Recently a number of medieval scholars have started examining what are called performative acts, that is not simply that someone did something or other, but that they "performed" it, that is acted in a certain way to underscore what they were doing. These days a lot of communication is done via text or email or phone call, where you don't see the other person, but medieval communication was more likely to be done face to face.
Now of course we still have performative acts. People do them instinctively even if they are not thinking through their performance. Mom coming into the room where she just heard a disturbing crash stands with her arms firmly folded. The professor steps up to the lectern and gazes sternly out across the students until they stop talking. The president signs an executive order, waves it back and forth so everyone can see his signature, and hands the signing pen to someone nearby, as (one assumes) a precious souvenir.
Medieval oaths of allegiance were full of performative acts. One did not simply swear an oath, or (as we do now) raise one's right hand while swearing it. (Think about it. Why does raising your hand make it more significant? But it does.) One went down on one's knees and raised one's hands to the person to whom one was swearing allegiance. This is the basic act of swearing homage, as a knight or noble would do to a lord. But it doesn't stop there. The lord would reach down, take the hands, draw the person up, and kiss them on the cheek. This would be done very publicly. Everyone would remember it and would understand the symbolism of the person swearing homage both being subservient to and the equal of the lord.
Peasants as well as aristocrats could take part in performances. In some parts of western France in the eleventh century, a serf was expected to come on hands and knees before his or her lord with a penny balanced on their head. The value of the penny was trivial. What was important was the public ceremony. In some cases the peasant might even have a rope looped the neck, in case the imagery was not clear enough.
Oaths of allegiance among aristocrats were not one-time events. Chronicles often tell us that, at Easter or other important times, the king might "wear his crown" and have all his men repeat their oaths of allegiance. Wearing the crown itself was a performative act, as kings did not usually walk around wearing something heavy, valuable, and awkward on their heads. When they put it on they were signaling their position and authority.
Even property transfers were often performative. Someone giving land to a monastery would generally place something on the altar, a book, a staff, even a handful of dirt. Although scholars once considered such acts a sign of a primitive, illiterate society, in fact the public act, which dozens would witness, is only known about today because it was recorded in writing. The physical action emphasized the spoken and written words and gave the witnesses something striking to remember.
Although the physical act is usually what we think of by a performative act, documents could play a part. A big piece of parchment with seals dangling from it could be waved around as its own performative act.
© C. Dale Brittain 2025
For more on medieval political acts, see my ebook, Positively Medieval: Life and Society in the Middle Ages. Also available in paperback.
No comments:
Post a Comment