Adam to the resurrection.  In medieval times prayers were prayed by the priests in Latin and the Bible was not read aloud to the congregation.  Guilds of Mystery players traveled throughout Europe performing their plays so that people would understand the story.  The plays were banned in England in the 16th Century but were reintroduced in the 1950's and now they reconnect us with the Medieval world. 

FINALLY EASTER SUNDAY!  No more fasting, and new clothes for everyone.  Well, not exactly.  The Lord and Lady of the castle would give new clothes to the senior servants, who would pass down their old clothes to the next in line, and so on. Some people didn't get anything brand new, but at least they got something different.
PictureThe ingredients of the Easter feast
The feasting of Easter Sunday made up for any weight that the people may have lost during Lent.  Medieval people knew how to eat, and they knew what they liked.  They liked spices, and sauces, and especially they liked cloves. They valued presentation, such as a roasted peacock with its feathers restored and breathing fire. They liked to see how many animals they could stuff inside other animals.  Forget about turducken, that's amateur stuff.  And they liked quantity.  At the marriage feast of Henry III's daughter in 1251 the guests ate 2300 deer, 7000 hens, 170 boars, 60,000 herrings (apparently they were still not tired of fish), and 68,500 loaves of bread.

PictureBeltane fires to welcome May
And after Easter, it was on to Whitsun for the Christian King Arthur, but if our King Arthur was a pagan, it was on to May Day or Beltane, fertility, fire, no fish, and no abstinence.  
In Excalibur Rising, Arthur's kingdom is a land changing  between the old and the new. The  new Christianity is spreading.  The old magic grows weak but Excalibur still has power.


6 Comments
Joyce Kushon
3/23/2016 09:22:37 am

I like your Arthur/Easter story. I didn't know you wrote this blog. I'll look forward to book 2.
Joyce

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Doug Lauffer link
3/24/2016 03:57:11 am

HI JOYCE/RICK! ☺

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Doug Lauffer link
3/24/2016 03:56:42 am

How interesting, I really appreciate this post! This essay rekindles in me that I will not rest until Excalibur in my treasure vault! ☺

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Mak Wilson link
3/24/2016 02:35:02 pm

That's a lot of nosh! Although, a 5th/6th century Arthur may not have fared so well.

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Linda Carnicelli
3/14/2017 12:30:41 pm

I found the information very interesting. I certainly am glad that I didn't live in that time. No sex? Well, maybe not approved sex. LOL. Just let me say that I really enjoyed the recipes also. Thanks.

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Idaho Adult Classified link
11/30/2022 05:24:47 pm

Thannks great blog post

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    Eileen Enwright Hodgetts

    Novelist, playwright and cheese maker

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