Oh What A Time... - #5 Marriage
Episode Date: August 13, 2023This week we're talking marriage through the ages; from the legally loose nuptials in medieval England, to shacking up with your cousin in ancient Egypt plus we explain why tavern keepers in ancient R...ome had such a hard time getting hitched. This first series will contain 12 episodes that we’ll be releasing weekly. If there's an episode you'd like to hear, please let us know! And thank you so much for your support for the podcast since our launch a few weeks ago. If you like it, why not drop us a review in your podcast app of choice? (Thus taking heed of our increasingly desperate pleas for reviews). If you’d like to get in touch with the show (perhaps to tell us when was the worst period in history or if we've INEVITABLY got something wrong) you can email us at: hello@ohwhatatime.com We’re also on Twitter and Instagram @ohwhatatimepod Thank you to Dan Evans for the artwork (idrawforfood.co.uk). And thank you for listening! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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Visit continue.yorku.ca Hello and welcome to Oh What A Time, the history podcast that tries to decide if the past was as awful as it seems.
I'm Ellis James.
I'm Chris Scull.
And I'm Tom Crane.
Each week on this show we'll be looking at a new historical subject and today we're going to be discussing marriage.
From marrying your cousin in ancient Egypt to marriage in ancient Rome to the genuinely
mortifying ideal of consummating your marriage in medieval Britain. There you go, buckle up.
But shall we kick off with some correspondence? Let's do it. Now, last week, dedicated listeners will know that we talked about the awful life that people used to experience when they lived at sea and they worked at sea.
And we've got quite a few emails on this subject, and one that really stuck out for us.
Now, it's from a guy called Samuel Robert Kinghorn, who is a Royal Navy officer.
There you are. Look at this.
Great name.
And he was always going to be an officer with that name.
Absolutely.
Although it also has a slight sort of sound
of like a naughty, posh schoolboy.
Kinghorn!
Damn you!
Is that a frog in your pocket?
Headmaster's office, Kinghorn!
Now, Robert Kinghornhorn Now Robert Kinghorn
Samuel Robert Kinghorn
Sorry sir
Has got in contact to say
I have an amusing
Slash terrifying anecdote
About our life at sea
That you three salty sea dogs
May enjoy
I like that
Someone from the Navy
Has called us salty sea dogs
That's how I've always identified
As a salty sea dog
All emails from now on Please refer to us Salty sea That's how I've always identified as a salty sea dog.
All emails from now on, please refer to us as salty sea dogs.
He said... Yeah, the SSDs.
While on my previous unit, we were operating in the mid to north Atlantic on a nice day when it was fairly calm.
And often in these situations, we would stop the ship in the water and some crew would jump off and go for a swim.
And this was in water that was, on six kilometers deep okay so my no the battle crews would slow down
and they would leap off into the six kilometer deep water picture oh my god picture attached
as proof there's a photo of him swimming around he says additionally this is a bit that worries
me perfectly honest additionally you'll notice next to the bridge of the ship near the top that there is someone
leaning on a minigun with a covering over it and this man is on shark watch which is exactly what
it sounds like and that's why he's got a minigun ready kind regards sam the royal navy officer
hang on if there's a shark sure you know attack it so're not going to try and shoot it, are you? With a minigun? Now then, I will never in my life need to swim that badly.
It is a good point, though.
Adding bullets to the mix.
Bullets, something which is, I think,
one of the few things which is as dangerous as a shark.
Yeah, yeah.
Tossing those into the mix.
Horrendous.
I'll tell you one brief thing about
this this for me is like the epitome i'm exactly like you of things i would never want to do i have
a profound fear of sharks also a profound fear of deep water the two of those absolutely freak me
out and um there is a reason for this i don't know if i've told you about this before but um when i
was eight i was fascinated with sharks and i asked my mum for christmas to buy me a book on sharks and uh she got quite
confused instead she bought me a book on shark attacks and it was 300 pages of the most horrific
images you've ever seen in your entire life oh my god who's publishing a book on shark attacks
hardback and it was like sepia images of men with their ribs missing
and bodies lying on the beach.
And it's just like Christmas Day underneath the tree
seeing the most horrific book you've ever read.
And that's why I've got this profound fear of sharks.
So Samuel doing this to me feels like absolutely not me.
You know the gun guy?
Yeah.
Who's meant to shoot the shark before the shark bites you to death?
Yeah.
Has that ever worked?
Do they reassure people?
Oh, it was fine.
About three or four years ago, we were in the Caribbean, actually,
and there was a shark, and he tried to bite one of the lads,
but we just blew its head off with a gun, and then it was fine,
and there was no collateral damage,
and no bullets sprayed anywhere, so we didn't want them to. No one got hurt in the crossfire. It was fine and there was no collateral damage. No bullets sprayed anywhere, so we didn't want them to.
No one got hurt in the crossfire.
It was absolutely fine.
The shark made an appearance.
We blew its head off and we carried on swimming.
This actually is close to a famous historical inaccuracy that I am aware of.
You know the film Saving Private Ryan?
The first scene where they're arriving on the beach on D-Day.
And one of the things that gets pointed out is that
that is inaccurate because bullets do not fly through
water in the way they're depicted in that
scene. So if you were to be
if you were shooting, there's too much friction in the water
so if you were trying to shoot a shark
if the shark is at a little bit of depth
those bullets will not be hitting that shark.
You need a decent headshot.
