Posted on 06/29/2023 11:53:10 AM PDT by SunkenCiv
Did paganism survive all through the Middle Ages, as scholars once thought, remaining the religion of the common people, while the elite had embraced Christianity? Or did it die out earlier?
This lecture will consider a broad range of evidence, including figures in seasonal folk rites, carvings in churches, the records of trials for witchcraft and a continuing veneration of natural places such as wells. It will also compare ancient paganism and medieval Christianity as successive religious systems.
A lecture by Ronald Hutton recorded on 7 June 2023 at Barbican Centre, London.
The transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the Gresham College website.
Gresham College has offered free public lectures for over 400 years, thanks to the generosity of our supporters. There are currently over 2,500 lectures free to access. We believe that everyone should have the opportunity to learn from some of the greatest minds.How Pagan Was Medieval Britain? | 1:02:20 | Gresham College | 219K subscribers | 45,534 views | June 20, 2023
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Transcript · Introduction 0:01 · foreign good evening everybody 0:08 · I have posed a question in the title of my talk and for most of the 20th century 0:16 · the answer to that question given by most experts would have been a 0:23 · resounding affirmative it was generally accepted that ancient 0:29 · paganism in some form had survived in Britain long after its 0:35 · official conversion to Christianity there was 0:40 · Sun argument over 0:47 · forgive me a moment my clicker is not aha it's my clicker has just 0:53 · flashed into life and there we go 0:59 · there was some difference over the exact form that it took some Scholars suggesting that the aristocracy had been · Early Modern Paganism 1:06 · mainly Christian that commoners clandestinely Pagan While others 1:12 · believed that the two faiths had long persisted amicably side by side from top 1:19 · to bottom of society Jeffrey Coulton a great historian of the 1:25 · medieval English church asserted in the 1920s that English peasants of the 1:32 · period had been cheerful semi-pagans meaning that they dutifully attended 1:39 · Christian Services in the day but went home to venerate older deities by the 1:46 · Fireside in the evening during the late 19th century 1:52 · a belief caught on among British Scholars that the people persecuted as 1:59 · witches in the notorious Witch Trials of the early modern period had been 2:05 · practitioners of a surviving Pagan fertility religion 2:10 · this was given its fullest expression in the early 20th century by Margaret 2:16 · Murray whose books turned the idea into something of an Orthodoxy by the 1960s 2:25 · it was repeated by such Giants of the historical profession as the 2:31 · medievalists Stephen ransomen and the experts in the early modern period Sir 2:37 · George Clarke and Christopher Hill support to the idea of a Pagan's 2:44 · survival was given by the medieval carvings in British churches 2:50 · in 1939 a gentile folklorist lady Raglan 2:55 · Drew attention to one form of them in particular 3:00 · of human heads with 3:07 · foliage gushing from nose and or mouth 3:12 · and she linked these to two other pieces of evidence 3:17 · one was a figure found in Victorian Mayday processions of a man covered in 3:24 · dense vegetation supported on a frame of wood this was thought to be ancient and 3:31 · generally known as the Jack and the green the other was a common Pub sign labeled 3:37 · the Green Man and by modern times usually showing a Forester or Robin Hood 3:44 · but nobody knew quite how old this Motif was 3:50 · and what lady Ragland did was to link all these three things together 3:58 · as representing the same original Pagan God a deity of returning Greenery and 4:05 · fertility to whom she gave the name appropriated from the pub sign of the 4:12 · Green Man his place in many churches suggested 4:17 · that the Christian clergy had been forced to tolerate his presence in order 4:23 · to propitiate the ordinary people who still venerated him 4:29 · Margaret Murray who did so much to popularize the idea of the early modern 4:35 · Witch Trials as a persecution of pagans made another important contribution to a 4:42 · belief in persisting paganism during the 1930s she Drew attention to a 4:49 · different form of enigmatic medieval Church carving showing a woman facing 4:55 · the Observer and displaying her genitals like this one in herefordshire 5:01 · Scholars had generally given these their Irish nickname of Sheila nagig 5:08 · Margaret Murray interpreted these as a representation of a pagan fertility 5:16 · goddess placed in churches like that of the Green Man to satisfy those who 5:23 · continue to worship her these ideas not only continue to be 5:29 · accepted outside the academic system during the late 20th century but made an 5:36 · impact on its wider culture Margaret Murray's portrait of the Pagan witch 5:41 · religion made a major contribution to the development of an entirely viable 5:47 · and successful pagan-witch religion in the modern Western world called wicker 5:55 · the pioneering scholar of British Iron Age paganism and Ross accepted the 6:02 · interpretation of the shield and a gig as a goddess linking the image to a deity whom she 6:10 · called the Divine hag of the Pagan Celts in 1975 Anne went even further teaming 6:18 · up with a good photographer to produce a popular book called grotesques and 6:24 · gargoyles in this she interpreted sheilana Giggs green men and other 6:31 · motifs carved in medieval churches as representations of pagan deities 6:39 · she accused academic Scholars of virtually and I quote a conspiracy of 6:46 · Silence to conceal this evidence for the reality of a persistent Pagan religion 6:53 · through the Middle Ages and Beyond radical movements appropriated these 7:00 · images for their own uses feminist artists adopted the shield in a 7:06 · gig as a powerful and effective symbol of female sexuality empowerment and 7:14 · self-confidence the green movements naturally took up the green man as a motif especially 7:22 · after the London poet William Anderson hailed it as an archetypal 7:28 · representation of the power of the endangered natural world 7:33 · there's no doubt that these medieval images have become Dynamic and emotive 7:40 · components of modern culture and are extremely valuable as such 7:46 · but what is the truth 7:51 · concerning survival of paganism