The section on Feudal Society and Custom, as well as Women, were both really good.
Art: Its functional character and technical utility, far from harming the artistic quality, are its most obligatory supports; for art cannot be "added" to a useful object: it is born with it; it is the very spirit that animates, or else it does not exist. (speaking of a Romanesque capital)
motifs: ...but when the most humble trait, the most modest touch of colour signified another reality, enlivening a useful surface by communicating to it some reflection of the beauty of the visible or invisible universe.
Feudal Society and Custom: (pp. 70 - 72)
Thus the right of private war was allowed, which was the right for the group to avenge an offence suffered by one of its members and to obtain reparation. Also, when we think of feudal society, we must acquire the habit of thinking of lineage, family, household, rather than of individual voices. Yet this same society rested on personal connections, of man to man; one committed oneself to a particular lord. If some incident occurred, it was necessary to renew the agreement that had been made. In this way, the history of feudal times unfolded, made up of games of alliances formed and then dissolved; here it was a vassal who swore homage to his lord, but who then proved guilty of infidelity; there it was another who, having sworn homage to the father, refused to do as much for the son... Feudal wars, which in no war resembled modern wars, drew their origins from that extremely complex fabric of personal agreements and community traditions that constituted the society of the that time.
Accusing Finger - pp. 136 - 138
Women: Gradually, after the Middle Ages, everything that conferred upon women any autonomy, any independence, any instruction, was taken away from them.
Convents gradually ceased to be those centers of study that they had been previously once the University (which only allowed men) tried to concentrate all sources of teaching and knowledge, and once the convents ceased that, they also ceased, rather rapidly, being centers of prayer.
A woman salt merchant, hairdresser, miller, widow of a farmer, a chatelaine, a woman Crusader, etc.
Women voted like men in urban assemblies or those of rural parishes. In notarial acts, it is very common to see a married woman act by herself, in opening, for example, a shop or trade, and she did so without being obliged to produce her husband's authorization. Finally, the tax rolls, when they have been preserved for us, as is the case of Paris at the end of the 13th century, show a host of women plying trades: school mistress, doctor, apothecary, plasterer, dryer, copyist, miniaturist, binder, and so on.
It was only at the end of the 16th century, with the growing influence of the Roman (Imperial law) 1593 that explicitly excluded women from all state function. It was not long before women were being restricted in what has been, in all times, her privileged domain: the care of the home and education of the children - at least up until the moment when that too would be taken away by law with the Napoleonic Code. She could no longer own property and would be forced to play an inferior role in her own household.
Or, too, I might have mentioned the right of sanctuary, which perhaps would be useful to revive on a large scale in an era when the spirit of public and private vengeance has been reborn.
Boys could vote, learn a trade and be on their own by age 12, girls by 14.
Rediscover the importance of tradition, which is a living given, susceptible like all life to growth, to acquisition, to enrichment from new contributions.
“By familiarizing oneself with other eras, civilizations, one acquires the habit of distrusting criteria of one’s own time; they will evolve as others have evolved. It is the occasion for personally revisiting one’s own thought mechanism, one’s own motives for action or reflection with those of others. “, pp. 112 - 113)
The High Middle Ages
Frank Period: 410 (Goths seize Rome) or 476 (deposition of the last Emperor) to the middle of Eighth century
Imperial Period: Unified Europe from mid 8th century to mid 10th century
Feudal Age: mid 10th century to the end of the 13th century
The true Middle Ages, a period of transition between feudalism and monarchy, with the violent social, economic and artistic changes that such a political change caused, is the 14th - 15th centuries. The true age of wars, famine and epidemics.