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Medieval Children Nicholas Orme
New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2001
pp.387
ISBN 0-300-08541-9
Reviewed by: Dr Sally Crawford
Department of Ancient History and Archaeology
The University of Birmingham
Email: s.e.e.crawford@bham.ac.uk
Professor Orme's new and lavishly illustrated
work on medieval children presents the lives and activities of children
in England from the Anglo-Saxon to the late Medieval periods. Although
many aspects of childhood in the medieval period have been covered
by other writers, Professor Orme is the first historian to attempt
to discuss the topic from before the Norman Conquest to the 16th
century. Accessible to the general interested reader and useful
to the historian of childhood, the book includes full footnotes,
a complete bibliography and a friendly index. The intention of the
book is to 'reveal the richness of the material about medieval English
children' (p10).
Chapter 1, Arriving, covers births, baptism,
naming and record making. Family Life, the second chapter, covers
family size, bringing up the baby, weaning, 'daytime' (essentially
a discussion of children's diet, clothing and toilet training),
'nighttime' (sleeping arrangements and dreams), relationships between
parents and children, and the lives of the poor. This last leads
on naturally to chapter 3, focussing on danger and death in the
lives of the medieval child. The next two chapters introduce aspects
of children's play: chapter 4, Words, Rhymes, and Songs, traces
the sketchy surviving examples of their oral culture. With occasional
special pleading, Orme is able to identify a number of nursery rhymes
specifically for children, as well as exploring the often blurred
distinction between children's pastimes and adult pursuits in the
medieval period. Orme even manages to include a page or two dedicated
to the most rare of records, children's talk (p158-160). The examples
given are all from adult sources, but the delightfully scurrilous
verses do resonate with children's taunting language. Chapter 5,
Play, also confronts the problem of distinguishing adult from juvenile
activities, emphasising the simple fact that adults and juveniles
in the medieval period shared common interests, and that children
were not always segregated from adult society. However, the attempts
by the crown to legislate 'educational' play for children sheds
interesting light on the attitudes of adults. At the highest level,
children's culture was of sufficient interest to be controlled and
directed towards purposeful play (p183). Also in this chapter is
a section on 'The Children's Calendar'. This charts the seasonal
games and festivities of the child's year. This section exemplifies
the value of Orme's work and why it represents a departure from
previous works on medieval childhood; Orme is always striving to
see the medieval world from the child's viewpoint, and devotes topic
after topic to activities and problems that really mattered to children.
Cock fights, ball games, scrumping, roasting beans - children's
business is Orme's subject. Chapter 6, on the church, discusses
the clergy's involvement with the raising of children, including
their religious education, Christian rites of passage, and children
working within the church as clergy or as participants in the liturgy.
Inevitably, given that secular and ecclesiastical life were finely
interwoven in the medieval period, there is some discussion of these
topics in other chapters too. Orme chooses the topics of 'Learning
to Read' and 'Reading for Pleasure' for his penultimate chapters,
concluding with a chapter on the transition from childhood to adulthood.
Is anything missing from this detailed, information-packed
account? A more common approach to organising the discussion of
medieval childhood would be to include several chapters on education:
Shulamith Shahar, for example, in her Childhood in the Middle
Ages (which covers Europe as well as England) dedicates five
of her twelve chapters to the education of children from different
social backgrounds.[1] Orme
discusses 'Learning to Read' (chapter 7) and 'Reading for Pleasure'
(chapter 8), but deliberately excludes broader issues of education
and schooling in this work. As he rightly states, education is a
large subject and one he has written on in more than one previous
work, and it is not unreasonable to have excluded this as a separate
subject requiring more intensive study than this already large book
has space for.[2] In practice,
the school, school books and schoolboy thoughts crop up repeatedly
in the illustrations of medieval life and play. There may be no
formal discussion of schooling, but truancy, writing tasks, frustration
at unkind masters, and the trials of being away from home all crop
up with such frequency that the school looms as large in this text
as it must have done in the lives of many a medieval boy.
Studies of childhood in history have come a
long way since Phillipe Ariès first published his thesis of medieval
childhood in 1960, alerting historians to the idea that social history
does not begin with adults, and inviting them to see the worst of
man's character in his attitude to children.[3]
Ariès could not 'see' children in history; their lives were of no
great significance to medieval adults, and their treatment at the
hands of their carers was negligent at best and brutal at worst.
Since Ariès, most historians of childhood have seen a different
history in their records, and have been moving away from the idea
that the majority of children had an abusive upbringing. It is appropriate,
then, that with a new millennium, Nicholas Orme has offered a work
in which the page seems to have been turned on the past as an unsavoury
place for children. Death, abuse and infanticide are certainly part
of Orme's narrative, but this dark side to life is balanced by portraits
of loving, cherishing parents and carers, and happy children absorbed
in their play, or comfortably ensconced within the family. Orme
presents a comprehensive and evocative picture of the life of the
medieval child from birth to adolescence, exploring the relationships
between children and the cultural institutions that surrounded them.
Baptism, birthdays, disablement, playtime, family life and preparation
for adulthood are presented through the chronicles, paintings and,
to a lesser extent, the material culture of the period. In Orme's
populated pages, we are introduced to hundreds of medieval children
going about their business - Peter Carew, playing truant from school
and later humiliated for it in public by his father (p85); a boy
named Durand who had a small stone lodged in his ear (p111): Dorothy
Plumpton, a teenager miserable at having been sent away from home
as part of her upbringing (p318) - names, incidents and the minutiae
of children's lives, games and emotions teem within the pages of
this book.