are these all actually as we had thought 7:58 · evidence for it only from the 1990s did an answer starts 8:07 · to emerge based upon solid research a great deal of this was needed to pool 8:14 · the data to evaluate the truth of all these previous claims as the data was so 8:20 · disparate and so scattered however from the late 1970s this work began powered 8:29 · by the expansion and greater dynamism of higher education and by a new mood of 8:36 · re-examination of Victorian and Edwardian beliefs 8:42 · the idea of the witch trials as persecution of pagans most associated by 8:48 · the mid-20th century with Margaret Murray collapsed first 8:54 · sustained and widespread Research into the trial records across the whole of 9:00 · Europe and its colonies prove that the individuals prosecuted for witchcraft 9:06 · had not been pagans even though ancient ideas had played a part in creating some 9:14 · of the belief systems that had produced the trials after that the components parts of Lady 9:23 · raglan's construct of the Green Man were dismantled the medieval foliate heads were studied 9:31 · by Kathleen basford in 1978 and Mercia 9:37 · McDermott in 2003 they were revealed to have been a motif 9:43 · originally developed in India where it seems to have represented a genuine 9:50 · Hindu vegetation God and then the motif traveled through the medieval Arab 9:56 · Empire as a decoration and arrived as such in Christian Europe there it is 10:03 · first found in Monks manuscripts as a decoration for the margins 10:09 · and from there it spread later into churches 10:15 · the Jack and the green was studied by Roy judge in 1979 and 10:22 · proved to have appeared in London at the end of the 18th century it was actually 10:27 · initially a feature of Chimney Sweeps processions enacted to collect money in May the 10:36 · whole problem of May for chimney sweeps is it's the beginning of Summer and the 10:41 · whole problem summer for chimney sweeps is that people don't tend to use their 10:47 · fires thereafter so summer is a bad time for chimney sweeps business and so they 10:54 · would hold processions through towns at the opening of it to collect money from 11:00 · sympathetic observers to tide them over the Dead period of work in the summer 11:07 · and they found that fancy dress attracted more attention and more 11:13 · donations and the carrying of foliage and grievery on a frame whilst 11:19 · particularly popular so by the late 18th century they'd adopted that and from the 11:25 · chimney sweep processions it got into Victorian Mayday celebrations in general 11:32 · the Green Man Pub sign while studied by Brandon centerwall an American academic 11:39 · in 1997. and shown to derive from the medieval 11:44 · motif of the wild man of the Woods this is an imagined figure in the Middle 11:50 · Ages of a barbaric or Savage Race of 11:56 · humans who are the antithesis of civilization and therefore have all the 12:01 · disturbing and exciting traits of antitheses to civilization they lived in 12:07 · the woods and they were either covered in hair or dressed in leaves 12:12 · and they passed from the Middle Ages from scholarly books into Tudor and 12:18 · Stewart Urban pageantry where having an oik dressed up in leaves and wielding a 12:24 · club was a very good way of clearing space for the Vegeta for the procession 12:30 · to make its way especially if the lads with the leaves 12:35 · and the clubs appeared to be drunk and this aided by the connection between 12:42 · Vines and wine made the leaf-covered man into a symbol for distillers in the 17th 12:50 · century and so it got onto pub signs and has been there ever since the point is 12:57 · that none of these three things actually had anything to do with each other or 13:03 · with a pagan God further research revealed the true · Further Research 13:09 · context of the shield and a gig in 1977 Jurgen Anderson realized that 13:17 · she had come from France and was found there and in Spain as much as in the 13:22 · British Isles she was part of a new style of church decoration in the 11th 13:28 · and 12th centuries called Romanesque and spread with the other motifs of 13:36 · Romanesque along major pilgrimage routes 13:41 · in 1984 Anthony Weir and James German confirmed this 13:47 · and suggested that it was a warning against sins of the flesh the shielding 13:52 · gigs were never beautiful they were always blatant and they were intended to 13:57 · turn people off rather than turn them on there was no connection between them and 14:05 · a goddess their case is now generally accepted but there may I think be an 14:11 · exception to it in Ireland where the motif is often found on secular buildings and where the eye 14:18 · cannot reach and can be linked to a genuine Irish folk tradition that a 14:23 · woman could avert Evil by exposing her genitals to it 14:29 · in Ireland's therefore the shield in a gig May indeed link into ancient Pagan 14:35 · belief but that's not however the original point of the image which does 14:41 · seem to have been to warn against lust and nor the usual meaning that seems to 14:47 · have been placed upon it in medieval times which was that · Legal Records 14:52 · now all those red herrings have been removed what actual evidence is there 14:58 · for the survival of paganism in medieval Britain there are two bodies of directly 15:06 · relevant material from opposite ends the Middle Ages and they both consist of legal records the 15:15 · first comprises Anglo-Saxon law codes are danglosaxon Church Council decrees 15:22 · that forbid Pagan practices among the recently converted English 15:28 · and these prohibitions certainly exist in the 7th and early 8th centuries but 15:36 · they die out in the course of the 8th Century by the time you reach 800 there 15:42 · are no more being issued they then reappear in the 10th Century the 900s 15:49 · but they are there to deal with newly arrived Pagan Viking settlers who had 15:56 · just been converted officially to Christianity and that second series of 16:01 · prohibitions also comes to an end in this case after 10 30. thereafter no 16:10 · medieval British laws sermons or Publications forbid the worship of pagan 16:17 · deities in Britain no matter how Evangelical and intolerant a Christian 16:24 · the author at the other end of the Middle Ages in · Church Courts 16:29 · the 15th century we have the records of church courts 16:34 · that dealt with religious and moral offenses among local populations 16:41 · certainly many people did offend