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Kate Lister: 中世纪时期,人们普遍认为性欲是女性的特征,对性传播感染的认知和治疗方式如何?以及中世纪社会是否具有进步甚至性积极的一面? Ruth Karras: 我的研究始于70年代,当时这个领域还面临一些阻力。我的主要资料来源是法庭记录。通过研究,我发现了Eleanor/John Reichner的案例,这可能是中世纪的跨性别性工作者。对这个案例的解读也经历了一个过程,最初的理解与现在的理解有所不同。 中世纪时期大约从公元500年到1500年,婚外性行为一直被认为是不道德的,但婚姻内的性态度在12-13世纪发生了变化。在此之前,贞洁比婚姻更好,但婚姻内的性行为并非完全被谴责。婚外性行为一直被官方谴责,但并不意味着没有发生。12-13世纪,对婚姻内性行为的态度发生了变化,婚姻被正式视为圣礼,生育成为性行为的正当理由。一些主张禁欲的人被贴上异端的标签,这导致教会改变了对婚姻内性行为的看法。教会开始认为,为了生育的婚姻性行为是好的,这与禁欲的观点并存。犹太文化中一直存在着性行为是好的观点。对《圣经》中“要生育,要繁衍”的解释在不同文化中存在差异。在犹太教文化中,男人被认为应该至少生育一男一女。 很难确定中世纪普通民众的性行为。中世纪晚期,一些布道手册中出现了对婚姻内性行为持肯定态度的观点。中世纪晚期,人们开始认为,为了生育的婚姻性行为符合上帝的旨意。中世纪社会存在着对女性的矛盾态度:一方面鼓励她们在婚姻中生育,另一方面又认为她们是难以控制的性欲狂。中世纪的人们认为女性比男性性欲更强,其理由是夏娃引诱亚当吃禁果的故事。中世纪社会认为女性性欲强的原因是她们的软弱,而不是男性无法控制自己的性欲。13世纪以后,人们对女性的看法发生了变化,认为她们不仅有罪,而且低劣、软弱、愚蠢。 中世纪时期对更年期的理解有限,圣杰罗姆认为更年期后女性不再是精神上的女性。中世纪认为,只要女性对生育持开放态度,更年期后进行性行为是可以接受的。中世纪时期,人们将勃起与生育能力紧密联系起来,并认为某些食物具有壮阳作用。中世纪时期,人们在法庭记录等文献中留下了许多关于男性生殖器官的图像。中世纪时期,人们将阳痿与不育联系起来,认为如果男性无法生育,则责任在于女性。中世纪,如果夫妻无法发生性行为,婚姻可以被解除。中世纪时期,对男性性功能的评估可能由医生、助产士甚至性工作者进行。宣称无法完成性行为是中世纪时期女性摆脱不想要婚姻的一种方式。中世纪时期,也有男性指控女性无法发生性行为的案例。中世纪时期,人们认为勃起是空气充盈的结果,并认为某些食物具有壮阳作用。中世纪时期,人们认为某些食物具有壮阳作用,这与体液平衡理论有关。 中世纪时期,人们对性传播感染的理解有限,将其与纵欲联系起来。中世纪时期,人们对性传播感染的理解与现代不同,他们将其与过度纵欲联系起来,而不是传染病。中世纪时期,人们对性传播感染的认识模糊,将疾病与不洁联系起来。中世纪时期,“洗衣妇”(lavenders)与性工作者之间存在联系。中世纪时期,“纺织女工”(spinsters)有时也被用来指代性工作者。中世纪德国,独立女性(“自食其力者”)常被与性工作者联系起来。中世纪时期,对女性的称呼(如“妓女”)带有侮辱性色彩。中世纪时期,对性工作者的态度复杂多样,既有肯定也有否定。中世纪时期,关于性工作者是否应该获得报酬存在争议。中世纪大学的学者们对性工作者等社会现象进行讨论,这与他们远离女性的生活环境有关。中世纪大学的学者们利用女性作为思考工具,讨论各种伦理问题。 中世纪朝圣活动可能并非完全出于宗教目的,也可能伴随着娱乐活动。中世纪的朝圣徽章可能并非全部具有宗教意义,有些可能是旅游纪念品。中世纪朝圣活动既有宗教目的,也有娱乐目的。中世纪社会并非铁板一块,人们的思想和行为方式多样化。从中世纪的性观念中,我们可以学习到社会进步的脆弱性。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

Why did medieval people believe women were more highly sexed than men?

Medieval people believed women were more highly sexed than men due to the story of Adam and Eve, where Eve was seen as weak-willed and easily tempted. This narrative suggested that women were more prone to desire and less able to control it, while men were considered stronger and more rational, capable of resisting temptation.

What were medieval beliefs about aphrodisiacs?

Medieval people believed that windy foods, like chickpeas, were aphrodisiacs because they thought such foods balanced the humors, particularly blood, which was associated with male vitality. They believed that foods causing wind could stimulate sexual desire by influencing the body's humoral balance.