Well, you need
the shark to leap out of the sea like Free Willy
and then just completely take it down.
You've got to Free Willy it.
Anyway, would you fancy a bit of a palate cleanser?
Shall we move on from that email to something slightly more cheery?
Yes, please.
As always, you guys have been sending in some brilliant suggestions
for things that we could talk about on the show,
if it's not minigunning a great white shark from the side of a ship.
William Hall, who has suggested we might want to talk about ketchup.
He says, I'm loving the show, but one little vignette of history that's worth looking into
is the evolution of tomato ketchup.
Starting out as a fish-based condiment hundreds of years ago,
that due to early storage techniques would routinely explode while being transported
and was known to maim and even kill people.
There you go.
That's a bit of fun.
Again.
Yeah.
I love red sauce.
Ketchup.
It's the perfect accompaniment to chips, bacon, pretty much anything.
I don't need it in my life enough to risk an exploding bottle.
I think I'll go with mayo.
Is that all right?
I'll just have mayo on my BLT.
That'll be fine.
Well, I've got an idea.
What if, on tomato sauce,
what if the listeners do the research for us?
If you want to send us any tomato ketchup facts,
we'd love to read them next week.
And if you say it's got 57 different varieties,
we know.
Yeah.
All right, you horrible lot.
Here's how you can stay in touch with the show.
You can email us at hello at oh, what a time dot com.
And you can follow us on Instagram and Twitter at oh, what a time pod.
Now clear off.
OK, so what are we talking about today? I'm going to be talking about medieval Britain
and the horror of the marriage ceremony and what happens afterwards, which somehow is
even worse.
I'll be discussing marriage in ancient Rome.
And I'll be discussing marriage in ancient Egypt, which is, to be honest, a bit incest-y.
A bit cousin-heavy.
I wanted to start this week with a real favourite passage about love and marriage,
which comes from Catullus, a poet in Rome from the 1st century BC.
Over a quarter of his poems were written about his girlfriend,
I'm doing that in inverted commas, his girlfriend, Lesbia, who was already married.
I think it just sums up the tragedy of love and marriage, really.
I hate and I love.
You ask, perhaps, how can this be?
I know not, but I feel it, and it is agony.
One question.
Was he quite an intense guy to know?
Was he the bloke who walked into the pub and be like,
Oh, great, cut, let's just see.
Oh, God.
You all right, mate?
Still feeling a combination of agony and ecstasy.
Yeah, most of it.
I bet he was constantly walking around with pieces of paper,
just writing poems all the time.
If you saw that guy in a Wetherspoons, you'd go, what a loser.
They were the sort of big-budget romantic signings in sixth form,
weren't they?
Those guys were the ones that got all the...
That was what you wanted to be as a sixth former.
Why on earth did I want to be brooding when I was 17?
What on earth things want to...
My son or my daughter,
I don't think it's slightly different for girls,
but if my son begins to brood at 17,
I'll say, just keep your chin at me.
It's not a great look.
I was so desperate to be even mildly attractive in sixth form.
My mum once told me I had lovely eyes
and I would make an effort to make my eyes as big as possible
when I was walking around.
How lame is that?
So I would really stretch them open.
So you see a lot of photos of me.
I look like I'm on pills.
I'm really making my eyes massive
because I thought this is what people find attractive
so easy
unfortunately
I had a terrible track record
with the opposite sex
at school
and every time I'd go out
on the piss
as a 17, 18 year old
when I was in 6th form
on the Saturday night as I was about to go into town,
my mum would always say,
Oh, you look handsome.
And every time I'd always say,
But the evidence suggests otherwise, doesn't it?
What you're saying comes from a position of love.
I need it to be evidence-based.
And you haven't got any evidence.
You can't take a note from your mum into a nightclub
just to reassure people.
No, no, no.
Nesta says.
Exactly.
I'm stuck with brooding now until university,
when, if I've got anything about me,
I will do a complete personality swap.
My brother has a friend who went to his church.
I'm not sure if this is true, but apparently it is true,
who offered his wife a murriment on a flight,
and she thought, he said, marry me. Will will you marry me and that is why they got married that is generally
what happened they're on a flight and she misheard it and then he was like well I might as well go
along with it now and they've now got children and they are married they're very very happy but
the initial thing was do you want a murrayment and that was literally and she said yes I thought
you'd never ask I don't often have Murray Mints on me,
but they help me to stop my ears from popping.
You've made me the happiest woman alive.
I've always wanted to try this.
I've always wanted to try a Murray Mint.
I've dreamt of trying a Murray Mint since I was a little girl.
It does suggest he was going down on one knee
while offering the Murray Mint, though.
So that's quite a strange way to offer someone a boiled sweet
Is to go on one knee
If he dropped a load of Murray Mints
Went down to pick them up
He was on one knee
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Ancient Rome.
Now then, like much of Roman society,
marriage was highly structured,
but it was quite logical and there are parts of it,
aspects of it,
not all of it, obviously,
but aspects of it are relatively modern., not all of it, obviously,
but aspects of it are relatively modern.
It wasn't always romantic, though.
It tended to be an agreement between families.
So men would usually marry in their mid-twenties while women married while they were still in their early teens.
So as they reached these ages,
the parents would consult with friends
to find suitable partners
that could improve the family's wealth or class.