the established Church's view of proper 16:48 · religious belief and practice at that time there were plenty of people in some 16:54 · areas with heretical Christian ideas who are known at the time by the umbrella 17:00 · term of lollards and they are also a few Skeptics and scoffers especially in pubs 17:08 · in the evening there is however nothing resembling paganism with the single 17:15 · possible example of a guy I found in Hertfordshire who allegedly declared 17:21 · that there were no Gods but the Sun and Moon he was however rather disappointingly 17:27 · not a member of a cult or an advocate of the worship of the sun and moon but an 17:35 · individual cynic indeed apprehended in a nail house suggesting that all religious 17:40 · belief was pointless is it possible that pagans could have 17:45 · continued to practice their religion in secret by this time without ever being 17:51 · detected it seems very unlikely if the lollards 17:56 · who did absolutely everything to conceal their beliefs and practices including 18:01 · going regularly to the Parish Church ended up in court because they sooner or 18:08 · later got detected and it does seem as if every lollard cell in the nation got apprehended at 18:17 · one time or another something the church caught records bring home very strongly is the sheer · Nosiness 18:24 · nosiness of ordinary people at the time and their strong sense of the need to 18:30 · conform to communal Norms uh in that sense little changed in many areas to 18:36 · the 20th century but the records of this in late medieval Church courts are 18:42 · particularly striking I'll take an example from my own City of Bristol in 18:48 · 191539 I am choosing Bristol not just because it's on my doorstep but because 18:55 · the records there are very good and because it's big it's the second or 19:00 · third biggest city in England or indeed Britain at that time and if you're going 19:07 · to carry on something clandestinely it's notoriously easier to 19:12 · do it in a big city than in the countryside because things there are more Anonymous it's much more easy to 19:21 · escape the notice of people who tend to have other things in their mind rather than those living in rural communities 19:27 · where nothing ever happens or changes for long periods and yet 19:34 · it was actually very difficult even in Bristol to get away with the mildest of 19:40 · infringements of expected Behavior my favorite case here is Marjorie Norful · Marjorie Norful 19:49 · who was a bouncy Widow who arrived in Bristol from the countryside in that 19:55 · year we don't know how her first husband died certainly he did so by the time she was 20:02 · 26 and she came to Bristol with the declared attention of finding another 20:08 · husband and she then proceeded to buy 20:15 · several crates of wine to assist the process of inducing an atmosphere in 20:21 · which proposals could take place and her first attempt was on an elderly 20:27 · wealthy Clothier but it didn't work out she decided at 20:34 · Close Quarters that she preferred a penniless young man to a wealthy Earls 20:39 · one and so set about finding a handsome young man and she did his name was Thomas Jones 20:47 · recommended to her by a friend in her lodgings who was a servant in Bristol so 20:53 · she invited Tom Jones to come to the house when he arrived Marjorie produced a 20:59 · bottle of wine and Witnesses reported that they sat at the table drinking wine 21:05 · merrily together literally Sherry together it was Bristol after a Time 21:11 · Thomas Jones announced that he must go because he had Folks at home and 21:16 · therefore he was sorry Mary however refused to let him go but insisted he 21:22 · should stay the night so that they could talk further Witnesses then saw Marjorie produce 21:29 · another bottle of wine as they retired to her bed chamber the next day 21:34 · Witnesses saw Marjorie and Thomas walking hand in hand in the garden and then sitting on a seat under a Woodbine 21:42 · plant they then heard Marjorie say to Thomas let us not go inside here's a good place 21:49 · for there are many folks Inside Yes there certainly were and they are all taking notes 21:56 · and then she set the cloth there already and set her for them wine and Ale and 22:03 · there they drank and were very merry together after some time Thomas again protested he was sorry but he must go 22:11 · home to attend to his job and Witnesses heard Marjorie say to him uh with my 22:18 · assumed accent remember she comes from Somerset what need you to be sorry go your 22:24 · hometown to your Harvest for I am your wife and you be my husband and by my 22:31 · faith and Truth we will never be departed till God depart us the witnesses watching through the 22:38 · Parlor window saw that Thomas likewise took Marjorie by the hand and said by my 22:45 · faith and truth I take you to be my wife Thomas then went home but a few days 22:51 · later he sent a messenger with an expensive present of a string of coral 22:56 · beads with Gordies of silver to Marjorie in the meantime however Marjorie had met 23:03 · somebody else and refused to accept the beads saying 23:09 · God make him a good man I will never have his tokens now the new man in her 23:15 · life was a weaver called Thomas Hayward who was both young 23:21 · and good-looking and wealthy and Marjorie solemnly got engaged to him 23:27 · however following a complaint from Tom Marjorie got cited before the church 23:32 · court for breach of contract and she lost the case we unfortunately don't 23:38 · know what happened to her thereafter but given the fact that she was Marjorie I 23:43 · imagine she made her own way well enough somewhere the point here is that uh this is a 23:51 · common place and intimate and private series of conversations but everything 23:57 · that Marjorie said or did with the men was observed and recorded by at least 24:02 · two witnesses and this runs through the records people loved nothing more than entertainment 24:09 · than observing their neighbors especially if their neighbors appear to be doing something wrong · Three Isolated Cases 24:16 · between these two bodies of evidence are three isolated cases assembled by 24:23 · Margaret Murray as evidence for continuing paganism the first was a Chronicle entry for 1282 24:32 · that the priest at inverkey in Scotland had forced The Village girls to dance 24:39 · around a human image while he carried a carved phallus on a pearl this is 24:45 · admittedly rather unpreast likely paver uh even for the 