The use of strewn, not woven, rushes in churches survived until at least
the C18th in my part of the world. Although the provision of rushes
(rushbearing) had become a festive occasion the underlying reason was
traditionally understood to be functional.
The rushes provided insulation on stone floors. By being strewn rather
than woven they could be swept out when soiled. And a weekly traffic of
worshipers making their way across unmade and often wet roads would
guarantee that they would be soiled.
Such a functional consideration would also apply to any secular public
place such as a medieval hall and at any time. It's difficult to see
that woven matting would have been as functional.
Different considerations might have applied to private rooms.
--
Ian
The Hotmail address is my spam-bin. Real mail address is iang
at austonley org uk
Would there not be a time consideration here? The time necessary to
weave the matting relative to the need to change the rushes as they
got soiled, implying that where traffic was heavy rushes would always
be strewn and changed regularly, but could be woven where traffic was
light, maybe?
regards
melanie
CM Woolgar's 'The Senses in late Medieval England' (2006), pp.142-3,
190, quotes from several medieval references to strewing rushes on
floors - it can be found on Google Books.
In 1515 Erasmus famously wrote in a letter that in England 'the floors
are commonly of clay, strewn with rushes, under which lies unmolested
an ancient collection of beer, grease, fragments, bone, spittle,
excrement of dogs and cats, and everything that is nasty' - Jortin's
Life of Erasmus (1808), i, 69. If that was true at the start of the
16th century then I'm sure it was even more so in the 12th century.
Matt Tompkins
I was intrigued by your question and did some googling last night on
the subject. The Erasmus quote was well used on sites dealing with
life in medieval castles but I also found this site
http://historicalnovelists.tripod.com/medlife.htm which deals with
upper class fashion and presents the problem of wearing skirts which
trailed 12" of cloth on the floor covered with rushes rather than
matting. Other sites eg http://www.castlewales.com/life.html
describe the norman castle of the 12th century as having a ground
floor hall with a central hearth and the private quarters of the lord
and lady being screened off at one end of the hall. This leads me to
think that maybe this end of the hall had matting, where as the rest
of the hall had strewn rushes? This would fit in with the idea that
Ladies where cloistered away from the ordinary folk in the rest of the
hall, they simply couldn't walk there.
The local farmers here in Brittany use fresh strewn straw in their cow
sheds which is built up on a daily basis over winter, keeping the cows
warm as the lower layers "ferment", and mucked out in spring to be put
on the fields. The Erasmus quote seems to indicate a similar method
for "heating" castles! The historical novelist article seems to
suggest that when royalty visited the whole lot would be mucked out,
the floor cleaned and left bare with maybe a few strewn herbs, giving
room for dancing and such like before a new layer was formed, and the
ladies were once again confined to a given area.
Fascinating. In later castles with wooden flooring and the hall on
the first floor, chimneys and private appartement women would have had
more movement as wooden floors wouldn't have the same insulation needs
as stone or earth, indeed the wood would have rotted if covered with a
6 month layer of rotting rushes! thus rush matting would seem more
likely here.
just a few thoughts on the subject.
regards
melanie
Or even just bare wood.
On Sep 26, 12:55 pm, Ian Goddard <godda...@hotmail.co.uk> wrote:
> Or even just bare wood.
Wooden floors were sometimes covered with a layer of beaten earth,
presumably to duplicate the beaten earth surfaces which predominated
on the ground floor, even in quite high class houses. In 1260 Henry
II ordered the wooden floors at Havering castle to be well earthed,
and 1260 the floor of his queen's chamber at Winchester castle was
plastered, while in 1453 New College Oxford earthed the wooden floor
of a chamber (Steane, Archaeology of Medieval England and Wales
(1985), p 202).
Matt Tompkins
That sounds like an early mycological experiment ;)
On the subject of earth floors, they still exist here in Brittany in
houses people still live in. The house I live in only had its earth
floor dug out and replaced by concrete in the 1980s and I have visited
neighbours in the late 90s with earth floors. There doesn't seem to
be a tradition here of covering floors with anything. At Poul Fetan
( http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fichier:France_-_Morbihan_-_Quistinic_-_Poul_F%C3%A9tan.jpg
) there is a 17th century village restored to its original state and
the floors are bare. At Melrand ( http://sagemorw.alias.domicile.fr/melrand/index.php3
) there is a village c1000 and here the floor is beaten earth with the
animals on straw at one end of the houses and (as I remember from my
visit) bare floor at the other end where the people live. These
floors are periodicaly dug out and clean earth bought in to replace
that taken away, then the neighbours are than invited in to party and
dance in the house to compact the floor with their feet!. My parents
in law can remeber this from their childhood. The floors were swept
daily but never dry to prevent dust, water was sprinkled over the
floor first. Needless to say the houses were always damp,
particullarly as the walls are made of clay and staw as well!
I know this is slightly OT but thought it might be interesting
regards
melanie