I mean, I'd say, Ellis, very briefly,
you, as a 15-year-old,
you're saying about your mum saying you're the most handsome person
in the world. Do you think, how do you think it would
have done for you if Nesta, at that
point in your life, was finding you a wife?
Do you think that would be...
Because obviously it puts an awful lot of...
It puts an enormous amount
of pressure
on those early relationships.
So most aristocratic women were married off in their mid-teens,
and a woman who was not wed by 20 was considered a deviant.
So if you've got to the ripe old age of 20 and you're not married,
the Emperor Augustus formalised this.
He said, unmarried men are forbidden to receive inheritance and legacies.
This disability begins for men at 25 years receive inheritance and legacies. This disability
begins for men
at 25 years of age
and for women
at 20 years of age.
So obviously,
put a huge amount
of pressure
on that one-week
relationship you have
in year nine.
That,
that,
you've got to get
that right, man.
Oh my goodness me.
Think about
the pressure
and the intensity of your crushes as you're 15.
Yeah.
I think if you'd asked me at 15, the girl I fancied who was in my class,
would you marry her?
I'd be like, yes, yes, a thousand times yes.
She is the one for me.
The way she sits next to that boy Adrian in maths and occasionally looks at me when she
needs to borrow a protractor she is the woman i want to live with for the rest of my life yeah
yeah absolutely at that point you saw you you also read into every interaction as so profoundly
important and wonderful and then you analyse it afterwards.
There was a girl in my sixth form... She wanted to borrow a set square today.
Does that mean she fancies me more or less
than after the protractor day?
Oh, my God.
Well, I remember she once rang me about history homework,
and I was so happy for, like...
You really started ranking.
What happened there is she's gone,
who's the biggest nerd in the class?
Yeah.
Which loser's going to help me with my homework?
Oh, here we go.
How dare you?
I got, well, yeah.
Actually, I'm now doing a history podcast.
Yeah.
She knew.
And this is why I'm doing this podcast,
in a desperate attempt to get back with.
Oh, yeah.
But you're right.
There's so much pressure attached to that.
But one thing I was thinking is like,
yeah, there's a pressure to get kind of married
at probably 15 years of age,
but you're also probably dead at 40.
So like, if you divide your life,
that is actually, you probably need to be getting married at 15
because there's not much coming after this.
The average first marriage in ancient Rome lasted for about 14
years, and the most frequent reason behind
its ending was death.
The high mortality rate would not be unusual for people
to marry more than once. So,
you're in love with a girl in year 9,
she sits next to a boy you know in maths,
you lend her a protractor
or a set square, whichever is the sexiest
piece of mathematical apparatus.
She says yes.
Your mum and her mum get together at the school gates
and agree that it's on.
You're married.
In 14 years' time, all being well, she's died.
You get another go at it.
By that point in your late 20s, you know yourself a little bit more.
You've been in a long-term relationship.
That is the ideal scenario.
A widow at 28.
Obviously, like lots of ancient civilisations,
the rules around adultery...
I mean, especially the women,
it's rules that, to modern eyes, look crazy.
It's been held that women convicted of adultery
should be punished for the loss of half of their dowry
and the third of their goods
and by relegation to an island.
The adulterer, however,
shall be deprived of half his property and
shall also be punished by relegation to an island
provided the parties are exiled to different
islands. You don't necessarily need to say island.
I can't reiterate
enough.
Our punishment is you two
off to a tropical island.
You two shaggers are off to a tropical island. You two shaggers are off to a tropical island.
Augustus himself was obliged to invoke the law against his own daughter Julia
and relegated her to the island of Pandateria.
Wow.
Now this I found really interesting.
Tombstones record some qualities and traits that were deemed positive in the Roman period.
Some of the most common positive attributes used by husbands
to describe their deceased wives include chaste, obedient, friendly,
old-fashioned, frugal, content to stay at home, pious, dressed simply,
good at spinning thread and good at weaving cloth.
Imagine that.
That's a headline on your tombstone.
What did you love most about your wife?
Well, God, hard to say, really.
She was old-fashioned and she was good at spinning thread.
So, in the early Republic,
you couldn't marry anyone closer than your second cousin
Which I think
They've got that one right in my opinion
By the first century
CE
You could marry your brother's daughter, niece to uncle
That was absolutely fine
Oh my goodness
However you couldn't marry persons associated with unsavoury occupations
I.e. prostitution
Acting and tavern keeping.
So if you married your niece, that was all right.
If you married someone who'd gone to drama school,
people are like, oh, you dirty bastard.
Or running a sports bar.
That'd even be...
If you married someone who ran a walkabout
that was very accessible
to big groups and stags
yeah you're like oh jeez
why don't you just be normal
and marry a niece
I tell you what if you're an out of work actor
working behind the bar at a tavern
you are the lowest of the low
you are scum
my dad that attitude he fitted in Lowest of the low. You are scum. Yeah.
My dad, that attitude, he fitted in quite well in ancient Rome in that case.
Because my brother Michael was once in a primary school nativity play.
And playing, not even the lead, I think he was the innkeeper.
Yeah.
And he came off stage at the end at the age of nine.
And my dad went up to him and said, don't get any funny ideas about becoming an actor.
Oh, wow.
Sure, you smashed it as the innkeeper just now.
So my dad would absolutely have applauded that approach.
Just concentrate on getting some very normal ideas
about marrying an umptie.
I'm starting to think that I wouldn't have enjoyed
living in ancient Rome.