13th century 24:52 · but he was not the leader of the Pagan Community but a lone Maniac who also 24:57 · forced his parishioners to strip and whip each other until they murdered him 25:03 · the second case was from Kent in 1313 where a man called Stephen Le Pope 25:10 · worshiped images of goddesses and gods he'd made them set up in his garden 25:16 · unfortunately after this promising beginning it turns out he was clearly 25:21 · another solitary lunatic because he murdered his maid on the same night and 25:28 · that's why he ended up in court finally in 1351 the monks of friffel 25:34 · stock Priory Devon were accused by their local Bishop of Exeter 25:39 · of running a fortune-telling racket for money and directing an image and this is 25:45 · the interesting bit of proud or disobey and disobedient Eve or unchaste Diana 25:52 · the Pagan goddess in their Chapel the interesting thing here though is the 25:58 · monks protested it was actually an icon of the Virgin Mary and it must be 26:04 · recognized the bishop concerned was a most unusual one a frenetic Evangelical 26:10 · reformer who seemed bent in his time as Bishop on accusing practically everybody 26:16 · if anything it may therefore be concluded there is no real evidence for genuine paganism in 26:24 · Britain off to 10 30 ish defining genuine paganism as allegiance to 26:31 · pre-christian goddesses and gods there's enormous amounts of images ideas 26:38 · practices and Customs taken into medieval Christian culture from paganism 26:44 · that it's all thoroughly assimilated to Christian culture · Polytheism 26:50 · the obvious question to be posed is why this was and the answer offered here is 26:58 · that medieval British Christianity made paganism unnecessary by reproducing its 27:04 · features in a parallel form United to a very different theology 27:09 · those features were number one polytheism paganism had many deities the equivalent 27:18 · in Christianity was provided by Saints who are likewise of both sexes and with 27:26 · many different individual areas of potency there were hundreds and hundreds from 27:34 · whom to choose some had a very localized following Cornwall alone famously had schools 27:42 · found there and nowhere else Saint Walston of Barbara 27:47 · is a misspelling on the text was venerated by 20 parishes in Norfolk and 27:54 · nowhere else and Saint Sidwell was a great favorite in Exeter and East Devon but not found 28:02 · elsewhere just as with the relationship with Pagan 28:08 · diocese the relationship with people of people with Saints was very ad hoc in 28:15 · other words Pagan goddesses and gods had special areas of life or the world over 28:21 · which they presided and certainly had a problem that area you went along to that 28:27 · particular goddess or God and asked for help and medieval people did the same 28:33 · thing with Saints they went to them for help when they had 28:38 · specific problems such approaches could be much more important to ordinary common people than · Saints 28:45 · mainstream religion in many ways the great Trinity God 28:51 · Christ Holy Ghost or simply too important rather like 28:57 · important people and medieval Britain they were simply Out Of Reach of commoners 29:02 · and so people instinctually turn to Saints as they would to officials on the 29:08 · manor or Parish officials to intercede with the higher-ups for them or simply 29:15 · to help them because of their own specialties this remains a feature of traditional 29:21 · Roman Catholic societies to this day in the French Department de Parma of legere 29:30 · in the 1960s which is a rural uh 29:35 · relatively economically impoverished area of France it was found 29:42 · that five percent of the working class inhabitants had attended a service in 29:48 · their Parish Church during the previous year but 49 of men and 78 of women had 29:56 · visited a saint Shrine to pray and ask for help the saints were the religion of 30:03 · ordinary people in legere as in medieval Britain 30:09 · just like Pagan deities saints were patrons of specific trades age groups 30:16 · cures for illnesses genders Nations regions farming processes and 30:24 · animals some were clearly overworked · Natural Places 30:31 · Saint Clement ended up patron of blacksmiths anchor makers iron workers 30:37 · workers and Carpenters Saint Blaise cared for wool comers wax 30:45 · Chandlers which is why he's got candles in his hand on the screen wild animals and appropriately for 30:55 · somebody with a feast day in early February sore throats 31:00 · like Pagan deities also natural places just Wells and trees were sacred to 31:07 · Saints so those seeking their help didn't even need to enter a church if 31:13 · they didn't wish it and these trees and Wells could be quite lonely wild places 31:19 · where people could go discreetly in order to have a one-to-one with the 31:25 · Saints concerned on the whole Pagan temples in Britain 31:31 · were not changed directly into Christian churches nor Pagan deities into Saints 31:40 · Pope Gregory the Great who said the first Christian missionaries to the Anglo-Saxons wrote a famous letter in 31:49 · which he ordered that Pagan English temples be transformed into Christian 31:54 · churches this however doesn't seem to have 31:59 · happened perhaps because Gregory mistook the sort of temples they had in 32:06 · Pagan England for the great stone temples of his very 32:12 · own Rome which could make Splendid churches instead the Anglo-Saxons had flimsy little wooden shrines 32:19 · which were simply not suitable as communal Christian places of worship 32:26 · just for the record and this I admit stunned me 32:31 · only 33 out of around one and a half thousand 32:36 · medieval Parish churches in Britain have been shown to have had any apparent 32:43 · pre-christian activity religious or secular on their site 32:49 · no British Saints seem to have been former Pagan deities in contrast the 32:57 · situation in Ireland and Continental Europe where you do seem to have a few 33:02 · goddesses and gods turned directly into Christian Saints the outstanding Irish 33:08 · case being Bridget even sacred Waters have little overlap 33:15 · the medieval British Christians had lots of holy Wells so had the Pagan British 33:24 · but there's little continuity major Pagan sacred Springs such as coventeen 33:32 · as well at karabara up on Hadrian's Wall and the wonderful hot Waters of the 33:39 · Goddess sulis Minerva at bath were not apparently christianized 33:44 · conversely only