How did medieval people understand sexually transmitted infections (STIs)?

Medieval people did not understand STIs in the modern sense. They associated diseases like gonorrhea (a term they used for genital discharge) with overindulgence rather than contagion. They believed that diseases could be transmitted through contact with 'filthy' individuals, such as sex workers, but lacked a clear understanding of pathogens.

What was the medieval attitude toward sex within marriage?

Medieval attitudes toward sex within marriage evolved over time. Early on, the church emphasized renunciation of sex, but by the 12th and 13th centuries, marriage was considered a sacrament, and sex for reproduction was seen as good. However, sex purely for pleasure was still discouraged, though not as severely condemned as extramarital sex.

How did medieval people view menopause and sex after it?

Medieval people believed that sex after menopause was acceptable if the couple remained open to the possibility of divine intervention causing fertility. They thought that God could still enable conception, so post-menopausal sex within marriage was not considered sinful.

What role did sex workers play in medieval society?

Sex workers in medieval society were often associated with other professions, such as laundresses (lavenders) or spinsters. They were viewed with suspicion but were also recognized as part of the community. The church condemned them as sinful, yet they were sometimes seen as necessary, and debates arose about whether they should be paid for their services.

How were impotence and infertility handled in medieval courts?

In medieval courts, impotence was a valid reason to dissolve a marriage. If a spouse claimed the other was impotent, midwives, doctors, or even sex workers might be called to examine the accused. If impotence was proven, the marriage could be annulled, allowing the parties to remarry.

What were medieval pilgrimage badges, and what did they signify?

Medieval pilgrimage badges were souvenirs that pilgrims collected to commemorate their journeys. While some were religious symbols, others were more risqué, featuring phallic or vulvar imagery. These badges were not necessarily tied to specific pilgrimage sites but were often seen as humorous or kitsch souvenirs.

What was the medieval understanding of erections and fertility?

Medieval people linked erections directly to fertility, believing that a man's ability to have an erection meant he was fertile. If a couple failed to conceive, the blame was often placed on the woman, as men were assumed to be fertile if they could perform sexually.

How did medieval people view same-sex relationships?

Medieval attitudes toward same-sex relationships were largely negative, influenced by the church's teachings. However, court records reveal instances of same-sex relationships, such as the case of Eleanor/John Rykener, a 14th-century individual who may have been a trans or gender-fluid sex worker. These cases show that same-sex relationships existed, even if they were condemned.

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Hello my lovely Betwixters, it's me Kate Lister and you are listening to Betwixt the Sheets and in case you just wandered in off the street and have no idea what goes on around here, I have to tell you this is an adult podcast spoken by adults to other adults about adulty things in an adulty way covering a range of adult subjects and you should be an adult too and if you're not then be off with you. We don't need you getting upset while the rest of us are enjoying ourselves. For everyone else, on with the show.

Don't mind me, Betwixters. I have just hopped over into the Garden of Eden to see what's what. I'm actually quite peckish, and the fruit is looking pretty good around here. I mean, what could be the harm, right? Well, it turns out, quite a lot of harm indeed. Far from an apple a day keeping the doctor away, Eve picked one, and then the whole of mankind was plunged into chaos, and women were blamed for being thrown out of paradise forevermore. From an apple! An apple!

And the fact that it was Eve that did this, that it was a woman that did this, took on a hell of a lot of meaning in the centuries to come. Because only someone who was weak-willed and easily led would be stealing apples. At least that was the idea that took hold, particularly in the medieval period amongst many other theories. So, let's grab some more apples and find out more.

What do you look for in a man? Oh, money, of course. You're supposed to rise when an adult speaks to you. I make perfect copies of whatever my boss needs by just turning a knob and pushing the button. Yes, social courtesy does make a difference. Goodness, what beautiful dance. Goodness, there's nothing to do with it, Jerry.

Hello and welcome back to Betwixt the Sheets, the history of sex scandal in society, with me, Kate Lister. A very happy new year to all our old and new listeners. Hello, we're very glad to have you here. Who knows what 2025 holds, but we can always rely on the past to provide stimulating, fascinating and downright naughty entertainment.

Take the medieval period for example. This is a time that we often think of as being dominated by the Catholic Church. A hell of a lot of "Thou shalt not" went on, or did it? Just because the church was saying "Behave yourselves" does that mean that everybody did? Why did they think of sexual desire as a particularly female trait? How were sexually transmitted infections thought of and treated? And is there any way that we could consider them a progressive, even sex-positive society?

Well, joining me to find out more is Professor Ruth Karras, author of, well, freaking loads of books on medieval sex, but author of Sexuality in Medieval Europe Doing Unto Others. There is nobody better to help me find out more. Pilgrim badges and wimples at the ready, Betwixters. Let's do this. Hello and welcome to Betwixt the Sheets. It's only Professor Ruth Karras. How are you doing?