You get this idea of ancient Rome in the movies and stuff,
which feels quite exciting,
and sort of fountains of wine and all this sort of stuff.
Yeah, and platters.
They've cut out that sort of niece-dating business
from Gladiator.
That doesn't really come in much.
Like everything, though.
And I remember having this discussion
when I was a history student, actually,
sort of with my housemates.
At any time, if you could be sort of airdropped into any period in history,
it is always much, much better if you're rich.
Yeah.
If you're rich, it would be so much better than often a couple of hundred years
in the future if you're poor.
And I think, it was I think if
you were well off in ancient Rome
it must have been alright
what I think
we would all find difficult is
that they were such strict
power structures and it was such an ordered
society and you couldn't really
I think it's seemingly quite difficult
to deviate from that stuff which I would find
difficult but you know I was a brooding 17 year old who wrote very bad I think it's seemingly quite difficult to deviate from that stuff, which I would find difficult.
But, you know, I was a brooding 17-year-old who wrote very bad poetry to impress girls in regional nightclubs,
so make them know what you do.
Yeah, Ellis, as I found when I was reading about the medieval England,
as I will talk about later,
it does feel one of the things about the rich-poor divide
when it comes to marriage, and it seems similar in Rome,
is that basically poorer people tended to marry for love more than the rich yeah it seems often the rich
are kind of marrying for status for continued financial security whatever happened to be it's
like that scene in the Titanic when they're sort of having a lovely time and swinging around
genuinely like each other where upstairs it's kind of it all genuinely like each other upstairs it's all forced
it's all done for money
I mean if you're
if you're poor
in medieval Wessex
and you quite fancy a girl
and she quite fancies you
and it's all you've got
to offer her
is a turnip
and she says
well I've got half an onion
you're like
sod it
yeah
oh that'll do
that'll do
I've got two turnips
you've got a carrot
let's stick them together
and have a laugh
come on
we're not above that
look everyone
gather round
we'll have a laugh
and then we'll make some soup
I mean there were over 50 Roman deities
that were in some way involved in the reproductive process.
So, Liber, I hope I'm pronouncing that correctly,
who was the god of wine and semen.
How did he get that portfolio?
Whose temples were signified by a phallus.
Say that again, what was that?
His temples were signified by a phallus.
They loved that in ancient Rome, didn't they?
Every pot's got a big old knob on it.
Come on, guys, can you not draw something else?
Like the front of a soft schoolboy's jotter.
Do you know what I love? Yes, that's constantly. Do you know what I love?
I have visited cathedrals and monasteries
where there is carved graffiti
from occasionally hundreds and hundreds of years ago.
And I love that.
There's something about it that I find so compelling
where it would be some teenager got, you know know a chisel and decided to carve 1718
into a wall which must have taken him or her absolutely ages as well yeah and they often
they do little sort of cocks and balls just like you would on your school desk
yeah it's so weird well i guess like that it's such a it's such a fundamental it's so weird. I guess it's such a fundamental...
It's deep in there, isn't it?
It's innate to draw a cock and boys.
And that has been the case for hundreds of years.
Well, look at the guy...
What's that huge guy on the side of that hill?
What's he called?
The guy with the big erection.
Yeah, that guy.
I'm sure that's not his actual official title, but...
We're going on a school trip to see the guy with the big erection.
The guy who started drawing that and then like
when his mates came over
I'm going to draw this guy with a massive
knob they must have just cracked
up what do you reckon
which part Chris do you reckon he started with
when you're looking for it
you're living in the village at the bottom of the hill
and you're looking up the first two days
is it just a cock and bull?
And then he does the rest of it.
Or maybe he started drawing a nice face, the nice legs.
And the villagers are like, this is quality.
This is really coming along.
Quality.
And then overnight on the last night,
when everyone's gone to bed, I'll get the cock done now.
And the villagers go, what is this?
It's the Cairn Abbas Giant.
It's a hill figure.
I think it's Cairn.
I hope it's not CERN.
Anyway, it's in Dorset.
55 metres high.
Depicts a standing nude male with a prominent erection
and wielding a large club in his right hand.
Yeah, it's back filled with short rubble.
I've never thought about that, actually, Ellis.
Very briefly, what is the situation that's depicting?
Why has he got a club and a boner?
What's happening?
There's lots of different...
I mean, I'm just Googling it,
and there are lots of different interpretations
as to why he's standing there naked with a big club.
I mean, fertility is the most well-known one.
Yes, yeah.
I have one final question about that.
The guy on the hill.
Do you think it affected property prices in the area?
Do you know what?
I think it really, really depends on the buyer.
It's either going to be a case of, right, we're leaving,
or we'll take it.
No one is sort of ambivalent or indifferent.
At the end of the day, the estate agent's like,
we're never going to shift this.
And then you see the garden gate open,
and in comes a man who's naked with an erection
holding a club
here you go
we found our buyer
well we touched on
some notes of incest there
and if you like incest
then jump in the DeLorean
let's head back to
ancient Egypt
because boy
have I got some stories for you.
You know, the majority of girls in ancient Egypt got married between 12 and 13.
And boys are typically a year or two older.
Average life expectancy in ancient Egypt, 36.
Bloody hell.
Wow.
That's mad, isn't it?
So we're all dead.
We're all dead.
Long dead.
Wow.
It's crazy.
So the distinctive feature, I would say, about marriage in ancient Egypt is, of course,
that there was no rules against the union of close relatives, brothers and sisters, in love songs in ancient Egypt.
