A New Episode of The Medieval Podcast: Early English Queens with Matthew Firth https://www.medievalists.net/2025/01/early-english-queens-with-matthew-firth/ #MedievalQueens #EarlyMiddleAges #Podcasts
A New Episode of The Medieval Podcast: Early English Queens with Matthew Firth https://www.medievalists.net/2025/01/early-english-queens-with-matthew-firth/ #MedievalQueens #EarlyMiddleAges #Podcasts
Caroline Goodson speaking about 'Urban Gardening in Early Medieval Italy' https://www.medievalists.net/2024/11/urban-gardening-in-early-medieval-italy/ #EarlyMiddleAges
A Date with the Two Cerne Giants: Results of the National Trustβs Excavation in 2020 https://www.medievalists.net/2024/10/a-date-with-the-two-cerne-giants-results-of-the-national-trusts-excavation-in-2020/ #EnglishHistory #CerneGiant #EarlyMiddleAges
CADBURY CASTLE :
IS IT A MODEL FOR CAMELOT?
Here are links I gathered together recently. The main illustrations I have in mind are the one at the top plus the row below it. (see Illustrations link below.)
Though other candidates have been proposed, chances are quite good that Cadbury Castle may have been the model for Camelot; and, as we know, there's simply not a more congenial spot.
Wikipedia article
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadbury_Castle,_Somerset
Illustrations
Suggested Dates for the Battle of Badon (Mons Badonicus)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_conflict_in_Anglo-Saxon_Britain
(It is my opinion that the Battle of Badon took place in the range of 492-494 AD, squarely in the fifth century.)
It seems to me the topic of the historic Arthur deserves a major rethinking. Lucky for us, this process was begun by Christopher Gidlow, which he presented in his book, "The Reign of Arthur."
It is commonly understood that Picts and Saxons did, in fact, attack Britain in the fifth century; and the Britons did mount a successful counterattack. It is widely accepted that the Battle of Badon (Mons Badonicus) is an actual historic event. The earliest sources attribute this decisive victory to Arthur. In short, Arthur did exist. One early source credits the Badon victory to Ambrosius Aurelianus, which brings in the venerable thought that Ambrosius Aurelianus equals Arthur.
We keep learning more about the Arthurian period - and before it and after - through such means as archaeology, aerial photography, scans that penetrate deep into the ground, fresh looks at old texts, and on and on.
A genealogist took Geoffrey of Monmouth's "House of Constantine" seriously, if not necessarily literally, and plotted a plausible family tree including Aurelius Ambrosius and Uther. Could the historic Riothamus be the same person as Aurelius or Uther? According to some scholars, Saint Ambrose seems to have had family in Britain, suggesting some connection to Geoffrey's Aurelius Ambrosius and/or to the historic Ambrosius Aurelianus. Who knows?
Most theories do not prove out. A thing one person "knows" contradicts what another person "knows," if you get my drift. But we can keep inching forward by considering new information, giving new looks to old information, and sorting out most ideas while keeping a few.
:
Closely related names
Geoffrey Ashe
Leslie Alcock
History of the Kings of Britain (Historia Regum Britanniae)
:
#ambrose #ambrosiusaurelianus #ancienthistory #arthur #aureliusambrosius #badon #battleofbadon #britain #britons #cadburycastle #camelot #christophergidlow #darkages #darkageshistory #earlymiddleages #earlymiddleageshistory #fifthcenturyad #geoffreyofmonmouth #historiaregumbritanniae #history #historydarkages #historyearlymiddleages #historyofthekingsofbritain #houseofconstantine #medievalhistory #monsbadonicus #picts #reignofarthur #riothamus #saintambrose #southcadburycastle #thereignofarthur #uther #utherpendragon
:::
The Gododdin of Aneirin: Text and Context from Dark-Age North Britain - John Koch [pdf 410pp] https://www.academia.edu/109991544/The_Gododdin_of_Aneirin_Text_and_Context_from_Dark_Age_North_Britain #EarlyMiddleAges #DarkAge #YGododdin #Aneirin
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β§ Medieval cuisine β§
Medieval cuisine includes the foods, diets, and cooking methods of various European cultures from the 5th to the 15th century. Cereals were the most important staple during the Early Middle Ages: barley, oats, and rye were eaten by the poor while wheat was generally more expensive. These were consumed as bread, porridge, gruel, and pasta by people...
#EarlyMiddleAges #LateMiddleAges #Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_cuisine
A little #FrenchHistory as background during the riots: (edited from #Wikipedia)
Did you know that 1200 years ago as #Rome fell, the #Christian world was nearly conquered by the #Islam World?
The Carolingian Empire (800β888) was a large #Frankish-dominated empire in western and central Europe during the #EarlyMiddleAges.
In #AD800, the #Frankish king #Charlemagne was crowned emperor in Rome by #PopeLeoIII in an effort to transfer the #RomanEmpire from the #ByzantineEmpire to western Europe.
Excited about finally receiving my backordered copy of this book, which Iβm sure Iβll find time to read between graduate school, client work, and adult education courses π #EarlyMiddleAges #BookStadon #histodons #history #archaeology
tra una settimana sarΓ² ospite de @LaStatale #Milano per parlare del complicato rapporto tra Adelchi di #Benevento e lβimperatore Ludovico II.