Compared to earlier discussions of medieval
childhood, Orme's presentation of loving parents, caring teachers
and a considerate judiciary may seem to be a sweetening of the past,
but it represents an admirable determination to show the positive
aspects of medieval childhood and parenting, rather that dwelling
on the grim, brutal, and quite probably unrepresentative material
that survives in the records of courts and coroners rolls. Moreover,
he is at pains to explain the reasons for some of the apparent brutality
of medieval childhood, and to show how accessible medieval emotions
and thought patterns are to us. In his section on infanticide and
abandonment, for example, Professor Orme insists that 'medieval
people, like us, regarded such deeds [as infanticide] with horror'
(p95). Later, we are advised that 'the medieval families that came
closest to modern ones in providing support for children's reading
were those of the wealthier and literate people' (p274). When it
comes to the crowded sleeping arrangements of the later medieval
period, Orme cautions us that 'people get used to sleeping in groups,
and one can be as lonely in a dormitory as in a private room' (p79).
Teenage sex and pregnancies 'could be as surprising and unwelcome
to adults as they are today' (p331), and even the notorious 'Italian
relation', in which a 16th century Italian visitor to London describes
parents heartlessly turning their children out of their homes to
work in hard service as apprentices, is questioned and reinterpreted.
Altruistic and indulgent parents were trying to better the lives
of their children (p310). Ariès said; 'look how differently children
were treated in the past because parents did not care about their
children; isn't this interesting?' By contrast, the starting point
for Orme's presentation of childhood is that parents and carers
normally loved their children. In a sense, his vignettes of children
at play, children learning to read, children helping around the
home, say 'look at medieval childhood, see how consistently medieval
parents treated their children the way modern parents do: isn't
that interesting?' In one sense, yes. Orme's sympathetic treatment
of medieval childhood creates an enthralling and intimate social
history. But where does the discipline of research into the history
of childhood go from here?
The difficulty arises because the book conveys
no real sense of development in the history of childhood in this
period. Orme claims to be covering the period from the 7th century
to the 16th - some 900 years of societal change and development,
but his medieval children show little growth or change, with the
notable exception of an interesting and important discussion of
names, where Orme traces the shift in the popularity of names from
the Anglo-Saxon, through the Viking and into the Norman periods,
showing how the political climate and prevailing ethnic power groups
had a direct impact on the names chosen by parents for their children,
even if the most popular names were at odds with the parents' own
cultural background. If medieval childhood was static through 900
long years of war, Conquest, agricultural change, urbanisation and
theological upheaval, as this book, for the most part, implies,
and if medieval childhood, with its nursery rhymes, reading for
pleasure and upsetting teenage pregnancies is really very similar
to modern childhood, then there is, after a book such as this, no
point in studying the subject further.
Fortunately, the impression this book creates
of a world in which most medieval children throughout this time
span experienced broadly similar childhoods is, to a large extent,
accidental. In spite of his intentions stated at the outset, Orme
too often refers to 'the medieval child' engaged in some activity,
giving the impression that a 9th century Aelfric would have a similar
lifestyle and expectations as a 16th century Nicholas. In part,
Orme is drawn into this trap by the inevitable contrast between
the sparse evidence available for the Anglo-Saxon period and the
wealth of documentary records from the very end of the medieval
period, and perhaps for the general reader, this broad brush approach
is not a problem; only an academic pedant would feel obliged to
point out that this book says very little about Anglo-Saxon childhood
and a great deal about the late medieval period. Large portions
of the book have nothing to do with pre-Conquest society: discussions
of apprenticeship and the drift of adolescent workers into towns,
for example, are presented in general terms, as though common to
medieval society throughout the period. Revealingly, Professor Orme
begins a section on 'stories and memories' by claiming that 'it
is easy to find evidence about medieval children as they were seen
by others' (p338). If only this were true for the Anglo-Saxon period!
But, as Orme's discussion of children's names
illustrated, societal changes do have an impact on the culture of
childhood. What is static through time, and what Orme and others
have convincingly demonstrated, is that parents cared about their
children. But what is worthy of study, is what parents did, at different
times and under different circumstances, in order to do their best
for their child. None knows better than a modern western parent
how the demands and pressures of society lead to internal conflict
and much compromising between the desire to protect your offspring
and the desire to do what is 'right', and what was 'right' for an
Anglo-Saxon child was surely very different, because society was
very different, to what was 'right' for a 16th century child.
This does not come across in Orme's book, however,
because this is only a book (albeit a very, very good one) about
13th to 16th century childhood in England, with occasional reference
to the earlier period.
Nicholas Orme has done a tremendous amount
for the medieval child in this very enjoyable and readable book,
but fortunately, it is not the last word in the study of the subject.
February 2002
Notes:
1. Shahar,
S. Childhood in the Middle Ages London, Routledge, 1990.
2. For
example, see Orme, N. English Schools in the Middle Ages,
London and New York, 1973; Education and Society in Medieval
and Renaissance England, London and Ronceverte, 1989, and Education
in early Tudor England: Magdalen College Oxford and its School,
Oxford, 1998.
3.
Ariès, P. L'Enfant et la Familiale sous l'ancien Régime,
Paris, 1960.
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