It's not surprising to learn that women who lived during the Middle Ages didn't always get the credit they deserved,pornography and eroticism are ways of challenging the repressive mores but tangible proof that further erodes our male-centric view of history is always welcome.
A new study asserts that lapis lazuli found in the teeth from the remains of a Medieval woman indicates that she was an artist. Researchers are calling the discovery a "bombshell" because it provides extremely uncommon proof of the role that women played as skilled artists at the time.
“It’s kind of a bombshell for my field,” Alison Beach, a medieval history professor at Ohio State University and co-author of the study, told the Associated Press. “It’s so rare to find material evidence of women’s artistic and literary work in the Middle Ages.”
"B78," as the anonymous skeleton is identified, was 45 to 60 years old when she died. She was then buried at a monastery in Germany sometime between 1000 and 1200 AD. Researchers first began to examine the mouth of the anonymous skeleton to better understand Medieval diet.
SEE ALSO: The internet couldn't help but laugh at the poor Pompeii victim crushed by a giant rockBut the discovery they made was much more substantial. The resulting study, published in Science Advancesby the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History and the University of York, found remnants of the stone lapis lazuli.
At the time, lapis was used to create blue pigment, and it was as valuable as gold. Specifically, artists used it to create illuminated manuscripts, which are intricately painted, often with precious materials. Researchers said that only skilled painters were entrusted with this duty, and as such, were some of the few people with access to the stone.
So how did ancient residue of a blue stone get into the skeleton's mouth?
Researchers think that licking the tip of a paintbrush was a common method to get a fine tip at the time. There are other explanations for how the lapis might have entered her mouth; perhaps she helped produce the stone, or it could have been used as a medical treatment. But a frequently licked paintbrush is the most likely explanation for the amount of lapis found in B78's mouth so many centuries later.
It's pretty cool to learn that a random skeleton was an elite artist in the Middle Ages. But the discovery has bigger implications. Scribes of the time penned every book produced by hand, and while few were credited it is believed that women both contributed more and were recognized less than is known. This discovery supports that belief.
"Because things are much better documented for men, it’s encouraged people to imagine a male world," Beach told the AP. "This helps us correct that bias. This tooth opens a window on what activities women also were engaged in."
NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for June 17: Tips to solve Connections #266Will GPUs Ever Get Cheaper? GPU Pricing UpdateThe Evolution of RansomwareGPU Pricing Update: Was AMD's Radeon RX 7000 Launch a Success?The Dark Web: Exploring the Hidden InternetCost Per Frame: Best Value Graphics Cards in Early 2023Nvidia and AMD Keep Dropping GPU Prices After New Product Launches FlopWhy Upgrading a Gaming PC Right Now is Almost PointlessPSA: Pokémon fans are losing precious data in Switch 2 transferNvidia and AMD Keep Dropping GPU Prices After New Product Launches FlopMeta’s Llama has memorized huge portions of Harry PotterShader Compilation and Why It Causes Stuttering, ExplainedFluminense vs. Borussia Dortmund 2025 livestream: Watch Club World Cup for free30 Years of CivilizationThe GPU Market Finally Gives In, Nvidia Prices DropShader Compilation and Why It Causes Stuttering, ExplainedTrump's madeMonterrey vs. Inter Milan 2025 livestream: Watch Club World Cup for freeAmazon is offering 6 new free games before Prime Day for subscribersNvidia and AMD Keep Dropping GPU Prices After New Product Launches Flop Nabokov Reads “The Ballad of Longwood Glen” by The Paris Review All the best Cyber Monday deals on Sony headphones and earbuds Writers’ Fridges: Leslie Jamison The Soviet Anthology of “Negro Poetry” by Jennifer Wilson Tom Wolfe, 1930–2018 Redux: Reading About Mom by The Paris Review Okokokok or lalalala TikTok quiz: What it is and how to play New Casper launch: Check out The Casper and Snow mattresses Black Friday drone deals 2023: DJI, Holy Stone, more What Our Contributors Are Reading This Month by The Paris Review Black Friday gaming laptop deals 2023: Acer, MSI, more A Gentler Reality Television On Beyoncé, Beychella, and Hairography by Lauren Michele Jackson Solawave's new Radiant Renewal Wand is now available Redux: Emily’s Other Daffodil by The Paris Review The Moment of Writing by Amit Chaudhuri Technical, Tactical, and Merciless: An Interview with Marcus Wicker Poetry Rx: Pleasure as a Means The Child Thing: An Interview with Sheila Heti by Claudia Dey Tom Wolfe, Straight
3.6576s , 10194.46875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【pornography and eroticism are ways of challenging the repressive mores】,Feast Information Network