Christmas at the Court of
Edward
the Confessor
By
Paula Lofting
Winter began in November, according to Anglo-Saxon tradition. The 7th
of November to be exact, and from the 15th of November, 40 days
before the Christmas season began, it was a time of fasting and alms giving,
which was the origin for gift-giving at Christmas. ‘Christmas’, comes from the
Anglo-Saxon, Cristesmæsse, a word first recorded in 1038. It replaced
the old pagan ‘yule-tide’, known back then as Geola and still referred to when talking about yule logs etc. As we
know, the early Christian church instructed their emissaries to allow the
Christianisation of some pagan traditions, a clever strategy on their part, to
encourage people to give up their pagan ways by allowing them to retain some of
the features and customs of the old religion. During this time of fasting and
strict observance, it was not just the clergy who were expected to fast, attend
prayers and vigils, and give alms to the more unfortunates of their world, but
the secular communities also. It was a sign of your wealth and status if you
could afford to give alms, something that many people were eager to do, for the
Anglo-Saxons were as keen as any for their soul to get a free pass to the afterlife.
So, that was a lot of days of hardship for less than half the days in
return of feasting! Anyway, that aside, only those who were employed to do
necessary tasks, were excused from taking 12 days off work. Quite honestly, I
could not imagine anyone complaining about that unless they were one of those who
were engaged in those aforesaid important occupations.
Oh, there’s one other little thing I have forgotten, there were no
carnal relations allowed during this fasting period, after all, with all the vigils
and extra prayers and psalm singing, how was one going to fit in having sex as
well? But, should one fail in this expectation, and need absolution to restore
their spiritual equilibrium with God, there was always confession and more
fasting as penance.
During King Edward’s time, the Christmas period was usually spent at
Gloucester. Edward was a keen sporting huntsman, something the church frowned
on but were able to forgive because he was pious in other aspects of his life. Since
the Forest of Dean was his favourite hunting ground, it seemed natural that
after a good Autumn’s hunting, that he would spend Christmas at King’s Holme in
Gloucester. He did, however, spend his last Christmas on this earth in the
newly built palace of Westminster, whilst the new church of St Peter was
consecrated that year, in time for the celebrations and his funeral.
Poor Edward. His life’s work, just ready for him to enjoy and he pops
his clogs. At least he got to see it glorified to God, that must have been a
very auspicious day for him, for he would be able to go to his rest with the
knowledge that he had help to build one of the finest churches this side of the
British Channel. No matter though, for the Normans would soon rebuild it more
to their taste after the conquest.
It couldn’t have been much fun that year of 1065, when he succumbed at
last to the illness that seemed to have been brought on by the exile of his
favourite courtier, Earl Tostig. The stress of losing Tostig and having to give
in to the recalcitrant northerners a few months earlier, obviously affected him
badly, because hitherto, he had been quite robust and sprightly for an old man
of sixty; a great age in those times. So, Christmas of 1065 would have been
quite a miserable one that year, so perhaps we should hearken back to happier
times, and the Christmas of ’64, when having had a good hunting session during
the month of October and some of November, Edward was ready to put on his
virtuous head, start the fasting and alms giving and settle down to pottage for
supper each night until the 25th December when the holiday would
begin.
Kings Holme (now known as Kingsholm) was the site of an old Roman
fortress, significant in size to have made the Roman city an important
strategic place. We know that there was definitely a palace located there in
1051, and possibly, it may have dated back much further. At least by 1064, the
palace was a well-used one, having been one of three important palaces in
Edward’s England, besides Westminster, in London, and Winchester. A hoard of
early 11thc coins was found at the site and said to be a large collection from
probably a wide area, indicating that this was not and just any old burh. To add to the evidence of its
possible magnificence, excavations at the site have uncovered indications of
large timber buildings dating to around this time.
We cannot say what King Edward’s palace consisted of for sure, but there
must have been quite a few domestic and guest quarters amongst the buildings found.
At Christmas time, the whole of Edward’s court would have been present in
Gloucester, and among them, his secular officials as well as many foremost
ecclesiasticals, bishops and abbots and possibly some Abbesses, some of whom
were very powerful indeed. Many of the king’s thegns would have been there, and
possibly they brought their wives with them, perhaps some brought their sons
also, and maybe their daughters, to be presented at court. If those who owed
service to the king couldn’t make it for whatever reason, then they would no
doubt have to send a representative. The most important of the king’s guests, would
have been the archbishops, Ealdred of York and Stigand of Canterbury, and
leading earl of the realm, Harold Godwinson. Aside from them, the other lords
of the earldoms: Tostig of Northumbria, Morcar of Mercia, Oswulf of Bamburgh,
Leofwin and Gyrth Godwinson, earls of the South Eastern Counties and East
Anglia respectively, and Waltheof, son of the great Siward, Tostig’s
predecessor. No doubt they would also have brought their wives and perhaps
their families too, not to mention their retinues, servants, and household
guards. No wonder there were several large buildings found on the complex, they
would have needed them to house everyone.