I'm very well, thank you. I'm delighted to meet you after having followed your work. Are you kidding me? I've followed your work for years. You are like an academic superstar in medieval sexuality and medieval sex work. I've got everything you've ever written. Honestly, I'm so thrilled to be talking to you today. I really am. Well, thank you. May I ask, as a start-off,

What brought you to study medieval sexuality? Because honestly, you're such a big name in this field. Actually, I was inspired by a professor that I had when I was, I think, in my second year at university, John Boswell, whose work I'm sure you know. And the first thing I ever wrote on sex work in the Middle Ages was an essay about

for his class on the early Middle Ages and that would have been back in 1976, 1977 or thereabouts. When you were researching this in the 70s, because the field of

The history of sexuality is it's quite vibrant now and there's more and more people entering the field, more and more work being done. But in the 70s, when you started studying medieval sexuality, did you get a lot of resistance around that? What was the field like at the time? When I said this started in the 70s, I mean, I was an undergraduate then. This was just when I mean, I wasn't sort of identified as a researcher in that area.

When I started doing it seriously, which would have been the mid eighties, I got an awful lot of nudge, nudge, wink, wink. Yes. Not so much. This isn't a real subject of study, at least not to my face. Although I expect there was some of that there in the background. It still gets a lot of wink, wink, nudge, nudge. Like people aren't quite sure where to put their reaction to this. When you tell them what it is that you study, is that what it was? Uh,

Yeah. And, you know, cracking jokes about it, doing experiential research or, you know, identifying with their field of study. And they would say, well, do you do that, Ruth? Yes. But your work has been so formative when it comes to studying not just sex work, but sexuality in the medieval period.

When you first started researching this, what sources and documents were you drawing on? Because it was a relatively new field of study. Or were there other scholars who were working that you were able to talk to?

There were some other scholars, a lot of people in the field of literature, not that many historians. I was using largely court records. There are a lot of people who work on court records for different kinds of things, but we're very welcoming of somebody else starting to use this kind of source. And let me give a shout out here. The article that I'm probably best known for is

was about Eleanor or John Reichner, who was probably trans sex worker in late 14th century. And the way I discovered that was that Sheila Lindenbaum, who was a professor of English literature,

Oh, you know, I was reading through these London court records, you know, this case, and I was reading through the London court records by using a calendar. So it's sort of a printed summary of the records.

that had been published in 1927. And the case she referred me to, all that was in the calendar was two men convicted of immorality. And I was working on sex work. And so I was looking for women. And so I just, oh, well, this is, if it said a man and a woman, I would have looked at the case, but this said two men. And I said, okay, this must be some other kind of immorality. I mean, I wasn't really thinking about same-sex relationships at that time.

She put me onto it and she said, I looked at it because I was interested in the use of space in late medieval London. I'm not doing research on sexuality. If you want to go with it, do whatever you'd like with it. And so I took that and, uh,

sort of said, oh, well, maybe I should be thinking about male sex workers also. Or, I mean, I was thinking of Reikner at that time as a male sex worker. Now, I don't think it's at all clear. But another scholar who was not working in the history of sexuality, but who took this seriously as a field, who was feeding me information. What was that like when you looked at that case and you sort of put

Put two and two together. Hang on a minute. Hang on a minute here. This is Eleanor Riker suddenly becomes John Riker with this really lurid story. Was there a moment where you were like, oh my God, this could be a trans sex worker from the Middle Ages? This is the part that's a bit embarrassing because when I published this, which I think was in 1990 or 1991, along with a colleague from English literature, we called the article

a transvestite prostitute in late medieval London. And I would not use either of those terms today. I mean, I would say a trans or...

possibly trans or gender fluid sex worker. Yeah. But I mean, at the time. Yes. Right. I mean, I was, I were not all prisoners of our vocabularies because if we were all prisoners of it and things would never change, but it's hard to think outside the terms that are current at the time that you're writing. Yeah.

When we're thinking of the medieval period, what chunk of time are you thinking of when somebody says medieval? Approximately 500 to 1500. But people have different...

start and end dates depending on which part of Europe you're talking about or indeed if you're talking about another part of the world. So 500 to 1500 are nice round arbitrary dates. It's a thousand years of history, like give or take. So if you're looking at something like sex and attitudes to sex and

I mean, apart from the acts themselves, which have remained fairly consistent over the history, have you found that attitudes around sex can be called consistent within that chunk of time, over a thousand years? Or do they change dramatically, radically? Is there anything that you could be called characteristic of medieval sexuality? One thing that is relatively stable across that period is

is that all sex outside of marriage is bad. There was always an attitude that all sex was bad that emanated from a monastic life. Monks and nuns were supposed to renounce all sexual activity. They took vows of chastity. And a lot of the writing that we have

about sex from the Middle Ages comes from a monastic context. And therefore, we get perhaps a distorted idea to the extent that they were talking to each other and not to the laity themselves.

