Life in the 1500's
Anne Hathaway was the wife of William Shakespeare. She married at the
age of 26. This is really unusual for the time. Most people married
young, like at the age of 11 or 12. Life was not as romantic as we may
picture it. Here are some examples:
Anne Hathaway's home was a 3 bedroom house with a small parlor,
which was seldom used (only for company), kitchen, and no bathroom.
Mother and Father shared a bedroom. Anne had a queen sized bed, but
did not sleep alone. She also had 2 other sisters and they shared
the bed also with 6 servant girls. (this is before she married) They didn't
sleep like we do lengthwise but all laid on the bed crosswise.
At least they had a bed. The other bedroom was shared by her 6
brothers and 30 field workers. They didn't have a bed. Everyone just
wrapped up in their blanket and slept on the floor. They had no indoor
heating so all the extra bodies kept them warm.
They were also small people, the men only grew to be about 5'6" and
the women were 4'8". So, in their house they had 27 people living.
Most people got married in June. Why? They took their yearly bath in
May, so they were still smelling pretty good by June, although they
were starting to smell, so the brides would carry a bouquet of flowers to
hide their B.O.
Like I said, they took their yearly bath in May, but it was just a big
tub that they would fill with hot water. The man of the house would
get the privilege of the nice clean water. Then all the other sons and men,
then the women and finally the children. Last of all the babies. By
then the water was pretty thick. Thus, the saying, "don't throw the baby
out with the bath water," it was so dirty you could actually lose someone
in it.
I'll describe their houses a little. You've heard of thatch roofs,
well that's all they were. Thick straw, piled high, with no wood underneath. They
were the only place for the little animals to get warm. So all the pets;
dogs, cats and other small animals, mice, rats, bugs, all lived in the roof. When
it rained it became slippery so sometimes the animals would slip and fall
off the roof. Thus the saying, "it's raining cats and dogs."
Since there was nothing to stop things from falling into the house they would just
try to clean up a lot. But this posed a real problem in the bedroom where
bugs and other droppings from animals could really mess up your nice
clean bed, so they found if they would make beds with big posts and
hang a sheet over the top it would prevent that problem. That's where
those beautiful big 4 poster beds with canopies came from.
When you came into the house you would notice most times that the floor
was dirt. Only the wealthy had something other than dirt, that's where
the saying "dirt poor" came from. The wealthy would have slate floors.
That was fine but in the winter they would get slippery when they got
wet. So they started to spread thresh on the floor to help keep their
footing.
As the winter wore on they would just keep adding it and adding it
until when you opened the door it would all start slipping outside. So...
they put a piece of wood at the entry way, a "thresh hold".
In the kitchen they would cook over the fire, they had a fireplace in
the kitchen/parlor, that was seldom used and sometimes in the master
bedroom. They had a big kettle that always hung over the fire and every
day they would light the fire and start adding things to the pot.
Mostly they ate vegetables, they didn't get much meat. They would eat the
stew for dinner then leave the leftovers in the pot to get cold overnight
and then start over the next day. Sometimes the stew would have food in it
that had been in there for a month! Thus the rhyme: peas porridge hot,
peas porridge cold, peas porridge in the pot nine days old."
Sometimes they could get a hold of some pork. They really felt special
when that happened and when company came over they even had a rack
in the parlor where they would bring out some bacon and hang it to show
it off. That was a sign of wealth and that a man "could really bring home
the bacon." They would cut off a little to share with guests and they
would all sit around and "chew the fat."
If you had money your plates were made out of pewter. Sometimes some
of their food had a high acid content and some of the lead would leach
out into the food. They really noticed it happened with tomatoes. So they
stopped eating tomatoes, for 400 years.
Plates for serving food were not used in Europe until the fifteenth
century. Most people didn't have pewter plates though, they all had trenchers.
Before that, food was usually served on thick, hollowed-out
slabs of stale bread called trenchers, which were specially baked and
allowed to harden so they could hold more food without falling apart.
The food's juices would soak into the bread, and after the meal the
soggy trenchers might be fed to the dogs or offered to poor peasants
waiting outside for leftovers.
The evolution of modern plates began when trenchers were carved out
of wood, sometimes with special compartments for spices and condiments.
For a while, wooden trenchers were used as supports for bread trenchers.
They never washed their boards and a lot of times worms
would get into the wood. After eating off the trencher with worms
they would get "trench mouth." Wooden trenchers were later replaced
by clay or ceramic plates, which did not rot under long use.
If you were going traveling and wanted to stay at an Inn, they usually
provided the bed but not the board.
The bread was divided according to status. The workers would get the
burnt bottom of the loaf, the family would get the middle and guests
would get the top, or the "upper crust".
They also had lead cups, and when they drank their ale or whiskey,
the combination would sometimes knock them out for a couple of days.
They would be walking along the road, and here would be someone knocked
out. They thought him dead, so they would pick him up and take him
home and get him ready for burial. They realized if they were too slow
about it, the person would wake up. Also, maybe not all of the people they
were burying were dead. So they would lay them out on the kitchen table for
a couple of days, the family would gather around and eat and drink and
wait and see if they would wake up. That's where the custom of holding a
"wake" came from.
Since England is so old and small they started running out of places to
bury people. So they started digging up some coffins and would take
their bones to a house and re-use the grave. They started opening
these coffins and found some had scratch marks on the inside.
One out of 25 coffins were that way and they realized they had still
been burying people alive. So they thought they would tie a string on
their wrist and lead it through the coffin and up through the ground
and tie it to a bell. Someone would have to sit out in the graveyard all
night to listen for the bell. That is how the saying "graveyard shift" was
made. If the bell would ring they would know that someone was "saved
by the bell" or he was a "dead ringer".
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