How Worcestershire sauce changed the way we look at medieval manuscripts. Historytoday.com

How Worcestershire sauce changed the way we look at medieval manuscripts. Historytoday.com

In early 1351, with the war to control the Duchy of Brittany grinding to a stalemate, Jean de Beaumanoir, a leader of the French-supported Blois faction, challenged Robert Bemborough, a senior knight of the English-backed Montfortist faction, to combat. HistoryToday.com

From the 14th to 16th centuries, Europeans were seized by a manic desire to dance – and did so in their hundreds, often until they dropped. But, asks Helen Carr, what caused this bizarre phenomenon – disease, disaster or the devil? HistoryExtra.com

Due to the worldwide pandemic of COVID-19, all WA Branch meetings have been cancelled for the foreseeable future.
We will continue to post both here and on our Facebook page (@Richard3inWA) and will definitely be in touch when we are able to meet again. Or send us an email at Richard3inWA@gmail.com.
Stay safe, everyone!
The Black Death of October 1347 to c1352 was one of the worst catastrophes in recorded history – a deadly bubonic plague that ravaged communities across Europe, changing forever their social and economic fabric. But how much do you know about the Black Plague? How many died? Did the epidemic really eradicate a third of Europe’s population? And did it afflict every town and village? HistoryExtra.com

Edward IV, the first Yorkist king of England, was given short shrift by Shakespeare. Yet, argues author AJ Pollard, Edward was a remarkable military leader who decisively won the bloody, dynastic conflict known as the Wars of the Roses.
Shakespeare did not have much time for Edward IV. None of his history plays are dedicated to England’s first Yorkist king. Instead, the writer split that monarch’s reign between two plays: Henry VI, Part 3 and Richard III – and Edward almost disappears between the two. historyextra.com

What did people use for medicine in medieval times? When human understanding of disease was shaped by the movements of the planets in the night sky and everyday infections often proved fatal, how did anyone survive the era at all? Dr Elma Brenner, Wellcome Collection’s medieval specialist, explores the reality of medicine in the Middle Ages. historyextra.com

A historic church that has “worldwide interest” because of its links to Richard III has completed £1.5m worth of restoration work.
The Church of St Mary and All Saints, Fotheringhay, Northamptonshire had repairs to the roofs and stonework. bbc.com

This ancient Bedfordshire church was abandoned when the village’s population slowly began migrating to new towns.

This now derelict church was originally constructed during the 12th century. The church was expanded over the centuries, however, was never fully completed. atlasobscura.com
If contemporary chronicles are to be believed, England’s medieval clergy may have spent as much time drinking, gambling and fornicating with prostitutes as attending to their flocks’ spiritual needs. Emma J Wells reveals why some men of the cloth simply couldn’t resist the pleasures of the flesh… historyextra.com
