The Veterinary Magic of the Middle Ages

Medieval healers treated animals’ ailments with a mix of faith, tradition and science

The year is 1266, and your horse is acting strange. It started with a fever. But then weeping pustules appeared all over its body, and fluids poured forth from every orifice. Not long after, the horse stabled next to it came down with the same sickness. You’ve heard of this before. It’s the dreaded disease called farcy—and you’ll need more than medicine to make your animals well again. SmithsonianMag.com

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A workhorse in Les Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry, 1412–1416 Public domain via Wikimedia Commons

Amateur Treasure Hunter Unearths Missing Centerpiece of Henry VIII’s Crown

The gold figurine, valued at roughly £2 million, depicts 15th-century English king Henry VI

Standing just 2.5 inches tall, the statuette may have once formed the centerpiece of a dazzling Tudor crown. As historian Leanda de Lisle wrote on her website this past December, researchers had long thought that the diadem—worn by Henry VIII during processions marking the Feast of the Epiphany and by his five immediate successors during their respective coronations—was lost, its precious metals melted down to make coins and its jewels sold piecemeal following the fall of the British monarchy in 1649. Smithsonianmag.com

The gold figurine stands just 2.5 inches tall. Kevin Duckett via Facebook

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The Ancient Books of Wales

Welsh literary history is preserved in the delicate pages of these medieval manuscripts.  

There are over 6 million books to be found within the walls of the National Library of Wales, located in the city of Aberystwyth. Within the library’s vast collection, three well-leafed tomes stand out from the rest: the Black Book of Carmarthen, the Book of Taliesin, and the Book of Aneirin are three of what historian William Forbes Skene deemed “the four ancient books of Wales.” Written in Middle Welsh, these are some of the oldest and most important literary works to come out of Wales. AtlasObscura.com

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The Book of Aneirin

Harrogate: Father and sons unearth Wars of the Roses treasure

Items from a medieval soldier’s treasure trove found by a family of metal detectorists in North Yorkshire are set to be auctioned.

“The hoard dates to the late 1470s and was deposited during the conflict, fought between the Lancastrians and the Yorkists,” Mr Mills said.

“It is very unusual, comprising 21 coins with a face value of two shillings and threepence together with the gold ring,” he added. BBC.com

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