one medieval Christian holywell at low later than Essex 33:52 · has evidence of cult activity in Pagan times as well 33:58 · Christianity in Britain seems therefore not to have adapted Pagan buildings 34:06 · deities and locations for its use so much as to 34:13 · have provided a similar but parallel service and this parallel service is reflected 34:21 · in church buildings so that by 1500 the average Parish 34:26 · Church contained anything from 3 to 30 shrines dedicated to Saints who weren't 34:34 · the parish patron saints and sometimes more than 30. many of these were 34:42 · constructed and maintained and served by guilds local societies dedicated to the 34:50 · Saints concerned which maintained their own priests and were open to all but the 34:56 · very poor you could be a member of most Parish guilds for a subscription of a 35:01 · penny a year and there were of many many different 35:07 · kinds there were Parish guilds for the young Parish gills for the elderly 35:13 · women's only gills men's only guilds and guilds serving the whole range of crafts 35:20 · and occupations found in the parish and again these are a parallel service to 35:28 · Pagan organizations they are the medieval Christian equivalent to the 35:34 · Priestly colleges or the mystery religions dedicated to particular goddesses and gods that you find in 35:42 · Roman Britain the Second Great area of parallel is 35:48 · festivals just as in Pagan times so in the Christian Middle Ages seasonal 35:55 · festivals were the main religious events there weren't any laws compelling people 36:02 · to attend church regularly before the 1550s 36:08 · an occasional local snapshots show that even in towns where churches are really 36:14 · easy to reach compared to the countryside about half of parishioners didn't go 36:21 · regularly the churches were however crowded out 36:26 · for the big spectacular annual calendar Feasts 36:31 · parishioners sang in The Dawn together on Christmas Day for the end of the 36:36 · winter solstice the returning of the light as well as the Nativity they had 36:41 · candles blessed at candleness in February to represent new light 36:47 · to hold up fire against the dark to drive it back and welcome becoming 36:53 · spring parishion has brought new foliage to be blessed on Palm Sunday and to protect 37:01 · and decorate their homes and attended the drama of the resurrection of Christ on Easter Day 37:07 · represented by a consecrated wafer of bread taken from a miniature tomb 37:15 · in May clergy-led regation tied processions to bless the growing crops 37:21 · of the area and on Whit Sunday a white dove was released in the church to 37:27 · symbolize the Holy Spirit otherwise 37:33 · the priests were there to celebrate Services themselves regularly on behalf 37:39 · of all parishioners including all those absent just as Pagan priests had maintained 37:47 · temples and kept up the regular rights there on behalf of the community · Secular revelry 37:52 · parishioners provided the images hangings carvings gilding incense and 38:00 · music churches were really houses of God 38:07 · and the priest functioned as the housekeeper and people turned up there when they 38:15 · wished or when things were exciting scriptural meanings were imposed on 38:20 · Ancient calendar Feasts but the feasts themselves were kept going 38:25 · traditional secular revelry converged with religions the Middle Ages went on 38:31 · so that may games Village summer feasts and collections by plowboys in January 38:38 · all came to be means of raising funds for the Parish Church what had happened 38:44 · here is something quite remarkable in the earlier parts of the Middle Ages 38:49 · and up to the 13th century Christian churchmen regularly condemned the 38:55 · traditional seasonal festivities of the populace as a temptation to sin mostly 39:02 · the sins of drunkenness and fornication but in the 14th and 15th centuries 39:09 · increasingly the church claimed those very same festivities as a means of 39:15 · raising cash for the parish and the result was sensationally successful so 39:22 · that by 1500 in most parishes all the expenses of maintaining the church 39:29 · physically were paid for by Fun by the proceeds of popular and extremely well 39:37 · attended rounds of traditional Neri making Morris dancing Naples Robin Hood Games 39:46 · all sorts of traditional dances plays and Feasts and now the proceeds going to 39:54 · the church the devil had been cheated even the merry-making we should at first 40:00 · been condemned by churchmen as leading to sin became harnessed to pay for 40:06 · worship and the proceeds were so considerable that rates 40:14 · the local taxes levied upon parishioners to pay for the church could be abolished 40:19 · in most English parishioners because Mary England had taken their place · Feminine power 40:25 · there was also a place for the feminine the medieval Christian church had ample 40:32 · space for feminine power human and divine about half of All Saints were women led 40:40 · by Mary the Queen of Heaven herself whose images took on trappings from the 40:46 · Pagan goddesses Juno Venus and Diana women functioned as Parish Church 40:53 · wardens and Guild members with equal rights honorees gave them private religious 41:00 · spaces and some women made great reputations as Hermits and authors such 41:07 · as Julian of Norwich all this served to erect a thick scream at Parish level 41:14 · before a fundamentally patriarchal religion and the fourth parallel was that in · Sacrifice 41:22 · medieval Christianity as an ancient paganism the central ritual Act was 41:28 · sacrifice but pagans had sacrificed animals and then 41:34 · ate them so that a pagan sacrifice was part act of worship and part barbecue 41:41 · they also poured Libations of their favorite drinks and they burned incense 41:48 · a sacrifice Christianity replaced all this with the self-sacrifice of the 41:55 · divine Savior of the religion commemorated by offering up his body and 42:00 · blood symbolically in the mass and this was the essential right that had to be 42:07 · celebrated regularly preaching by contrast was popular if you had a good 42:13 · preacher but not essential and you usually had a good preacher because 42:18 · preaching was provided from the 13th century often in Market places or at 42:24 · roadside Crosses by professionals the Friars who turned areas 42:31 · providing a road show of first class lecturing for the locals 42:39 · the priests who served parishes were not