The words brother and sister have the same significance as husband and wife.
Oh, dear.
There was none
of the common horror of incest.
Not only was the brother permitted to marry his
sister, but it was customary.
Oh my god.
I've got two sisters. One of them's there.
Are you that going to cut?
What a rift. You've got a choice.
You've got a choice. Oh dear, dear, dear.
And also the one thing I didn't realise
was that I assumed in ancient Egypt it was just the nobility, but it wasn't.
It was the most suitable type of marriage between brothers and sisters of all ranks of society.
Yeah.
So everyone is at it.
I've got enormous questions about the implications in terms of children.
Yeah.
Well, have you ever seen Tutankhamun?
They did a
reconstruction i saw in some documentary he had a disproportionately massive arse he had like an
underbite and all of this was the result of incest like generational wow what's kind of interesting
about that is you think the royal family that would have been you could see that sort of
preservation of power that's about maintaining the control within
your bloodline all that sort of stuff and not letting others in that's exactly what it is
i've googled the rendering the real face of king yeah from the bbc documentary uh toon khamun the
truth uncovered and you're right chris i mean he's he mean he's not a good looking guy
seen by modern
by conventional modern standards
but his sister thought he was
very handsome, so it was alright
goodness me
King Tutankhamun died young as well and you look at him
when they kind of recreate what he would have
looked at and you go
yes, there is no way that guy is living very
long
I had no idea
generations of inbreeding finally incest gets a bad press
someone's saying it um and their gods actually they got like osiris married his sister like it
was so such a central part of of their kind of society that crazy really but
interestingly scholars say that their domestic lives were very happy egyptian women would share
the work and recreation of their husbands they would go on with their husbands on hunting and
fishing expeditions there's lots of drawn scenes of husbands and wives entertainings really common
um i don't think any of this makes up for the fact you're having to marry a sister.
No.
I do think that's... I get to go on the odd fishing trip, but I'm marrying my sister.
That's not enough of a...
What's interesting about Egyptian culture as well is the harem.
It was a really accepted part of Egyptian culture.
So a man who could afford it would have a number of female household slaves
who as a matter of course became part of his harem.
There was no moral issue involved.
His right to them was accepted,
but he would only have one woman as his legitimate wife.
Right, you've got to think about her role in all this.
Her feelings. I mean, I can't believe i'm saying this but having met in the in the in the late 80s right when they brought in
compulsory seat belt wearing having seen the fuss people made about that and yet it was it was
obviously it was a legal requirement to wear a seatbelt.
You get old men saying, oh, you'll never catch me wearing a seatbelt.
The old, yeah,
it's fine that my husband can have
sex with who he wants because that's an accepted
part of society. And you'd be sitting there
thinking, you fucking Jesus, he's at it again
with someone who isn't related to the dirty
old side. Disgusting!
Get in your way
related. You're not even related
from a different town
disgusting
so how many people would be
in the Harim then
well Pharaoh Ramesses II
had 48 to 50
sons and 40 to
53 daughters
oh my goodness I find two children a lot to deal with
yes although do you was he was he getting was he doing the early wake up with all 70 of them
do you think or was he kind of and this is also this is this is pre uh sort of ci you know
there's no mr tumble and all that sort of stuff back there. Yes, what are you doing? You're up with them and you're entertaining them.
Do you want to look at some hieroglyphics?
Exactly.
Come look at the hieroglyphics.
Do you don't want to watch the hieroglyphics?
Right, I'm out.
Also, the state of the hand-me-downs for child number 70 as well.
By the time the clothes get down to him.
Decades out of fashion.
Typical youngest child of 70.
Well, I was the fourth child
And there was a huge age gap between me and my brothers
So you talk about fashion changing
Pictures of me as a child
Everyone else in my class
Is dressed in shell suits and stuff
In the 80s or 60s
I'm in these wide flares
Both from a different generation
My youngest brother was 15 years older than me
That's amazing.
So I have all these old clothes.
Once at school, I found a coin in my pocket that was no longer legal tender.
It'd been out of circulation for like 12 years.
How, yeah, being one of 70 children, trying to get a bit of time with your parents
Some kind of feeling
Trying to get a piece of quiet in the house
Having your parents remember your name
Is going to be a struggle
I don't think I know 70 people's names
You know that
I do this thing though
I am like a parent in an 80s sitcom
Where I want to say Izzy,
but I'll go through everyone else in the house's name first
before I get to Izzy.
Stefan, Betty, Izzy, sorry.
Imagine doing that with 70 kids.
Impossible.
Tony, Rachel, Terry, Malcolm, Graham, Colin, Philip.
Yeah.
All those classic Egyptian names.
