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Judi Lynn

(160,450 posts)
Thu Jan 10, 2019, 04:39 AM Jan 2019

A medieval woman's work left blue pigment on her teeth


The skeleton reveals the hidden role of women in producing medieval manuscripts.
KIONA N. SMITH - 1/9/2019, 12:17 PM

Archaeologists recently unearthed the skeleton of a woman they say was probably a skilled artist who helped produce the richly illustrated religious texts of medieval Europe. The woman lived sometime between 997 and 1162 CE, according to radiocarbon dating of her teeth, at a small women’s monastery called Dalheim in Lichtenau, Germany. And she died with tiny flecks of expensive lapis lazuli pigment still caught in her teeth, probably from licking the tip of her paintbrush to make a finer point.

. . .

. . . Recent historical research suggests that for much of the Middle Ages, nuns were prolific producers of religious books, especially in Germany and Austria, where records as early as the 700s CE mention books transcribed and illuminated by women. In Germany, about 4,000 books produced between 1200 and 1500 CE can be attributed to 400 specific female scribes.

For the early Medieval period, when the unnamed illuminator of Dalheim lived and worked, it’s a different story. Fewer records—and fewer books—survive from those early days. And even at surviving libraries of women’s monasteries before 1100 CE, only about one percent of the books can be clearly connected with female scribes and painters.

But the woman from Dalheim tells us, through the telltale blue flecks in her mouth, that women were scribing and painting manuscripts in medieval Europe, even if history had forgotten them. Until the 1400s CE, most scribes and painters didn’t sign their work, as a mark of humility, and that has largely erased women from the record, leaving historians to assume all the scribes were men.

More:
https://arstechnica.com/science/2019/01/medieval-illuminated-manuscripts-were-also-womens-work/
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A medieval woman's work left blue pigment on her teeth (Original Post) Judi Lynn Jan 2019 OP
You post MFM008 Jan 2019 #1
I'm constantly amazed when I stumble across it! I've been lucky, for sure. Thank you. n/t Judi Lynn Jan 2019 #2
Doesn't surprise me that they would touch their brushes to their lips, thereby transferring lapis... hlthe2b Jan 2019 #3

hlthe2b

(102,119 posts)
3. Doesn't surprise me that they would touch their brushes to their lips, thereby transferring lapis...
Thu Jan 10, 2019, 07:11 AM
Jan 2019

Fortunately lapis lazuli is not toxic unlike....

Radium and the Dial Painters:
The Radium Girls — still glowing in their coffins
https://www.spectator.co.uk/2016/06/the-radium-girls-still-glowing-in-their-coffins/

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