required to preach or even to be 42:45 · literate and were generally local and Ordinary People risen from the parish or 42:52 · the district to serve it related to and relating to the ordinary parishioners 42:59 · and to judge from the comparative absence of litigation against them in 43:05 · the late Middle Ages they were generally popular looking to the Future · Looking to the Future 43:11 · it's clear that both the Protestant Reformation and the Catholic counter-reformation which began together 43:18 · in the 16th century represented a massive reaction by the 43:24 · leaders of European and indeed British Christianity to end this system of 43:31 · medieval religion by then the intellectuals and the presiding figures 43:37 · of the western church had come to think that Christianity had become altogether 43:43 · too decentralized folky straying away from the central figures of the Trinity 43:50 · and its basis in Scripture and both movements Protestants and 43:57 · Catholic sought more uniformity better central control 44:03 · better education especially for clergy and a piety more closely based upon the 44:10 · Bible the Trinity and the key teachings of the church 44:15 · in the British case protestantism which became within two generations the 44:22 · religion of 95 of the British got rid of the Saints 44:28 · the mass Church decorations the place of women in 44:34 · the church festive customs and secular merry-making 44:39 · the link between merry-making and fundraising was broken as sinful and 44:46 · rates and Pew rents were imposed instead to raise the money 44:51 · to pay for the church it was a self-conscious removal of pagan 44:57 · parallels and it was hoped that what would result as an end to this process would be a 45:05 · much more Orthodox uniform fervent educated informed and inspired kind of 45:14 · Christianity that will get everybody to Heaven a great deal more easily 45:21 · instead what it did was shatter Christian Unity because Protestants all 45:27 · over Europe including Britain began very soon to quarrel amongst themselves over 45:33 · right belief and right practice and in the 17th century the · Religious Pluralism 45:41 · relatively uniform if unstable Protestant churches of England and 45:47 · Scotland shattered in the bloodiest civil wars that both Nations have ever 45:53 · known indeed in terms of percentage of population dead the bloodiest Wars the 45:58 · British have ever known and the damage was irreparable 46:04 · after those Civil Wars the norm was not that of uniform Protestant churches with 46:13 · a few Catholic dissidents but established Protestant churches with 46:19 · huge numbers of other kinds of Protestants Presbyterians congregationalists United 46:25 · reformed Quakers Baptists etc etc religious pluralism 46:33 · and in many ways religious chaos within the boundaries of a well-run state 46:38 · became the norm this was in many ways a very good thing because learning to live 46:45 · with diversity as the British reluctantly had to do produced a much 46:51 · more tolerant diverse and dynamic and extremely successful culture to make the 46:58 · transition into modest into modernity that the result by the late 20th century 47:06 · has become in many ways a modern version of the medieval situation and religion 47:11 · with added pluralism in other words whatever people's denomination it tends 47:17 · to be the priests or ministers who keep churches going while among the lay 47:23 · population it's The Devout who choose to attend religious worship 47:30 · you can see a snapshot of this in the 1990s when it was found that 10 percent 47:36 · of the British went to church or Chapel regularly but 62 percent believed in God 47:43 · however defined 65 percent interestingly 47:49 · still profess to be Christian including three percent there who don't believe in God 47:54 · and 90 celebrated Christmas 48:00 · all that's changed since in that is that the percentage going to church from the 48:05 · chapel regularly has diminished still further and the number of people professing no religion in the nation has 48:13 · at last risen to be the greatest single group interestingly among the new forms of 48:21 · religious pluralism to appear in the 20th century was a revived paganism 48:27 · to complicate and round off to date the British religious picture 48:33 · that that however is a story for another course of these 48:39 · lectures and so I earned this course of lectures on the edge of a Vista of more 48:47 · [Applause] · Questions 49:00 · Professor Hutton thank you again for another fascinating lecture we've got time for some questions so what I will 49:06 · do is I'll open it up to our in-person audience here before I take any from our 49:11 · online audience so show of hands for me anybody who's got the question for Professor Hutton 49:17 · a couple here thank you Professor Hudson um appreciate very much what you said 49:24 · um just interested where you think woe didn't figures in all of this 49:30 · with the Advent of the Saxons of course and leftovers from ancient Britain when 49:36 · the Romans left thank you werdin certainly features in this because he is 49:42 · preserved in late that's Christian Anglo-Saxon healing charms spells which 49:50 · are recorded dutifully by monks as effective against various forms of 49:55 · disease and physical Affliction which call upon woden as a helpful Spirit we 50:03 · have no idea how much the monks concerns knew who woden was still or what 50:09 · attitude they had to him but these charms are clearly pre-christian 50:15 · or their the charms are based on pre-christian charms and they were 50:20 · preserved because people respected their reputed effectiveness it would be wonderful if woden was still 50:26 · there in the charms of the later Middle Ages but he doesn't survive the Anglo-Saxon period 50:32 · thank you you said it's deserve no positive belief in pagan gods was there 50:38 · skepticism of any of any God was there a it's an Atheism in that period yes uh 50:46 · it's it's difficult to be an atheist and medieval or early modern Britain because the penalty is death 50:53 · and therefore it's all the more significant that uh there's a steady 51:00 · trickle of cases and the church courts of people who seem invariably to have 51:06 · been drunk in the village pub or the parish in uh 51:12 · who sound off about how can anybody believe in this Tosh and it's all dearly 51:17 · reported by their neighbors now we we don't know um how many went unreported because 51:24 · their