Its most likely that Edward’s great feasting hall was a timber
construction, as no evidence for stone foundations have been found during the
excavation. Edward had been building his wonderful complex at Westminster in
stone, but that was a special undertaking that had been under construction for
years. The king’s feasting-hall was basically a large-scale version of the
smaller halls that one might find on manorial estates. It was rectangular, with
doors in the longest sides, front and back, and possibly with ante chambers at
both ends, perhaps one of those rooms could have been where the king and queen
slept. The space inside would have been large enough to contain a good few
hundred people and was the heart of the community during the Christmas period.
During the last few days of fasting before the feast of Christ, the final
touches to the décor would have been carried out. Around the walls, were murals
decorating the lime washed walls and possibly hung with fine embroidered
hangings depicting biblical scenes. Holly and Ivy would have decked the hall, a
throw-back to earlier times. Things might have changed somewhat from the early
days of the mead-halls as described by Steven Pollington in his book The
Mead-Hall, where a lot of the symbel (the
feasting) had its rituals rooted in Pagan beliefs and old Teutonic ideals based
on the ways of warriors. However, the principle that the hall was the place
where the joys of life could be found, drink, merriment, and good times,
remained even in the 11thc. The feasting-hall, or the mead-hall, was
where it all happened, much like how some of us nowadays see pubs, clubs,
restaurants, and bars.
In the early Anglo-Saxon halls, the lord, chieftain or senior clansman
would have had a dais erected on both sides of the hall. The side where the
chieftain sat, was raised higher than the guest’s dais across the hearth,
obviously to enforce his higher position within the hierarchical structure of
the feast. In Edward’s time, if there was another dais, it would most likely
have included the most prominent of his people that were not already seated
with him around his table.
People often have this idea that the wooden halls of Anglo Saxon times
were draught-ridden, smoky, cold places, and this must have been so, but once
that big central hearth got going, and the smoke rose upwards to the apertures
in the gables at each end of the rectangular building, the place could be
surprisingly clear and warm. Obviously the closer you were to the king and the
hearth, the more important you were. Servants would usually sit on the floor if
there was no room at the tables, or boards as they were often called, being
mainly trestles with wooden boards resting on top of them. No doubt, however,
King Edward would have had a rather more refined structure for his meal, with
his high-backed chair, brightly coloured and bedecked with cushions. His queen,
Edith, who sat with him, would also have sat in an ornate chair, but it is also
possible that for the Christmas celebrations, they may have wanted to make use
of their thrones, both of which were said to have been decorated with gold and
precious gems. I for one would not have wanted to spill anything on those
beautiful cushions once I’d got a little merry.
The most important tables would have been covered with the best table
linen, the best accoutrements and have the best choice cuts of meat. Feasting
in Anglo Saxon times would have been nothing without meat, turkey would not
have been on the menu. For the most highest-ranking nobles, meat would have
included wild boar and venison, most likely hunted by Edward himself, and
preserved for the occasion. Edward would have loved that, to see the products
of his efforts being enjoyed by his guests. Apart from these meats which would
have been consumed as said earlier by the most noble of the nobility, there
would have also been available goat, lamb, and pig. Vegetables were also
consumed, and were often preserved by drying by the fire, just as slaughtered animals
were. Items such as mushrooms, herbs, fish, and seaweed, were routinely dried
and smoking also was a popular method, such as the carcasses that were hung in
the rafters.
Medieval people of this time did not know sugar, but they enjoyed sweet
tastes, and would have used honey to sweeten their cakes, or dip their breads
in. There were opportunities to flavouring their food with salt and pepper,
ginger, cinnamon, very expensive commodities. It’s also conceivable that they
stewed fruit and served it with cream and it is said that a form of jelly was
made from cow heels.
Often a hall’s hearth was used for cooking over, with great pots hanging
on chains with stews of pottage, or with pork bubbling away in them with leeks,
onions, garlic, and carrots as part of the ingredients. But in larger halls
like Edward’s, the hearth was for warmth and light only, for apart from perhaps
some shuttered windows in each end of the hall, there would not have been much
light without the hearth. They of course had candles made from bees wax for the
wealthy, and tallow from animal fat for the poor. I’m sure that Edward made
himself available to the bees wax makers, for they looked and smelled better
than animal fat. Torches were available in their sconces on the walls to give
off more light and warmth in this cold, dark season, and rushes dipped in fat
also made light.
The roasting of meats would have been done over hearths in the kitchens
which were in buildings separate from the hall. Food would have been brought to
the tables on huge platters carried in by members of the king’s household to be
served to the guests. I hope the kitchens weren’t too far from the hall, for at
this time of years it would have been very cold, perhaps even snowing.