We're hearing only about monastic sexuality. And to the extent they were talking to the laity, it's not at all clear that the laity were listening to them. But is that the only way to salvation through renunciation? And not only renunciation of sex, renunciation of sex.

Delicious food. You know, you're supposed to eat only what was necessary to keep your body alive and not get great pleasure from it. Renunciation of comfortable clothing and bedding. I mean, the monk or the nun was supposed to live an ascetic life in all respects. So is that the only way to salvation? And

The saying was that virgins get a hundredfold reward in heaven, widows a 70-fold reward in heaven, and married people a 30-fold reward in heaven.

marriage was not as good as virginity, but it was good. Augustine said, it's not a lesser evil. It's just that virginity is a greater good. And Augustine was the most popular author of Middle Ages. And even though he's writing at the very beginning of the period, he's very widely read.

If you sinned within marriage, which is to say, if you had sex within marriage, that was not for reproductive purposes. That was okay. That was not a mortal sin. You know, if you did it just for pleasure and you confessed it and you did a penance, it was not that big a deal as compared to if you did it outside of marriage. But sex outside of marriage was okay.

officially condemned through the Middle Ages. That doesn't mean that it didn't happen. But I think there was a major change in attitudes towards sex within marriage that comes in the

12th, 13th century, several things happen then. One is that marriage begins to be officially considered a sacrament. There hadn't been sort of a formal sacramental theology around marriage up till that time. The other thing is that there are people around who are espousing a life of purity and renunciation of sex, not within the monastic context.

And they get labeled as heretics. Really? And yes. I thought they would have been really into that. They'd have been going, well, no. No, no. In fact, there's a story told again by a monk of a man who was trying to seduce a woman and she refused. And she told him that it would be a sin for her to have sex with him. And so he denounced her as a heretic.

on the grounds that she was anti-sex. And the people who were known to later historians as Cathars, although that's not what they called themselves, but a group of people largely in the south of France, although elsewhere in Europe as well, who, as far as we can tell, believed in renunciation of the flesh, and they are condemned as heretics. And

And so then the church starts saying, no, we think sex for reproduction within marriage is really a good thing. And there starts being a lot of talk about nature and the natural. And talking about nature and the natural can be a way of condemning some activities as unnatural. But it also can be a way of saying, well, what does nature do? I mean, nature is for reproduction.

every spring the animals are reproducing and the plants are reproducing, you know, the birds and the bees are reproducing and people need to be doing it too. And so there's still this ascetic strand and that renunciation is the best, but there is also a strand of thought that says, you know, marriage is good. Reproduction is good. Sex is good. Sex is good when it's for reproduction. And this attitude that it's good,

was the case all along, for example, in Jewish culture.

There's a very interesting book by a scholar called Jeremy Cohen about the Bible verse, be fruitful and multiply. Okay. And how it was interpreted across the medieval period, but even before the medieval period, I mean, he really covers it for millennia, how that verse is interpreted in Christian and Jewish culture. And in Jewish culture, it's an absolute commandment. I mean, men were

supposed to have the duality of that commandment, be fruitful and multiply like it's two different things. They said, well, what could it mean by using two different words for the same thing? And in biblical interpretation, whenever there's a redundancy, they'll say, well, that must be because it has two different meanings. And what they interpreted as the meaning of this was you needed to have at least one male child and one female child

And so a man or a woman should not renounce sexual activity until they sort of done their duty, obeyed the commandment by having one male and one female child. And that's why if a man died and he hadn't had children, this is back in biblical times. This is not in medieval times where the Jews did not practice polygamy, but in biblical times.

The woman was supposed to marry the man's brother, and the first son and first daughter she had with her husband, stroke brother-in-law, would not be her new husband's children. They would be considered her first husband's children. And his brother was sort of doing the, obeying the commandment of being fruitful and multiplying on his brother's behalf. There are a lot of

conflicting messages here, Ruth, aren't there? Just being a medieval person walking around trying to work out what it is you're supposed to be doing here. On one hand, you've got things like that in the Bible, like go forth and multiply, get on with it quicker. If you can't do it, your brother will. And then on the other hand, you've got Augustus going, let's really try not to have sex, but I suppose if you have to, all right. And then there's so many conflicting messages. How do we start to understand that?

if any of that translated to the general populace? Because just because church leaders are saying something doesn't mean that people were listening, that it had an impact. How do we get to what normal people were doing? It's hard to know what normal people were doing. I mean, we know they were having children. We have inheritance records and so on.

And obviously the population of medieval Europe did not disappear. But by the later middle ages, we have not necessarily sermons that were preached. I mean, we don't have recordings, but we have handbooks for preachers that give like little stories to tell in your sermons. And the one that I really like is, I think it's a priest who has a vision and the angel shows him his congregation. And some of them,

are shining with halos on. And he says, those are married women. How come they're shining with halos on? Why isn't it the celibate people who have the halos?