neighbors were benign or because their neighbors agreed with them what one can say is that skepticism is 51:31 · definitely there the um 51:36 · or when we say counterfeit reparation period 51:41 · um with the rise in witchcraft 51:47 · in Europe which is almost outside of what you're 51:54 · talking about because malice [Music] um 52:00 · was 1485. so 52:06 · um how does this link in terms of England 52:14 · it certainly reached England because uh Britain had some of the most vicious 52:20 · persecutions of alleged witches in Europe in fact of the three worst areas 52:28 · for Witch Trials one was Scotland Scotland because it has a decentralized 52:33 · system of justice uh executed round about two and a half three 52:40 · thousand people uh for alleged witchcraft whereas England with five 52:45 · times the population executed four to five hundred because it had a centralized and more professional 52:52 · system of justice not because it was nicer but the connection with paganism is very 52:59 · tenuous the tenuous connection is that pagans believed in Witchcraft and in 53:05 · some cases persecuted it just as severely as Christians were to do there 53:11 · was a a lull in which persecution in the Early Middle Ages largely because of a 53:17 · problem for Christians which is if you have an all-powerful omnipresent single good God 53:26 · how can this person license evil human beings to work evil magic and this acts 53:34 · as a break on which trials for about a thousand years and then in the 15th 53:39 · century Christian theology mutates to the idea that God has licensed the 53:46 · devil to empower evil people with magic to hurt their neighbors and Christianity 53:52 · to test Faith before the end of the world and therefore the laws are changed 53:58 · to bring back the death penalty for witchcraft and lots of ancient fears and 54:05 · beliefs which had never quite been eradicated now explode upwards and 54:11 · create a bloodbath which we call the great Witch Hunt I've had a question come through from · Mummers Plays 54:18 · the online audience very quickly um did the Mummers plays portray pagan 54:23 · origins no is the answer plays are certainly 54:28 · Pagan we've always had them perform we've always had the performed at mid-winter like Mama's plays but mama's 54:36 · plays are an 18th century craze they appear in the mid-18th century 54:43 · spread by printed texts and you can see why they sweep England and some other 54:50 · bits of Britain because their knockout comedy and they're very elastic with a 54:56 · stock bunch of characters you can pack in all sorts of topical references and 55:01 · local jokes and also so it has the twin benefit of being spontaneous and full of 55:10 · surprises and yet it's basically so well known that the audience can shout the 55:15 · punch lines at particular times and it becomes the favorite drama of the 55:22 · southern English at midwinter by the early 19th century then it begins to 55:27 · become boring and it starts to die out just in time for folkloris who have no 55:33 · idea of its Origins to encounter it around 1900 and think it's Neolithic 55:38 · we've had some really very good Research into its Origins recently the 18th 55:44 · century origin seems pretty clear even if some of the characters and lines are taken from 16th 17th century popular 55:52 · drama and literature thank you very much in your coverage of · Harvest Festivals 55:58 · the various festivals seasonal festivals I think there's one you didn't mention it's one I rather like because there's 56:04 · no real theology attached to it that's Harvest festivals and what's the history 56:09 · of those I left them out because they didn't appear in parishes till the 56:15 · Victorian period uh before then uh they were they were represented by Harvest 56:22 · suppers and the Harvest supper was what a farmer would give the people who'd 56:28 · helped him reap his crop at the end uh the hands were all given a slap up 56:33 · dinner the best the farmer could afford in The Farmhouse kitchen often with 56:38 · music and dancing as well but in the 19th century recently farmers were not 56:45 · just starting to mechanize but they are also giving wages in money to their 56:50 · laborers and didn't see why they had to pay in kind as well at the end and so as 56:56 · the parish supper the Harvest suppers died out the vacuum was filled by a 57:02 · communal and all Village celebration the Harvest Festival · Unique Saints 57:07 · um I was just wondering if um the unique Saints we find in corn or 57:14 · aren't a product of pagan syncretism do we have any idea where they did come from well the answer is no not really 57:21 · but uh medieval people had an idea where they came from they virtually all come 57:27 · from Wales uh which seems to have been according to early medieval Cornish 57:34 · tradition was a missionary Powerhouse that sent out its its spare Saints to 57:39 · Cornwall Devon and indeed Brittany where where I lost them ended up uh because 57:46 · our only Authority for this is later medieval lives which may all be fiction 57:51 · uh we we actually don't know all we can say is we've never yet found a Romano 57:59 · British inscription to a goddess or God who has the same name even in earlier form as a medieval saint hi I was struck 58:08 · by um what you said about the how few churches can be connected to Pagan 58:15 · locations either structures or locations of worship and I know that um 58:22 · quite a few people out there you know it's repeated that a lot of churches are connected to Pagan locations you know 58:29 · people talk about you trees in church arts and stuff and I just wondered how can you be so definitive because I I 58:36 · imagine a lot of pagan worship uh was I mean I don't know enough about it but there weren't actually any structures 58:42 · you know they weren't temples as such that could well be the case uh all that 58:47 · we can say is that where pagans regularly celebrated you find the 58:53 · archaeological remains of Feasts sacrifices and offerings and in the more 59:01 · up markets the more important places altars inscriptions and carvings as well 59:07 · uh you'd expect more of these underneath medieval Christian churches that you 59:13 · don't find them in virtually all cases so much so that the emission must be 59:20 · deliberate there was a great misunderstanding 59:25 · produced by a popular writer in the Edwardian period not not an academic who 59:31 · declared with no fear and no research but in a