Medieval Woman: Village Life in the Middle Ages
Medieval Woman: Village Life in the Middle Ages book cover

Medieval Woman: Village Life in the Middle Ages

Paperback – November 1, 2018

Price
$16.59
Format
Paperback
Pages
304
Publisher
Michael O'Mara
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1782438984
Dimensions
5 x 0.9 x 7.75 inches
Weight
12.8 ounces

Description

"Completely persuasive and ringing with truth. If a medieval peasant woman had ever written a diary it would be like this." —Philippa Gregory Ann Baer is former director of the fine art publishers Ganymed Press. She hand-illustrated Medieval Woman , and has maintained a lifelong interest in medieval England.

Features & Highlights

  • A year in the life of a peasant woman in medieval England is vividly evoked in this extraordinary portrait of Marion, a carpenter’s wife, and her extended family. Based on years of research, Ann Baer brings to life the reality of a world that has been lost. Rising before dawn in a tiny village to a day of grueling hard work, Marion and her husband face the daily struggle for survival. Starvation is never far away and travel to the next village is virtually unheard of. Existing without soap, paper or glass and with only the most basic of tools, sickness, fire and natural disaster ever threaten to engulf the small, tightly knit community. At the mercy of the weather and the Lord of the Manor, each equally unpredictable and inescapable, Marion’s life is burdensome but also displays an admirable dignity and fortitude in the face of adversity. The little village is at one with the natural world around it and each member has a role to play and a place in the hierarchy. Simple people, living unrecorded lives in remote villages not on the way to anywhere are brought back into focus in
  • Medieval Woman
  • . Ann Baer defines and celebrates the woman at the heart of the community.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(148)
★★★★
25%
(124)
★★★
15%
(74)
★★
7%
(35)
23%
(113)

Most Helpful Reviews

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HISTORIC ENTERTAINMENT

I read all things Medieval and this brought out some interesting facts I hadn’t read before. It’s an old book, but well worth reading now and then when one feels “needy” of more consumerism, technology and a fat wallet.
1 people found this helpful
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Expands upon the female mindset in this time period.

I love this book. It’s told from a fictional viewpoint but is historically accurate and it expounds upon the mindset and held ideas a female would have had during this time period. There’s a lot of loss in this book. Some parts are sad, but it really makes you think about how viral would have had to been to service.
1 people found this helpful
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An intimate portrait of domestic medieval life

Medieval Woman by Ann Baer is not your typical plot-driven narrative, but rather an intimate portrait of ordinary life among farmers and tradesmen in medieval England. The reader follows Marion, wife of Peter the town carpenter and mother of pre-teen Peterkin and infant Alice.

From the start, Medieval Woman is vivid and raw in its descriptions of harsh and dirty (quite literally) every day life. Baer takes us through one year of Marion's life, starting in March and describing how the seasons dictate the lives of her family members and the entire village.

Life is communal, insular to the point where the next village over or closest city seems a world away. Days are dictated by weather and light, the bounty (or lack thereof) of the harvest. Medieval-set historical fiction is often action-adventure with wars and politics, but Medieval Woman is a quiet and humble life of an ordinary woman. By default, medieval life was harsh and unforgiving. The people of this time dealt with loss, in all its brutal forms, as part of every day life. You live with what you are dealt, and you survive despite it all--knowing full well something as simple as a splinter could kill you. Baer sugar coats nothing; from a child permanently maimed by fire, to unwashed bodies as the norm, to the long days and nights of winter marked by unforgiving cold and starvation.

If you're looking for a plot-based narrative, this book likely won't hold your attention. However, if you are open to being immersed in the dirty details of every day life in the middle ages, I highly recommend Medieval Woman--especially if you also appreciate vivid descriptions of the domestic. As a side note, I've always found the month-by-month paintings of every day life in the Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry to be both fascinating and peaceful (even though the harsh life of a peasant was not!) and this book really reminded me of those paintings.
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Fascinating read!

I am in love with medieval nonfiction and well-researched fiction stories. Especially when it pertains to women and family life. Wonderful read.