And the angel tells them, you know, these are women who had sex with their husbands in order to bear children. And when their husbands died, you know, they remained chaste. And they also did lots of good works. They did charity in the community and all these things. And so they are the ones who

who have fully obeyed God's commandments more than, say, those who renounced sex but weren't kind to their neighbors or various other things. So that's what's being preached to the laity in the later Middle Ages because it was understood that eternal chastity was not for everyone. You wanted to encourage your congregation to live together.

a life as God commanded, you know, as a lay person. They also have this, again, another contradictory narrative to this one. They have this very, very powerful, right, women,

behave yourselves you can have sex with your husband but then you're going to stop when he dies and behave yourself but they also have this narrative that that comes through that women are insatiable sex maniacs who can't be trusted i think the first time i ever learned that was through your work actually isn't as i think i was in my ma um how do those two things fit together why do

Did people in the Middle Ages think that women were more highly sexed than men? What was the rationale for that? It's really hard to say why. I can tell you the rationale that they gave, which is sort of a story used to dress it up. But it was, I mean, the story of Adam and Eve, that it was Eve who had tempted Adam with the apple. It's basically because women are weak. Weak, yeah.

It's not that men don't also feel desire like women, but men are stronger and more able to control it. Therefore, Adam might be considered just as guilty as Eve because Eve was the one who

tempted him and instigated him into eating the apple and disobeying God, but he's the one who was stronger and should have known better. So it's sort of based on women's weakness, really. It's this really strange one when you see it cropping up.

Is it the idea that men were just as horny, but they could control themselves? Or was it the idea that women were naturally more desirous? I think it's a very male fantasy that one, because they look, lads, they just can't help themselves. They'll be all over you. I think the idea really was that men were stronger. Men were more rational. Yeah.

And therefore, they were in a better position to control their desires. The way I think of it is up till the 13th century, the line was women are more sinful than men because of Eve and so on. And from the 13th century, you get, and women are also inferior and weak and stupid because they've rediscovered Aristotle. And that's what he says. Right.

And he says it. Yes, he says it a lot. You see. Yes. And then St. Jerome turns up. Oh, God. Yes. St. Jerome. St. Jerome is when he says all these terrible things about women, he's writing against marriage there. And his relations with he had a couple of pen pals who he wrote to a lot, a rich Roman widow who basically supported him and then her daughter.

And he was always polite to them and told them what to do. He mansplained a lot of things to them, but he gave them, he always spoke in a respectful tone and he respected, you know, the choice of chaste widowhood and so on. I mean, of course he did. They were supporting him. That was their philanthropy. But when he wrote about, you know, how horrible and dangerous women are,

He is writing to men about marriage and he's saying, don't get married because, you know, women are temptresses and will do all these horrible things. It had a considerable effect on women, I would say, but he wasn't writing to women there. He's writing to men. I'll be back with Ruth after this short break.

They say opposites attract. That's why the Sleep Number Smart Bed is the best bed for couples. You can each choose what's right for you, whenever you like. You like a bed that feels firm but they want soft? Sleep Number does that. You want to sleep cooler while they like to feel warm? Sleep Number does that too. Why choose a Sleep Number Smart Bed? So you can choose your ideal comfort on either side.

And now it's the lowest price of the season on the top-selling i8 smart bed. Your best savings plus special financing. Limited time. Shop a Sleep Number store near you. See store or sleepnumber.com for details. If I could throw you a curveball, because it's just something that I've been looking at lately. Was there any sense of menopause in the Middle Ages that you can think of? Because the only real thing that I can find about it is St. Jerome who chips in with something along the lines of

I'm paraphrasing now, but it's like, oh, because menstruation's ended, you are now no longer spiritually a woman and you can basically look forward to a contented life of croning or something. And it sounds like him, right? There are commentators about this, again, on the question of sex within marriage.

And how you should do it only for the sake of reproduction. Well, after you've passed your reproductive years, which is more obvious in women than in men, is it still okay to have sex within marriage? And the answer was, yes, it is. Because

God is all powerful. And if God wanted you to have another child, he would cause you to be fertile when you're having sex with your husband. And therefore, as long as you're open to the possibility of having another child, if God wants you to, then it's fine to have sex after menopause. Ah, interesting. While we're on the subject of medieval understanding of how the body works, kind of menopause stuff,

