• Liquidthex
    link
    fedilink
    English
    84 days ago

    Neat! Say, when did surgeons start washing their hands? Look it up ;)

  • @PugJesusOPM
    link
    English
    82
    edit-2
    6 days ago

    Explanation: While medieval hygiene was far from great by modern standards, especially amongst the non-elite, it was about normal for pre-modern societies. People took baths - if not always in tubs, then at least in the local rivers and streams. The ‘medieval people didn’t bathe’ myth is actually more accurate to the Renaissance period, when a mixture of urban culture in bath-houses making them suspected as places of ‘sin’, and a strange variation of miasma (‘bad smell’) theory caused ~150-200 years of anti-bathing sentiment. Bathing never entirely went away, but became less popular.

    Miasma theory was normally used to encourage cleanliness, but in the Renaissance, a prominent variation of the theory was used to discourage bathing - as bathing would open up the pores of the skin, and let the ‘bad air’ in to the body. As long as the ‘miasma’ was on the outside, it was safe!

    • Diplomjodler
      link
      English
      376 days ago

      The “ill repute” of bath houses wasn’t entirely undeserved. One factor that made people shun them in the early modern period was also the spread of syphilis which you could easily get from visiting a bath house of ill repute. Also, wood was getting more scarce due to wide spread deforestation. And that bath houses needed a lot of wood.

    • @edgemaster72
      link
      English
      19
      edit-2
      6 days ago

      Don’t let the bad air in through tiny fucking skin holes!

      Multiple much larger holes on face sucking in “miasma” every few seconds to live:

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      86 days ago

      I’m going to divorce my wife so that I can start dating again, just to ask their opinions on miasma during first dates.

  • @TankovayaDiviziya
    link
    English
    165 days ago

    Perhaps, but definitely there was poor public sanitation simply because of lack of knowledge. Cholera was epidemic because people would throw their crap outside their homes or just about anywhere they like. Cholera is not common anymore thanks to 19th century science that studied why the disease persisted.

    • @PugJesusOPM
      link
      English
      176 days ago

      'e’s the only one who hasn’t got shit on him

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    266 days ago

    We’re supposed to take bathing info from a pug? Don’t you guys go for the “licking things clean” method of washing?

    • @PugJesusOPM
      link
      English
      316 days ago

      Without assistants with opposable thumbs, how would a pug clean their own head wrinkles? My child, I tell you the truth; no pug is an island! ✋

      • Diplomjodler
        link
        English
        156 days ago

        But you can manage your balls on your own, I hope.

        • @PugJesusOPM
          link
          English
          316 days ago

          I wish I could; I woke up one day and they were missing 😔

  • Zloubida
    link
    English
    196 days ago

    My favorite example is when I talk about medieval hygiene and someone replies: “but yes, they were dirty in the Middle Ages, look at the French king Louis XIV for example, he never took a bath willingly for his all life”. And then I look at them with a look that is both dejected and tired and I wait to see if they understands on their own.

    • @TheDoozer
      link
      English
      24 days ago

      I feel like the cross section of “people who knew King Louis XIV refused to take baths” and “people who don’t know even approximately when Louis XIV ruled” would be relatively small. Is that not the case?

      • Zloubida
        link
        English
        34 days ago

        Apparently not, at least not in France.

        But it’s something I saw with a lot of subject: as soon as something bad occurred before the 19th century, it’s in the Middle Ages in the mind of most people.

    • @MothmanDelorian
      link
      English
      35 days ago

      That would require them to know when Loyis XIV ruled and when the Medieval period was. The former is unlikely for most and the latter depends on when/where they were educated as no one used “Medieval” around me in college in the 1990s.

      • Zloubida
        link
        English
        35 days ago

        I’m French, so the fact that Louis XIV isn’t a medieval king should be common knowledge. And the Middle Ages are taught in the CM1 (9-10 years old children) and 5e (13-14 years old) in history classes; and it’s mentioned in French, art history, … thorough school.

        • @MothmanDelorian
          link
          English
          25 days ago

          If you are in France that’s an appropriate reaction but outside of it that would be downright silly to expect people to know.

  • @taiyang
    link
    English
    66 days ago

    Lemmy gets it; on BlueSky there were far too many people being all “but they were dirty tho” when they’re really just mixing it up with Late Renaissance / Early Industrial. London was practically unlivable!

    • @PugJesusOPM
      link
      English
      46 days ago

      At least into the early modern period they restored the understanding that cleanliness was good, just had a harder time achieving it XD

  • tiredofsametab
    link
    fedilink
    66 days ago

    Me, seeing this saying “medieval people” and realizing it means “a slice of the world’s population that lived in this (probably western European), but I guess fuck the rest and they don’t count”

    • @PugJesusOPM
      link
      English
      316 days ago

      ‘Medieval’ to refer to societies outside of Europe remains a very contested usage.

      • tiredofsametab
        link
        fedilink
        -16 days ago

        Fair point, but that doesn’t stop people using “bronze age” and others (often forgetting that the chacolithic is even a thing) within Europe and a bit beyond without acknowledging that the dates for that (and the “iron age” for that matter) can vary a great deal.

        • @PugJesusOPM
          link
          English
          276 days ago

          “Bronze Age” and “Iron Age” are not regional in the same way that “Medieval” is. They can be used as global or developmental terms (ie ‘The Bronze Age world’, or ‘A Bronze Age society’), but medieval, by contrast, refers to a specific period of time, and, by origin and usage, generally a specific region - Europe. It would be like complaining that Italy is never mentioned as being part of the Sengoku Jidai in the 15th and 16th centuries AD.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    46 days ago

    Correct me if im wrong, but what you have to think about is the pest. It was so deadly, because the hygiene (in terms of the streets) was terrible causing massive rat populations and therefore spreading the disease.

    • @PugJesusOPM
      link
      English
      56 days ago

      That’s more about trash disposal than personal hygiene, though.