Which never existed, either, to be fair: color and flair was big in Medieval times, as was hygiene. And glasses.D&D isn't the muddy middle ages of Earth.
In England, the mud is always present.Which never existed, either, to be fair: color and flair was big in Medieval times, as was hygiene. And glasses.
Well, just as modern as medieval then?In England, the mud is always present.
Its always been bemusing to me that life after the industrial revolution got worse for the peasantry with increased water contaminatiin, open sewers and squalid urban living conditions. Of course the enclosure acts and deforestation didnt helpWhich never existed, either, to be fair: color and flair was big in Medieval times, as was hygiene. And glasses.
History is neither a tale of progress nor regress. It's a rollercoaster.Its always been bemusing to me that life after the industrial revolution got worse for the peasantry with increased water contaminatiin, open sewers and squalid urban living conditions. Of course the enclosure acts and deforestation didnt help
Its always been bemusing to me that life after the industrial revolution got worse for the peasantry with increased water contaminatiin, open sewers and squalid urban living conditions. Of course the enclosure acts and deforestation didnt help
But bagging on it is so much more fun!We should use our imagination to determine what the art piece can mean, rather than bag on it just because the artist in question didn't make it to our personal preferences. There are lots of fans with varied tastes to cater to.
Hygiene is highly dependent on location in the Middle Ages. For example, there were records of Arabs saying that the Vikings were filthy and didn't wash themselves properly. There are also English records saying that it was easy for the Vikings to seduce the wives/daughters of the Anglo-Saxons because they washed themselves weekly.Which never existed, either, to be fair: color and flair was big in Medieval times, as was hygiene. And glasses.