Medieval Morsels

Lucas Miller

Medieval Morsels serves up bite-size, story-rich history from the Middle Ages—without the boring textbook vibe. Each episode explores the castles, conflicts, odd customs, everyday life, and “wait…that’s real?!” moments that made the medieval world so fascinating. Expect curious questions, fun facts, and surprising twists—from plague myths to manuscript secrets, knights to kitchen life. New episodes for history lovers, casual learners, and anyone who wants the Middle Ages explained with personality.

Episodes

  1. Medieval Princesses: Power, Politics, and Perception

    3 DAYS AGO

    Medieval Princesses: Power, Politics, and Perception

    Podcast: Medieval Morsels Host: Lucas Miller Episode Description: In this episode of Medieval Morsels, we examine the real lives of medieval princesses beyond the fairy-tale stereotypes. Far from passive figures waiting in towers, princesses often played critical roles in diplomacy, dynastic politics, and cultural life. Through marriage alliances, regencies, and patronage, they helped shape the political and social landscape of medieval Europe. This episode explores how princesses were educated, how their marriages influenced kingdoms, and how chroniclers and later storytellers transformed their images into enduring legends. By separating myth from historical reality, we gain a clearer picture of women’s influence and agency in the medieval world. Topics Covered: The political role of princesses in dynastic alliancesEducation and upbringing of noble daughtersMarriage as diplomacy in medieval EuropePrincesses as regents and power brokersRepresentation of princesses in chronicles and literatureThe contrast between historical reality and fairy-tale tradition Key Takeaways: Medieval princesses were central to international politicsEducation prepared many princesses for leadership and court lifeMarriage alliances could reshape entire regionsLiterary portrayals often simplified or romanticized their livesPrincesses exercised real influence within the constraints of their time Recommended Reading: Medieval Queenship edited by John Carmi ParsonsWomen in Medieval Europe by Jennifer Ward Connect with Medieval Morsels: Subscribe for more engaging explorations of medieval history. Share the episode with fellow history enthusiasts and leave a review to support the podcast.

    19 min
  2. Mythical Creatures: Beasts, Legends, and Beliefs of the Medieval World

    13 FEB

    Mythical Creatures: Beasts, Legends, and Beliefs of the Medieval World

    Medieval Morsels Host: Lucas Miller In this episode of Medieval Morsels, we explore the fascinating world of mythical creatures that filled the medieval imagination. From dragons and griffins to unicorns and sea serpents, medieval people didn’t always separate myth from reality the way we do today. These creatures appeared in bestiaries, manuscripts, and travelers’ tales, shaping how people understood nature, morality, and the unknown. We discuss how mythical beasts symbolized virtues and vices, how they were used in religious and moral teaching, and why they captured the curiosity of medieval audiences. This episode blends history, folklore, and cultural analysis to uncover what these legendary creatures reveal about the medieval mind. Topics Covered: The role of mythical creatures in medieval bestiariesDragons as symbols of chaos and evilUnicorns and their religious symbolismGriffins, basilisks, and other hybrid beastsMythical creatures in medieval art and manuscriptsKey Takeaways: Mythical creatures were used as teaching tools as much as entertainmentMany people accepted these creatures as part of the natural worldSymbolism played a central role in how beasts were interpretedThese legends reveal medieval attitudes toward nature and morality Recommended Reading: The Book of Beasts by T. H. WhiteMedieval Bestiaries: Text, Image, Ideology by Florence McCulloch Connect with Medieval Morsels: Follow and subscribe for more bite-sized explorations of medieval history. Share the episode with fellow history lovers and leave a review to support the podcast.

    13 min
  3. Books, Power, and Truth: How Manuscripts Shaped the Medieval Mind

    26 JAN

    Books, Power, and Truth: How Manuscripts Shaped the Medieval Mind

    Books, Power, and “Truth”: How Manuscripts Shaped the Medieval Mind In a world before printing presses and paperbacks, books weren’t casual objects—they were handmade technologies of authority. This episode explores how medieval manuscripts shaped what people could know, who controlled knowledge, and how “truth” was established through institutions, commentary, and tradition. We follow the manuscript as both a physical artifact (parchment, ink, illumination, binding) and a social force—one that organized education, reinforced power, and preserved (and sometimes transformed) ideas as they traveled across time and place. Along the way, we examine the culture of glossing and marginalia, where medieval readers literally wrote their thinking into the page, and we zoom in on two key case studies: the devotional Book of Hours and the university book economy—including strategies like the pecia system that helped meet growing demand for texts. Ultimately, this is a story about how knowledge worked in the Middle Ages: not as endless information, but as curated tradition—guarded, copied, debated, and authorized. In this episode: Why manuscripts were expensive, scarce, and politically meaningfulThe manuscript-making process: parchment, scripts, layout, illumination, bindingWho accessed books (and how oral reading expanded their reach)Commentary culture: glosses, scholastic methods, and layered authorityMarginalia as evidence of real readers and real intellectual lifeCase study: Books of Hours as devotion, identity, and statusCase study: universities and the pecia system (scaling book production)How manuscripts shaped medieval “truth” through institutions and interpretation Key terms: Manuscript • Parchment • Vernacular • Gloss/Marginalia • Scholasticism • Illumination • Book of Hours • Pecia

    16 min
  4. Treating the Plague: Medieval Medicine, Bad Air, and Desperate Remedies

    23 JAN

    Treating the Plague: Medieval Medicine, Bad Air, and Desperate Remedies

    In this follow-up to our Black Death episode, we step inside the medieval sickroom to answer a haunting question: what did people actually do to treat the plague? Without germ theory or antibiotics, medieval communities relied on the medical framework they had—humor theory, environmental medicine, and the belief that disease traveled through corrupted air (“miasma”). We explore the remedies that followed logically from that worldview: herb bundles and fumigation, vinegar cloths, bleeding and purging, and attempts to “draw out” plague swellings with poultices and lancing. We also discuss complex apothecary mixtures like theriac, and why many “treatments” were as much about restoring control and meaning as they were about curing illness. Along the way, we include a brief primary-source moment to hear how medieval witnesses described fear, isolation, and the collapse of ordinary care—and we close with what these treatments reveal about medieval knowledge, culture, and survival under pressure. In this episode: The medieval medical “operating system”: the four humorsMiasma and the war on “bad air”Common responses: herbs, incense, vinegar, and household preventionPhysician practices: bleeding, purging, and regimen (diet + behavior)Buboes and “drawing out” remedies: poultices and lancingTheriac and the medieval pharmacyWhat may have helped accidentally: isolation and supportive careNext up (vote for the follow-up): Why quarantine becomes “40 days”Plague doctors: myth vs. timelineDaily life during outbreaks—work, family, fear, and survival

    18 min

About

Medieval Morsels serves up bite-size, story-rich history from the Middle Ages—without the boring textbook vibe. Each episode explores the castles, conflicts, odd customs, everyday life, and “wait…that’s real?!” moments that made the medieval world so fascinating. Expect curious questions, fun facts, and surprising twists—from plague myths to manuscript secrets, knights to kitchen life. New episodes for history lovers, casual learners, and anyone who wants the Middle Ages explained with personality.