Terry.
all those classic Egyptian names
Terry
imagine the Christmas
they're rapping on
Christmas Eve
oh my god
so huge harems
loads of children
and you're married
to your sister
this is the
Egyptian approach
also you do that
funny walk
wherever you walk
as well
yeah
that's part of the course
well that's the incest
isn't it
it's the club foot
yeah they can't actually
remove themselves
from that position
at any time
reversed elbows
and wrists
god those birds
they made fantastic
waiters though
didn't they
you could put a tray
on each hand so um so i've been reading about marriage in medieval england uh which
for those who don't know sort of ran from the end of the fifth century to the start of the early
modern period which is 1485 and it's kind of interesting because it's a period when official marriage
became sacred and sort of modern wedding rituals and traditions we have today first appeared and
also it's interesting because it's completely insane so it's it's mad what happened so in early
medieval england sort of like initially marriage wasn't
like it wasn't like a religious affair so you could get married anywhere uh like in the in the
road in the pub at your mate's house this is what people used to do wherever you wanted you didn't
need witnesses either you didn't need a priest you just needed all you needed to do was give
your consent so people say do you want to get married you go yeah and then you just if you
both wanted to do it then it could just happen then and there if you agree it's done that's literally all it was
you're getting married in in the road without having to have any witnesses seems quite uh
convenient i quite i quite like yeah i think i think i think the medieval english have got
something right planning a wedding is quite stressful as well it's expensive yeah it's
really fun the day was really fun
I got married
as you say
you were both there
about a month and a half ago
I really loved it
but it's a lot of work
a lot of work
couldn't have just done it
in the street
exactly
and you don't even need a priest
you just need to say
do you want to do it
and they say yes
could have done it
outside Superdrug
so this is what people
used to do
in the early medieval period they'd just say do you want to get married or they maybe have a couple of people there to do they pre in the early medieval period they just say do you
want to get married or they maybe have a couple of people there but often they just wouldn't
bother they wouldn't have anyone it would just be an agreement between two people
but the issue with this is it caused problems if at a later date one of them claimed it never
happened oh but that means every marriage has a like aout clause, because you can just deny it.
Exactly, which is why in the 12th century,
the church made it a holy sacrament that had to be observed by God.
So basically the game changed at that point,
because people were constantly trying to get out of marriages.
Married, no.
Oh, I can just say no.
Lived with you for 18 years.
Three kids together, 20 years.
No, we're not.
Because no one in Halfords heard us agree to get married that afternoon last week.
You can just sort of claim...
Find someone who stood outside St. Dundare on that day 18 years ago and saw us do it.
So, in medieval times, as we discussed earlier,
the lower classes, often they married for love.
The wealthiest we talked about in Rome, they sort of married for money and power.
And by extension of that, actually, wealthy medieval children were often betrothed in infancy.
So you would have a child and you would decide what other baby you want your baby to get married to.
My son is four. He's not ready to settle down. Would have a child and you would decide what other baby you want your baby to get married to.
My son is four.
Yeah.
He's not ready to settle down.
Would he be a good husband?
No, he's so into cars.
He's quite a single issue conversationist.
And it was, you know, it was cars.
It's been cars this month.
It was eggs last month, and it was ducks the month before that.
So he doesn't even know himself.
He's certainly not ready to settle down.
I find that idea quite appealing, where it's like,
I don't need to do any of the legwork to find a wife.
Someone is going to go out and do it for me and i'll just turn up well you'd hope
you'd hope it would be your parent this is the issue though chris so it wouldn't necessarily
be someone who is looking for the right baby and has your interests at heart because if your father
died and he hadn't arranged marriages for you for his children it then became the responsibility of
the landlord in the area you lived it was his responsibility to find you a suitable partner as a child,
basically, for when you grew of age.
And he's got binders to not fix.
Yeah, exactly.
He's got a lot of stuff on.
My first house in Cardiff, Ellis, I don't know if I knew you then,
when I moved in, my room was up in the roof,
and they hadn't finished building the roof.
It was just black bin bags across the...
And that was like that for like a month and a half.
And the idea that that man would be finding me...
A man who couldn't finish a roof isn't going to really be the person that...
Could actually let me lie in it.
Or animals try to get in
and could get in if they really pushed it.
Yeah.
It was the landlord's responsibility.
And also they would often profit
because they would sell off your marriage rights, basically.
Bloody landlords, man.
Exactly, yeah.
Landlords from hell.
And then at the wedding, things got sort of even weirder in medieval Britain.
First of all, you had the best man.
The best man isn't what he is today.
You know, goes and gives a funny speech.
Oh, guys, this is a great stag.
Exactly, yeah, yeah.
Great medieval stag.
Your options are the tavern.
Yeah.
I'll go, I mean. It's all you need. We're going to the tavern. Yeah. I'll get him in.
It's only mead.
We're going to the tavern.
Two villages over.
We're staying over three nights.
Different postcode.
Obviously, if it does kick off,
big group of lads in a different village,
it's the kind of thing that turns up
and we will get boiling oil poured over us.
I've booked us in with some archery.
boiling oil poured over us so i've booked us in with some archery uh and you say well thank goodness isn't paintball that's the only thing
the so the best man it was the person you choose would be the best swordsman
uh you knew because it was their job to fend off the bride's angry family if they didn't approve
or if someone tried to steal your bride now i don't know if you've ever been a best
man, but that was your job. You were given a
sword and it was your responsibility
to fight anyone that had a
problem with the wedding, basically.
That's a stitch-up. That's a stitch-up
if you know you're going to have
a battle on your hands. It's the yes-yes
to do that now. In that sort of
scenario as well, you probably don't even like the bride.
Also, as a best man,
you've got to weigh up
how hard are the bride's family?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yes.
Well, I think in my mind,
medieval time,
basically everyone was hard.
In my mind, that's what it is
because it's such a tough existence back then.
I don't think people were...
I think it was just naturally
in your
character surely wasn't it that fighting was such a way of life yeah i guess like that's evolution
isn't it you're it's just hard people are just the ones who have survived so everyone's gonna be hard
i think basically any anyone who lived pre-central heating is hard yeah i agree i do feel that compared to me.