So, we have a picture of what the hall would have looked like, decorated
for Christmas with holly, ivy and mistletoe and frescos and wall hangings in
bright colours depicting the nativity and other biblical representations. The
hall would have been full to brimming with people seated at tables, standing,
or sitting on the rush mats with Edward’s hounds. The day would have begun with
people attending early morning mass in the precinct’s chapel, which would most
likely have not accommodated everyone, with the excess standing out side to try
and hear the mass. I’m sure that if both archbishops were present, they would
have participated in the mass, perhaps taking it in turns. Then everyone would
pile into the hall to break their fast, glad that the ritual of abstinence was
over at last and they could get their gnashers stuck into what they really
wanted to eat, which was meat. But for their first round of food they would
have had breads, finely sifted for the top tables, until the bread was white,
which was what they preferred to eat, if they had the chance, pretty much like
us. And cheese and butter, boiled eggs washed down by ale.
As the day progressed, during the feasting which was pretty much
nonstop, there would have been all sorts of entertainment, in between going to
mass of course. There were scops, jugglers,
musicians, singers, acrobats, dancers, and jesters. The king’s own scop would
have sung his praises, about how wonderfully kind, brave and majestic he was.
He must have been a great liar, also. There would have been dancing, boasting,
or flyting, where men (and perhaps
women, too) would compete in a game of words. Perhaps the epic tale of Beowulf would have been told in the
evening, when people were subdued, and more willing to listen. It is said that
Edward enjoyed the poems and songs of the scops, and I wouldn’t have been
surprised to hear he knew a song or two himself.
One thing the Anglo-Saxons loved was a good knees up and after the
serious fasting, praying, and alms giving, they must have looked forward to
letting their hair down and getting merry, sloshed even, and knowing the old
English, they would have loved a scrap or two during the day, I hope no one got
killed, but an English feast would not have been an English feast without a
fight somewhere in the middle of it. Then everyone would have made amends, said
their sorries (hopefully) and all would be well again.
For it was Christmas, a time for good will to all men, wasn’t it?
With much thanks
to Regia Anglorum for the photos of the Saxon Longhall in Wychurst, Kent.
Stephen
Pollington, 2003 The Mead Hall – Feasting
in Anglo-Saxon England Anglo-Saxon Books, Thetford, England.
Frank Barlow,1997
Edward the Confessor Vale University
Press, Newhaven and London.
British History
online.
Paula Lofting’s début novel, 'Sons of the Wolf' was first published with the assistance of SilverWood Books in 2012. More recently she has republished it with her new publishing company Longship Books, in kindle. A new paperback version will be published by June. It is a story set in the years leading up to the Norman Conquest of England and the first in the Sons of the Wolf series, about this amazing time in English history.
She has always admired the works of Sharon Penman and Bernard Cornwell, Edith Pargetter and Mary Stewart, amongst many others. History is a great love of hers and her interest in the subject goes beyond that of the keyboard. She also enjoys Anglo-Saxon re-enactment with Regia Anglorum.
She has always admired the works of Sharon Penman and Bernard Cornwell, Edith Pargetter and Mary Stewart, amongst many others. History is a great love of hers and her interest in the subject goes beyond that of the keyboard. She also enjoys Anglo-Saxon re-enactment with Regia Anglorum.
1054,
pious King Edward sits on the throne, spending his days hunting, sleeping and
praying, leaving the security of his kingdom to his more capable brother-in-law
Harold Godwinson, the powerful Earl of Wessex. Against this backdrop we meet
Wulfhere, a Sussex thegn who, as the sun sets over the wild forest of
Andredesweald, is returning home victoriously from a great battle in the north.
Holding his lands directly from the King, his position demands loyalty to
Edward himself, but Wulfhere is duty-bound to also serve Harold, a bond forged
within Wulfhere's family heritage and borne of the ancient Teutonic ideology of
honour and loyalty.
Wulfhere is a man with the strength and courage of a bear, a warrior whose loyalty to his lord and king is unquestionable. He is also a man who holds his family dear and would do anything to protect them. So when Harold demands that he wed his daughter to the son of Helghi, his sworn enemy, Wulfhere has to find a way to save his daughter from a life of certain misery in the household of the cruel and resentful Helghi without compromising his honour and loyalty to his lord, Harold.
Sons of the Wolf is a panoramic snapshot of medieval life and politics as the events that lead to the downfall of Anglo Saxon England play out, immersing the reader in the tapestry of life as it was before the Doomsday Book. With depictions of everyday life experienced through the minds of the peoples of the time; of feasts in the Great Halls to battles fought in the countryside, it cannot help but enlighten, educate and entertain.
What a wonderful post, Paula!!
ReplyDeleteMary Anne i am so pleased to have been asked!
DeleteThis era of history isn't something I am familiar with. You have wet my appetite to learn more. Thank you so much!
ReplyDeleteHi Beatrice, am so happy to have been able to share with you...
DeleteGreat post! I felt like I had stepped back in time.
ReplyDeleteThank you Cryssa, I'm glad you enjoyed it.
DeleteLovely post, Paula. Great detail. I can't imagine fasting in the early winter. My body just tells me to eat. Sadly, I tend to listen.
ReplyDeleteHaha, Richard. You and me both.
DeleteVery detailed and engaging insight, well done!
ReplyDeleteCan you imagine all the delicious smells of the cooking wafting about!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Tim, I hope your Christmas has been all you could hope for and more
ReplyDeleteCertainly would have been a delight to behold
ReplyDelete