Erections fascinate me, what the medieval people thought of erections, because that ties into their understanding of aphrodisiacs as well. Yes, and it also ties into the idea of fertility. I mean, you'll see little men with erections running around in the margins of, say, the Bay of Tapestry. There's so many willies on that. It's unbelievable. Yes, and I found in one of the volumes of

court records from medieval Paris that I was looking at recently. There's one page where it's full of dick pics. The person has just doodled them. And it's not because there's anything on that page that is warranted. It's just that the scribe got bored. We've never changed. Yeah. So they made a really strong,

connection in the Middle Ages between impotence and infertility. I mean, we know today, I mean, there are men with perfectly healthy erections and perfectly healthy sex lives who nevertheless are infertile. I mean, they have a low sperm count, but in the Middle Ages, it would not, I mean, they didn't think of that. If the man was capable of having sex,

then it was the woman's fault if they didn't have children. And there are, in fact, a marriage could be dissolved if the couple were incapable of having sex. And so, I mean, I see this in the court records that I'm looking at now, and a number of other people have written about this. If one partner complains that the other is unable to have sex, then

would be called in to testify. And sometimes these are doctors who are called in to examine. But in some cases, it's

It's midwives who are called in to examine the man. And in some of the cases in York, there are sex workers who are called in to examine the man. And they're supposed to fondle him and dance around naked and so on to see if he can get an erection. And then they describe what happens. And it's really quite funny. Could you imagine that your entry point into history is a court record where the

they called in a bunch of sex workers to try and help you get it up and you failed. Yep. That's it's the humiliation in it. Well,

Why were they doing that? Because from a modern point of view, that is objectively, it's hilarious. It's a completely mad thing to be doing. They must have had a reason for this. Why wouldn't they just accept? The wife has turned up and said, look, guys, I like him, but he can't get it up. Why do they have to subject it to this? Right, I'll tell you what we need. We need a midwife, a priest and a sex worker here immediately. Yeah.

That was one of the few ways you could get out of a marriage you didn't want to be in. Oh, yes. So if the woman says, I want out of this marriage, my husband is incapable of having sex with me. And she also would say, and I want children. That's part of the formula that you more or less had to say. And he says, no, that's not true.

That's how they find out the truth. If you couldn't prove something like that, you couldn't get the marriage dissolved. You could get what they called divorce, but it's more like what we would call a judicial separation. You didn't have to live together. You'd have the property divided, but you still had to, as they say, render the marriage debt if the other member of the couple wanted it, and you didn't have the right to remarry.

So if you had been pushed into a marriage that you thought was a mistake, claiming that you were unable to consummate the marriage would be a way of getting out of it. But you would never have the couple sort of agreeing to go into court and say, oh, we have been unable to consummate this marriage. Because then if you were sort of labeled as impotent, you would never be able to marry anybody else either. So only one party is going to be making that claim.

Have you ever found any records of a man bringing a woman to court saying that she can't have sex? Oh, you have. Yes, and there's a very interesting case that Shannon McSheffery found recently. I don't know whether she's published it or not, of a woman or, well, someone who was considered to be a woman, married as a woman, but who may have been intersex. And there are a number of cases. They're much rarer.

then women claiming a man's impotence, but they're saying that the woman was unable to be entered basically. And that again, she would be examined by doctors or midwives to see whether that is the case.

And am I right in thinking that they understood an erection to be full of air, that it was kind of like inflated, like a pneumatic penis? That I don't know. Because I've read that they believed chickpeas were an aphrodisiac for this reason, because they thought that foods that doth provoked wind

that windy foods was an aphrodisiac. Yes, they did think that windy foods were aphrodisiac. I'm not sure that that's because they thought the penis inflated. Why would they think windy foods would make you horny? That seems like the least horny kind of food to me. Well, it has to do with the balance of the humors, the four bodily humors. So collar, yellow bile, black bile and blood.

And they had to be in proper balance, but men were thought to be more controlled by blood that is sanguine. The four sort of personalities you get from it are sanguine, if blood is dominant, melancholic, if black bile is dominant, choleric.

If the yellow bile is dominant or phlegmatic, if phlegm is dominant. And the idea is that to be healthy, you want to have these humors all in proper balance with, you know, it's going to be out of balance a little bit. And that's what dictates your personality type. And farting can help this. Yeah. And the balance also corresponds in various ways to the different elements of earth life.

water, wind and fire. And so you would eat windy foods to get you in balance. This is sort of what they got from ancient Greek medicine. God love them. God love the ancient Greeks. But what about something like STIs? Because now we're very on that. We've got public information programs and it's part of sex ed curriculums at school. But in the Middle Ages, what kind of sexual diseases would they... Was syphilis...

Just towards the end of that particular period. But what was their understanding of sexually transmitted diseases? They knew you could get diseases. You can read through catalogs of diseases of the sexual organs. They refer to something called gonorrhea, but it's the Greek word gonorrhea means a discharge from the genital area. That name was given in

in the modern era to a particular disease caused by a particular pathogen, but it wasn't understood that way in the middle ages. It was just a discharge. And they understood discharges not to be so much caused by contagion because they didn't understand germ theory. They understood them to be caused by overindulgence.

