• Why medieval manuscripts are full of doodles of snail fights

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jun 15 10:33:35 2023
    from https://theconversation.com/why-medieval-manuscripts-are-full-of-doodles-of-snail-fights-206255

    Why medieval manuscripts are full of doodles of snail fights
    Published: June 13, 2023 11.20am EDT

    Author
    Madeleine S. Killacky
    PhD Candidate, Medieval Literature, Bangor University
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    A medieval drawing shows a soldier in chainmail aiming his sword at an oversized snail with blue shell.
    Battle in the margins from the Gorleston Psalter (1310-1324). British

    The doodles found in the margins of very old manuscripts are often just
    as interesting as the content of the manuscripts themselves. One such
    example is the frequently recurring – and extremely odd – image of
    knights warring against snails.

    From the late 13th century through to the 15th century, images of
    knights fighting snails pop up in all sorts of unlikely places within
    the medieval literary world. And they reveal fascinating insights into
    what medieval people thought about the world around them.

    Images of knights fighting snails first started to emerge in North
    French illuminated manuscripts (which are decorated with richly coloured illustrations) towards the end of the 13th century (around 1290). A few
    years on – although slightly less consistently – these same images
    started appearing in Flemish and English manuscripts.

    Interestingly, in most cases these snail doodles appear to be unrelated
    to the adjoining illustrations of textual passages.

    Read news coverage based on evidence, not tweets
    Often, the doodles depicted an armed knight confronting a snail whose
    horns were extended and pointing like arrows. In the manuscripts of the
    French folktale, Le Roman de Renart, the weapons that the knights were
    depicted with varied between sticks, maces, flails, axes, swords and
    even forks.

    A knight on horseback jousting with a snail.
    Extreme jousting from Brunetto Latini’s Li Livres dou Tresor, (c.
    1315-1325). Courtesy of the British Library
    Snail assailants are almost always male knights. However, there is one
    known instance of a woman opposing a snail wielding a spear and shield.

    As these snail combat doodles increased in popularity within
    manuscripts, they became an accepted element of medieval imagery. From
    here, they spread to other areas of medieval life.

    A page from a manuscript showing a snail facing a monk in the footer.
    The monk is disarmed and on his knees.
    A disarmed monk faces a snail opponent, from The Book of Hours (c.
    1320-1330). Courtesy of the British Library
    Decorative panels carved around 1310 on the main entrance of Lyon
    Cathedral in France, for example, showcase a knight confronting a snail
    and another man threatening a dog-headed giant snail with an axe.

    Despite travelling across the continent, the knights versus snails motif
    varied little from country to country, which suggests that it may have
    had a deeper meaning.

    Medieval satire
    Nobody knows exactly why battles between snails and knights were so
    popular throughout the middle ages. One theory is that these doodles
    added humour to texts which were otherwise quite dry and serious.

    A knight praying for mercy from a large hovering snail.
    The gastropod conqueror from the Gorleston Psalter, 1310-1324. Courtesy
    of the British Library
    A reader could rest their eyes by taking a moment to laugh at the scene
    of snail combat before continuing with their reading.

    A rabbit and a snail sit on top of a pair of monkey's shoulders, jousting.
    A rabbit, monkeys and snail jousting, from the Harley Froissart (c.
    1470-1472). Courtesy of the British Library
    Many of the doodles show a knight dropping their sword or kneeling
    submissively before their diminutive shelled foe, which accentuates its satirical implications. There are also several representations of women pleading with knights not to attack the formidable beasts.

    Other similarly lighthearted imagery includes a cat stalking a snail
    with the head of a mouse, as well as dogs, monkeys, dragons and even
    rabbits in fierce opposition with the molluscs.

    The meaning of the snail motif
    Snails were recognised in medieval times for their unusual strength,
    given that they were able to carry their home on their back.
    Confrontation with a snail, therefore, could represent a test of
    personal strength as well as mental fortitude.

    Once a symbol of deceptive courage, the snail became a creature to be
    hunted down and destroyed in a display of strength and bravery.

    A knight approaches a large red snail, wielding a club.
    A knight versus snail fight from the Smithfield Decretals (
    c.1300-1340). Courtesy of the British Library
    Like many other subjects popularised in marginal illuminations of the
    1300s, the snail and knight duo gradually disappeared as time wore on.
    They experienced a brief revival, however, in medieval manuscripts
    towards the end of the 15th century.

    And they haven’t completely disappeared from the common imagination.
    Today the pairing can still be enjoyed in the nursery rhyme,
    Four-and-Twenty Tailors Went To Kill a Snail:

    Four-and-twenty tailors went to kill a snail,

    The best man amongst them durst not touch her tail;

    She put out her horns like a little Kyloe cow;

    Run, tailors, run, or she’ll kill you all e’en now.

    Medieval
    Folklore
    British history
    Knights and dames
    Manuscripts
    Middle Ages
    Snails
    European Middle Ages
    medieval books
    Medieval art
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  • From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jun 15 12:09:22 2023
    On 6/15/23 10:33, a425couple wrote:
    from https://theconversation.com/why-medieval-manuscripts-are-full-of-doodles-of-snail-fights-206255

    Why medieval manuscripts are full of doodles of snail fights
    Published: June 13, 2023 11.20am EDT

    Author
    Madeleine S. Killacky
    PhD Candidate, Medieval Literature, Bangor University



    and here is a very valid comment:

    Jacky Smith pin icon Pinned
    logged in via Google
    On the other hand, the failure to understand this may be down to the
    lack of crossover between academics studying such documents &
    enthusiastic gardeners.As a gardener, I have no problem appreciating
    them - they express exactly how I feel about slugs & snails. Mediaeval monasteries were dependent on their extensive gardens for all sorts of
    things, and they were regarded as the closest thing to paradise that
    could be seen on earth. No wonder pests were identified as significant
    enemies.
    1 day ago

    Steven Carr
    In reply to Jacky Smith
    That sounds like an excellent hypothesis.

    Jake Choir
    In reply to Jacky Smith
    Agreed - that was my first thought. Snails were the main “fight” that
    monks would face, so these pictures are probably monks having a giggle
    at their juxtaposition to knights.And the uniform spread across Europe
    of virtually anything at the time would most likely have been due to the church.

    also, along similar lines

    Ted Rethers
    logged in via Facebook
    The European snail is an extremely aggressive agricultural pest where
    farmers resort to burning their fields to reduce their populations . As
    the time suggests Europe was in a small ice age and the use of fire
    would have been difficult, also at the same time farmers were forcibly
    removed in many places and their practie of running ducks and other
    poultry as a reduction method would also have been curtailed therefore
    as it was up to the knights to look after the people this may have been
    one of their responsibilities to help with the combat of such a
    destructive pest.

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