Knighthood and learning

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Showing posts with label Gender history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gender history. Show all posts
Sunday, 18 December 2022

From the sources 9: self-righteousness and hypocrisy in the eleventh century reformation Part 3

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  The most enigmatic scene from the Bayeux Tapestry. A cleric in secular clothing touches the face of a mysterious woman called Aelfgyva in ...
Sunday, 20 November 2022

From the sources 7: childhood and going to school in the 1060s

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  I can’t tell you how great it feels to be writing a blogpost now. The last two weeks have been absolutely hectic for me with the PGCE and ...
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Sunday, 6 November 2022

From the sources 6: why write an autobiography in the twelfth century?

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  Meet Guibert de Nogent (1053 – 1125), the abbot of a monastery in Picardy, northern France. Guibert’s seventy years of life coincided with...
Wednesday, 9 March 2022

International women's day special: an early medieval mother's advice to her son (back to solid Carolingian content again)

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Happy International Women's Day After my wild excursion into the history of post-Roman Britain, that ended up becoming a monster post th...
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Joe Brown
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