For example, there's a 14th century English poem trying to discourage people from having sex with sex workers. And it says, one reason is that measles, M-E-S-L-E-S, have sex with them. And that word could mean lepers, people with Hansen's disease, but it could also mean just anybody with a rash. I mean, because they didn't have a clear diagnosis of

You don't want to have sex with a sex worker because somebody who has this unspecified disease has already had sex with them. And the implication is that it's therefore going to be contagious. But I'm not sure they understood it in that specific way. Rather, it's just they're in general filthy because a filthy person has previously had

had sex with them. We should talk about sex work because your research in this area has been absolutely transformative. It was in your work that I learned about lavenders. That was one of my favorite sex worker medieval facts ever. Tell us about that one for anyone who's not familiar. So a lavender is a laundress. The word comes from the Latin word for washing. And the reason the plant is called lavender is because it was used

to make laundry smell good. There was a strong connection between washers and sex workers, and possibly because people who did washing handled dirty clothes and intimate items. But more likely, I think, was because that was who came into your house, and particularly for houses of men, monastic houses,

They might have men as their servants, but for some reason it was always women who did the washing. And you get this in regulations for medieval colleges within universities. Be sure that the person who does your washing is an old woman. And it may be also that that was something that

Either sex workers supplemented their income by doing washing or washers who tended to be poor supplemented their income with sex work. And that was sort of the stereotype. And they came to be known as lavenders, didn't they? Sex workers. Well, they came to be known more commonly as spinsters. I mean, a spinster is a woman who spins. Yep. And that is,

was understood already in the 15th century to be the equivalent of a woman who is not married because that woman who's not married has to support herself. And that was often how she did it by spinning. But you also will occasionally see an equation of spinsters in the sense of women who spin or single women as sex workers. Any woman who wasn't married could be suspect of

I'll be back with Ruth after this short break. They say opposites attract. That's why the Sleep Number smart bed is the best bed for couples. You can each choose what's right for you whenever you like. You like a bed that feels firm but they want soft? Sleep Number does that. You want to sleep cooler while they like to feel warm? Sleep Number does that too. Why choose a Sleep Number smart bed? So you can choose your ideal comfort on either side and

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I was reading a book recently about attitudes to sex in medieval Germany, and I'm not going to attempt to pronounce the word because it took up the entire page. But there was a word there that they used for these single independent women, and it translates to women who earn their own bread. And that was their...

And it was also they were guarded with suspicion and local towns were passing laws about them. Like, be careful of these women in your house. And it was that they were of independent means and they were associated with sex work, too. Yeah, well, it was an accusation used to essentially keep women in their place. I mean, you see that today, too. And there's a difference between a formal accusation and just an insult. Yes. That's why in the book I wrote.

I often translated the Latin word meritrix, not as prostitute, but as whore. You know, when we say sex worker, we use that phrase because we want to give the person respect as a person doing a particular job. But when they use the Latin word meritrix, which in some cases should be translated as sex worker, but often they weren't using it to give women respect. They were using it to give women disrespect. And

I mean, if someone uses the word whore as an insult today, it

It may have a technical meaning of a woman who has sex for money, but when people use it, they just mean, you know, a woman who is sexually inappropriate or a woman who I wish to insult. And what were attitudes to women who really, and men, who really were selling sex? Because it seems that attitudes to sex work were very different from our own modern understanding. I mean, the range of attitudes was not very different from our own. I mean, on the one hand, you have...

These are members of our community. These are women or in some cases men, although we have a lot less information on that.

These are people who are members of our community, and this is how they are earning their living, and they're entitled to the pay for their work. And on the other hand, you have the church teaching, no, these women are sinful, and they're filthy, and they don't actually have a right to anything. There's a whole discussion about this in the University of Paris in the 12th century about should...

a sex worker be given her wage? And the answer that they come up with is, well, yes, if she's agreed a price,

with the customer, then it's his obligation to pay it unless she's wearing makeup. Oh my God. Because if she's wearing makeup, that means that she has committed fraud or deception by making herself look more beautiful than she actually is. And therefore he's been defrauded. He doesn't have an obligation to pay. That's just, I just,

I just imagine just large groups of men sitting around in meetings day after day coming up with this stuff. That's the thing that because the medieval church is, you know, required all men in major orders to be celibate. And because a lot of boys left home at a pretty early age to be educated and

You have this group of men who haven't been around any women. I mean, they haven't been around their mothers and sisters since they were quite young. They haven't been around any women except laundresses.

I mean, that's a bit of an exaggeration. I mean, some of them would have had landladies. Some of them would have come into contact with other women who were selling things in the market and so on. And at the top levels within monasteries or universities, those in charge would certainly come in contact with women philanthropists, donors. But for the most part, they've not led a home life with women since they were quite young. And

And they basically use women to think with. I mean, some of these people, Peter the Chanter and his circle are the ones who I was talking about who are sort of theorizing about sex work. And they theorized about a lot of practical things, but they're talking about a sex worker getting paid is part of their theorizing of what is fair in the market. And they're actually talking about the market because they're located within the university, but it's in medieval Paris.