But things weren't easy for the bride either at the wedding.
So the maddest thing that happened at the wedding is the bride's dress was associated with good luck.
And often at the end of the wedding,
the entire congregation would chase her
and try and rip bits of the dress off her.
Ideally, the garter, because the garter was the thing you wanted,
and apparently if you handed that to your lady,
it would mean you would then go on to have a successful and faithful marriage.
I hate to bring sport into this,
but at the end of the 1970 World Cup final,
fans get on the pitch and they're stripping the Brazilian players for souvenirs.
And I can't remember who it is. It's someone
like Jairzinho.
They get off his socks,
his shirt and his shorts
and he's
shitting himself because
they're going for his pants.
And he's fighting
with them because he doesn't...
That's my friend Mike, buddy.
He doesn't want to show his knob to a TV audience of a billion people.
Oh, that's the stuff of nightmares.
The stuff absolute nightmares.
She's being stripped by feral football fans
in front of a TV audience of a billion people.
Get off me, get off me, get off me, get off me.
That is so anxiety-inducing.
As a bride, knowing you've got that moment ahead of you
all through your wedding day, when does it stop?
Is there a formal beginning to the chase?
This would be after the wedding celebration, basically,
and before you go to your marital bed.
She's full of cake and pissed.
Absolutely, yeah, yeah.
It's just after the speech is over, basically. The final of cake and pissed. Absolutely, yeah, yeah. It's just after the speech
is over, basically. The final
speech ends with three, two, one, go.
And then she sort of just sprints.
But people say this is where the tossing of the garter
comes from, because one of the feelings
is it might have been that, basically, you toss
your garter away to try and make the crowd run
off in a different direction briefly so you
can get away. So this is
possibly where that idea came
from i mean surely you absolutely if i was a bride heading towards that i'd go into an intense period
of training oh yeah i'd be on the track every morning for about six months walking down the
island spikes
The congregation going, oh, God, look at those calves.
Yeah, yeah.
It's very odd. First of all, micro wedding dress completely clinging to me
so I'm as aerodynamic as possible.
Why is she dressed like Flojo?
But it was completely acceptable to be quite aggressive about this,
and part of that is they thought it sort of helped to whip them up into a bit of a fervor ahead of consummating their
their marriage so there's also this idea that it was all right to be quite rough and really just
tear huge parts of the wedding dress away so this is what happened during the service it wasn't kind
of particularly dignified either for for the bride and one of the things that often happened
in medieval weddings the father of the bride would give one for the bride. One of the things that often happened in medieval weddings,
the father of the bride would give one of the bride's shoes to the groom,
who would then tap her on the head with the shoe as a show of authority.
I don't know what that is.
As a show of authority.
You don't need to do that.
Someone tapping you on the head with a shoe.
I think that's the least dignified thing you can do to someone.
Also, it's medieval Britain, so that shoe is covered in shit.
Yeah, and it's made of wood.
It's a clog.
It's like being hit on the head with a mallet.
I was born in 1980.
And I don't think I'm cut out for society prior to about 1978.
Yes. It just all sounds nuts this next bit is the worst bit of all this is a bit that i think you'll agree none of us or anyone would enjoy most
um much which is that when marriage became a holy sacrament it became very important it was
consummated uh so after the ceremony, the congregation would follow the couple
to their marital bed
and either stay outside
or often come in
and gather around
and watch them consummate the marriage.
Oh my God.
Now, the idea being it was proof.
If it ever came up that it was consummated,
they could say, say well we have witnesses
we have 40 witnesses
we have 40 witnesses
that thing
man
so people would gather
around the bed
some of the family
would lift
the groom in
other friends
would lift the bride in
and then they'd sort of like
start cheering
and they'd kind of
they'd
lose their virginity
in front of 40 people
oh my god
too shy for that.
Yeah.
How do you think you'd manage in that situation?
And would it affect who you invited to your wedding?
Yeah, no family.
I think I'd be no family.
We're doing no family for this wedding.
I'd have to say, I'm so sorry, Mum.
You can't.
No.
We'll have a nice meal.
We'll go to the tavern.
We'll have a nice meal.
And, you know, we'll spend time together.
But this isn't for you.
All the photographs, they'll all get put on Facebook.
They're for you to keep.
But this bit is not for you.
Yeah.
So the stress of it all yeah with that situation you think
everything is awful but it's not all bad because if your marriage in the 13th century then lasted
a year after that point you would be given uh as a as a well done you'd be given a slab of bacon
that was me so it's not all bad so this tradition has been traced back to this guy called
lord fitzwalter in the reign of henry iii who ordered that whatever married man did not repent
of his marriage or quarrel with his wife and a year and a day after it should go to the priory
and demand bacon uh on his on his swearing to the truth kneeling on two stones in the churchyard
so you'd have to go to the uh theory, tell them that your marriage is going well,
and then they'd give you some bacon.
No wonder the fry-up still has such a totemic impact
on British culture and society.
This is why I think living in this day and age is the best,
because that little bit of bacon you have in your breakfast,
that was the best part of your life in medieval Britain.
That was a treat, the bacon.
And that is just one little aspect of modern life.
It's still quite high up there for me, to be honest.
I think bacon with a fry-up is still pretty high up.
Yeah, it is.
Yeah, bacon and Wi-Fi.
