Weird Medieval Guys  By  cover art

Weird Medieval Guys

By: Weird Medieval Guys
  • Summary

  • Leaving no stone unturned in our quest for the weirdest stories, guys, and art from the Middle Ages.

    The Weird Medieval Guys podcast is brought to you by Olivia, the creator of internet sensation Weird Medieval Guys, and Aran, a historian and fellow weird guy connoisseur.

    Olivia Swarthout and Aran Prince-Tappé 2023
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Episodes
  • What to do if you get time travelled to the Middle Ages
    May 17 2024

    Oh no! You've become unstuck in time and now you're in 15th century England with no idea what to do or how to avoid a miserable life as a social pariah who speaks an unrecognisable language and is ignorant to the rules and structure of the world around you! There has to be a better way! Or is there? Join Olivia and Aran as they journey back to medieval times to figure out the best way to get by. Should you become a monk or a nun? Have a go at blacksmithing? Or try to wow the village rubes with modern technology and ideas? All these options and more will be discussed in the search for a decent medieval life.

    For more on some of what we discuss, check out:

    • Database of England's immigrants 1330-1550
      • https://www.englandsimmigrants.com/
    • Some case studies of individual immigrants in medieval England, including so-called "Prince of Inde" John Balbat and fake Jerseyman Giles Morvyle
      • https://www.englandsimmigrants.com/page/individual-studies
    • William Lee and his frame knitting machine
      • https://alumni.christs.cam.ac.uk/william-lee
    • The prologue to the Canterbury Tales, read in Middle English
      • https://archive.org/details/lp_prologue-to-the-canterbury-tales-read-in-m_geoffrey-chaucer-nevill-coghill-norman-dav
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    1 hr and 58 mins
  • Vikings in the Arctic
    May 3 2024

    It's grim up north...

    Why did a five-hundred-year-old Viking colony in Greenland suddenly disappear, with no trace or record? In this episode, Olivia, Aran, and local archaeologist Joe Mason assemble to try and solve one of the most enduring mysteries in medieval history. It's a quest that will take them out of the libertarian "paradise" of 11th century, to the freezing walrus-infested shores of Greenland, and beyond - to the promised land of Vinland. Along the way they'll encounter Native American ghosts, Inuit revenge epics, and the Vikings' love of pointless, cyclical violence.

    Sources:

    The Saga of the Greenlanders: https://vidforul.wordpress.com/the-saga-of-the-greenlanders/

    The Saga of Erik the Red: https://sagadb.org/eiriks_saga_rauda.en

    "Tales and Traditions of the Eskimo" by Hinrich Johannes Rink: https://sacred-texts.com/nam/inu/tte/index.htm

    Music used:

    Peta, Etulu & Susan - This Land is Your Land (Inuktitut) - https://citizenfreak.com/titles/319453-peta-etulu-susan-songs-by-etulu-susan-peta

    Olafur reid med Bjorgum fram - https://www.loc.gov/item/2017701460/

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    1 hr and 34 mins
  • Why the Middle Ages ended in 19th century Japan
    Apr 19 2024

    Yes, you heard us right!! Join Olivia and Aran as they defend their most dubious claim to date, which is definitely not just an excuse to step beyond our usual remit and talk about the wild, delightful world that was Edo Period Japan! We explore why Edo Japan was so cut off from the world and the effects this had on its society, plus some of the cultural developments that took place along the way. Also discussed are

    • The legend of the tanuki and the train
      • https://www.proquest.com/docview/1036926966?sourcetype=Scholarly%20Journals
    • Kume Kunitake's diaries of travel in Europle and the United States
      • https://archive.org/details/japanrisingiwaku0000kume/
    • An overview of the Satsuma rebellion
      • https://www.jstor.org/stable/2383560
    • The decline of the Japanese warrior class
      • https://www.jstor.org/stable/25790888

    The song used in this episode is sōran bushi, a Japanese folk song traditionally sung by fishers.

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    1 hr and 31 mins

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Did they or didn’t they?

Great history content. Presenters achieve an entertaining balance between source-based historical information and informal silliness without descending into self-absorbed chatter. So did most medieval people travel outside their hometowns or not?

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Their constant laughter at their own jokes was boring.

Too much rambling on about themselves made it hard to understand what they were trying to relay.

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