They're in a major city. They're coming in contact with the market. So that's why they're thinking about these things. But there are also just a lot of discussions about various things in text from the medieval universities where they're using women to think with. They're not talking about real women. What is it a woman's obligation to do if a tyrant says to her, if you don't have sex with me, I'm going to kill a thousand people?

Should she do it in order to save a thousand lives? And their answer is she should not do it because even if she and a thousand other people are put to death, they are martyrs and they're going to go to heaven. I would never get to medieval heaven. I would mess this up. That makes no sense to me at all.

No, I wouldn't get to medieval heaven either for a variety of reasons. But I might get to medieval heaven if I went on a pilgrimage, which the final question that I'm going to ask you, because I could keep you here for weeks asking you questions, but I won't.

Pilgrimages. Now, anyone that studied Chaucer's Canterbury Tales or knows a bit about it, there's this idea that the medieval pilgrimage was almost like Ibiza Club 18 to 30. And you get those pilgrimage badges and you can get replicas of them on Etsy and things like that. And they're basically penises and vulvas that people were wearing as badges going to pilgrimages. What on earth?

was that about? What's your thought? So I don't know that those particular ones were actually pilgrimage badges. They were badges, certainly, that you could get. But I think those are more, you know, you got the one with the cockle shell on it if you'd been to St. James or whatever other pilgrimage site you'd been to. The others, I think, are just more like the

kitsch souvenirs that you buy in the market and not necessarily the place you've gone on pilgrimage, but the place that you've traveled anywhere. What are you going to bring back for your mates? I mean, like you might bring back today, well,

Not you, but one might bring back, you know, a teacher with a rude slogan on it or something like that. I might bring one of those back. Well, yes, depends what the slogan is, right? But in the same way, you'd bring back this badge as a souvenir. Not that everyone, you know, who went on pilgrimage was all that holy. Were they quite rowdy things? Was that a reputation well-deserved? Marjorie Kemp, the author of the first autobiography we have in English,

was going on pilgrimage. She went to Rome and she wanted to go to the Holy Land. And the people she was with would not let her board the ship with them to go to the Holy Land because they found her company too unpleasant because she was praying and weeping all the time. They were interested in enjoying themselves en route and she was spoiling it for them. I bet she was. So they were. It was the kind of reputation that I guess they did deserve is that it was a bit of a knees up reputation.

Yes and no. I mean, people went for a number of reasons. And I'm sure there were some people who went entirely for devotional reasons, and some maybe half and half, and some maybe because it was a good opportunity to see the world. I mean, the biggest mistake people make in understanding the Middle Ages is to think that it was

one big solid block of people all behaving and thinking the same way. And it certainly wasn't any more than any other time period. Yeah. So as a final question, then, do you think that we can learn useful things from the medieval period about sex? Or do you think that we, you know, we're so advanced now, we're so past it, they can't, there's nothing that we can learn from them? I think one thing we can learn is that any gains that we make in terms of attitudes,

towards women, attitudes towards same-sex desires, attitudes towards just about anything, any gains that we make are fragile because you can see how things in the Middle Ages, you have ups and downs and changes and changes between the Middle Ages. And now I think we can see some backlashes

going on right now and I think we can learn from the middle ages that we need to watch out for that Ruth you have been wonderful to talk to I'm so glad that you came on if people want to know more about you and your work where can they find you

I'm on Blue Sky under my actual name, although I don't post there a huge amount. And if they're interested in academic publications, I teach at Trinity College Dublin and they can go to the web page there for the history department. And there's a link there with a listing of all my academic publications. Thank you so much for talking to me. You've been marvelous. Well, thank you for having me. This is a lot of fun.

Thank you for listening and thank you so much to Ruth for joining me. And if you like what you heard, don't forget to like, review and follow along wherever it is that you get your podcasts. I know everybody says that, but it really does actually help us out. If you have one New Year's resolution that you could actually keep, it would be to like, review and follow along wherever it is that you get your podcasts.

But if you wanted to explore a subject or if you just wanted to say hello, then you can also email us at betwixt at historyhit.com. We've got episodes on the history of the gym and the brothels of Pompeii all coming your way. This podcast was edited by Matt Peaty and produced by Stuart Beckwith. The senior producer was Charlotte Long. Join me again, Betwixt the Sheets, the history of sex scandal in society, a podcast by History Hit. This podcast contains music from Epidemic Sound.

They say opposites attract. That's why the Sleep Number Smart Bed is the best bed for couples. You can each choose what's right for you, whenever you like. You like a bed that feels firm but they want soft? Sleep Number does that. You want to sleep cooler while they like to feel warm? Sleep Number does that too. Why choose a Sleep Number Smart Bed? So you can choose your ideal comfort on either side.

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