wonderfully well-written book 59:36 · that every English Parish church has a prehistoric Stone Circle underneath it 59:43 · and that just went into General belief it began to ebb and then Along Came the 59:49 · yew trees the yew trees are there because of a literal dreamer a wonderful 59:55 · Visionary called Alan Meredith who literally dreams that you trees were 1:00:00 · telling him the secret of how to judge their age botanically you can't date a 1:00:06 · yew tree doesn't have tree rings you can't tell how old it is by examining it looking at it so they could be really 1:00:13 · really really old but they might not be as old as oak trees we just don't know but Meredith's dreams gave him a form of 1:00:21 · calibration and he then announced as proven fact that enabled him to date you 1:00:27 · trees to thousands of years and this then persuaded people like David Bellamy 1:00:32 · the TV botanist who went around dating new trees all over the country and churchyard to the new stone age and the 1:00:39 · Bronze Age and that gave a great boost to the idea these churchyards were Pagan 1:00:45 · holy places uh in fact we still have no evidence that anyu tree is actually over 1:00:52 · a thousand years in age almost certainly some are but but very very few and the 1:00:58 · evidence is still lacking so there's a great deal of 20th century folklore involved in this yes evidence absence of 1:01:07 · evidence is not necessarily evidence of absence in this case but 1:01:13 · given quite how much evidence pagans piled up in places where they did 1:01:18 · celebrate their religion the omission of it underneath Christian churches is 1:01:25 · noteworthy thank you very much for your questions and Professor Hutton thank you for 1:01:30 · taking us on this journey this year to find the lost gods of Britain next series will be on Magic the Supernatural 1:01:39 · and the lost gods of Europe so we hope you can all join us then thank you very much again 1:01:45 · thank you 1:01:55 · next year it gets down and dangerous we're going to go to some of the darker 1:02:00 · and the creepier and the most exciting places of pagan Europe
Pagans?
People Against Goodness And Normalcy?
Or, you could read the transcript.
They are probably more pagan now with all the low life’s that have moved in. Even the London mayor is a pagan.
If the topic is the relative distribution of non-Christian vs Christian practices amongst the higher and the lower socio-economic groups, there should be significant mention of the luciferian religion practiced by the highest of such strata.
Many thanks for this very interesting article and link; it’s right up my alley! ;^)
There’s a movie, starring Charlton Heston, called “THE WARLORD”, that sort of deal with this subject, in a way; great movie, BTW and if you haven’t seen it, see if it’s on YouTube. It has a GREAT caste, is well written and acted, and is spot on accurate re costumes and even hairstyles, and historical data, but in modern day English, instead of the way early English was spoken.
Christianity, at this time, had already incorporated many pagan things ( making pagan gods saints, making pagan "holy sites" Christian ones, and the highest social strata were 100% Catholic, whilst many of non-Norman French/the lowest serfs, still clung to some very old pagan customs.
Thanks, will look it up.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0059896/
https://www.google.com/search?tbm=vid&q=Charlton%20Heston%20%E2%80%9CTHE%20WARLORD%E2%80%9D
You’re very welcome!
The Church did a lot more to see to the needs of the lower classes than most people today realize. And I’m not even talking about charity. For instance the church bought land and let peasants who had no hope of swinging a startup work it for a cut of the proceeds. The church benefited, the people benefited and the economy benefited. Feast days got time off for the hard working people and the church had no shortage of feast days. The Church wasn’t t just the Gospel it was the Gospel put into action.
I think I didn’t fully articulate the relevant points.
If we are to deal adequately with different spiritual beliefs, we must define the particular belief systems we are discussing.
First, we should understand that Christianity necessarily means belief in Jesus Christ as King of kings (all kings) and Lord of lords (all lords) and as Savior, the door to everlasting life. So that if a pagan deity creeps into any given individual’s belief system and pretends to displace Christ, then that belief system has been changed to from something other than Christianity to paganism. (The latter has many forms but as a whole represents no particular theology beyond a denial of Christ.)
And if we are looking at how spiritual beliefs are distributed among various socioeconomic classes, why would we ignore the dark prominence of luciferian doctrine amongst the highest elites?
I think people have an incorrect and false expectation that when Christianity first came to England and other northern European lands, that the people immediately eschewed, abandoned all their previous belief systems and customs. Think about how hard this would have been for people to suddenly abandon all their prior beliefs and customs in the blink of an eye.
As I understand, during the late Saxon period in England, many early Christian burials incorporated both Christian and Pegan rituals and practices – they may have not been so sure which one to follow and so and were hedging the bets by incorporating both just in case.
The Green Man
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yQHl2mzF1Do
Many originally pagan customs were not eliminated but incorporated into Christian traditions. Christmas trees and greens, yule logs, Easter eggs, and so on.
And don’t even get me started on some of the Norwegian Christmas traditions I grew up with, many of which while today “Christian” have some roots in ancient pagan Norse mythology.
Paganism is worshiping the creation, rather than the creator.
In one of the Time Team episodes, an ancient burial was found to contain pagan inscriptions to a previously unheard-of, apparently Romano-Britain hybrid local deity, on the inside of the box, where it didn't show to those giving the deceased the Christian burial.
Pilgrimages were probably mostly or entirely pagan in origin, particularly any that have anything to do with a natural spring or well. The innocuous but odd practice of throwing pennies into fountains is very ancient.
You speak the truth.
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