Yeah, absolutely.
It doesn't get much better than that.
But you had to be honest about how your
marriage was going to get the bacon which suggested they're just like the people who
work in the party are just real gossips they're kind of i i'd give more bacon if you told the
truth about how things were going if you if you listed the top three things your partner did that
really annoy you then you get loads of bacon.
I want the good stuff.
I want what's the most embarrassing thing she's done in the last year.
Oh, that's funny.
And the more you give, the more bacon
you get. People making up
stories.
Waking up in the middle of the night
really thirsty because you've just got
an entirely bacon-orientated diet.
So much salt.
Because of all the fabulous gossip about your wife
that you furnished the bacon man with.
Going down every morning to add more.
You come home with the bacon and the wife says,
what have you told them to get that much bacon?
Yeah.
So this is what would happen if it's going well.
You'd get your bacon.
If it wasn't going well, it's sort of tricky in medieval England
because divorce wasn't an option, only annulment.
That's all you had.
Annulment was really expensive and only permissible for a few reasons,
which were adultery, leprosy and impotency was one of the major ones uh do you guys want to guess how that how they tested
understandable in these scenarios yeah absolutely if you're failing to perform in front of your
family and at what point does the the impotence clause start getting widely discussed in that room? How is that not normal?
Would you like to fail to get a hard on in front of your mum and dad?
And your sarcastic brother?
The bride's father came, well, we've always got the impotency get out,
so this is fine. Well, would you like to guess how they tested
for the impotence how they tested for impotency because that was also pretty undignified yeah yeah
it was something called a bedroom trial and court cases in the 14th century show that bedroom trials
took place to check if impotence was true and if the marriage continued so the husband and wife
would be placed in a room and they'd be watched by a group of wise women for several nights to see if the man could muster an erection.
Oh, dear.
What? Just watched?
Yeah, so, and they would fondle,
they'd, like, you know, poke it and do things like this, whatever.
What if you're not in the water?
Well, and if nothing happened,
after a few days they'd go,
oh, yes, you are impotent.
He's poked by some strange woman you don't know.
Well, either strangers
or weirdly,
the only person who wasn't a stranger
was the groom's grandmother.
Which I would say
was the one name you didn't want to hear.
That was what happened in England.
Final thing,
I would say that I think things were much worse
in germany though um well how there was well it's you may disagree but i think this is pretty
horrific there was german law in medieval times allowed for marital disputes let's say you wanted
divorce or it's a big argument about something like that
to be settled
in the ring
but they had
very specific rules
on the way
this was done
so the wife
was allowed
a cloth sack
which contained
three rocks
like the worst
visit from Santa ever and you which he would use to whack the husband the
husband was allowed three clubs okay now you think a club's better than a rock isn't it in a in a
in a sack the only other thing is the husband also had to stand in a three foot wide hole that'd be
dug into the ground with one hand tied behind his back and if he ever touched the edge of the pit
with his hand or his arm he then had to surrender one of the back and if he ever touched the edge of the pit with his hand
or his arm he then had to surrender one of the clubs so every time he touched the side of the
hole he'd lose one of his clubs so the wife would run around the edge of the perimeter whacking him
while he would swing at her with his club and not try and touch the perimeter of the uh of the thing
um and at the end of it uh often the loser would be put to death
so the man would be
put to death or the woman
the wife, if she lost
she would be buried alive so it wasn't
an ideal end to things but it did
sort of wrap things up if you were
looking to knock things on the head, if you were going to have
some kind of answer, one of you was going to be single
Do you know what it offers? Closure
Closure, exactly it would make you want to resolve any uh arguments you had though wouldn't
it with your partner yeah you knew that's where it's heading that's a lot of pressure on that
first meeting at relate yeah we've got to get this right
but you wouldn't let petty you wouldn't let petty things fester would you Got to get this right.
But you wouldn't let petty things fester, would you?
If it was sort of like an argument about hanging up the washing or whatever.
Unless you were very good at hitting people with rocks.
In which case you thought, yeah, I'm just going to let him annoy me.
And I will settle this once and for all. So that's married life in the past, then.
What are we thinking?
None of those are great options.
No?
No.
Which era are we thinking we go for?
They all seem horrendous.
I don't want to marry my sister.
I don't have a sister.
So I think I'm going to knock ancient Egypt on the head.
That feels like one I really don't want to do that.
Being rich seems to be the number one priority.
As ever.
As ever.
Yep.
Ancient Rome, good climate.
You've got the weather.
You've got the wine.
You've got the weather.
Yeah, that is true.
And central heating in the winter.
And although it is quite an ordered
society,
you know, it's kind of like
you know where you stand with it all.
I mean, Egypt sounds horrific
as does medieval
England. Yeah.
Medieval England just feels
humiliating.
I think it's...
I think almost it's little things
like the tapping of the head with a shoe
I don't need that
to amaze me
humanity's capacity
for cruelty and
humiliation
absolutely even on your wedding day
building that in
the one day you think
I'm probably not going to be humiliated today.
This is my day.
They always said it was going to be my day.
Next thing you know, you're getting chased around
and someone's trying to tear a garter from your leg.
The medieval wedding,
it's like they've created the worst day possible for the bride.
Haven't they?
She's getting tapped on the head with a shoe,
chased out of the room and her clothes
ripped off, and then...
They just have sex in front of Uncle Tony.
Well, that is it for this week.
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