Episode 70: What we can learn about medieval people from their bones and teeth. A conversation with Professor Alison Beach

Episode 70: What we can learn about medieval people from their bones and teeth. A conversation with Professor Alison Beach

Author: Richard Abels January 24, 2026 Duration: 1:05:05
Send us Fan Mail And now for something completely different! In this episode, we are not going to be talking about kings or popes, crusades, wars, or political events. Instead, we will be examining the life experiences of ordinary medieval people uncovered through analysis of their skeletal remains. This field of historical research is known as osteobiography. Osteobiography is the reconstruction of an individual's life story from his or her skeletal remains. It treats bones and teeth a...

Ever wonder how much of what we think we know about the medieval world is actually true? 'tis but a scratch: fact and fiction about the Middle Ages digs into the stories we tell ourselves, separating Hollywood legend from historical record. Hosted by historian Richard Abels, each episode takes a familiar idea-from the brutal reputation of Vikings to the romanticized codes of chivalry-and examines its roots in reality. You’ll find discussions that go beyond the battlefield, exploring the everyday life, culture, and complex societies that defined a millennium. The podcast frequently uses popular films and shows set in the period as a starting point, asking what they get right and where they take creative liberties. It’s a conversation designed for anyone curious about the distance between our modern myths and the lived experiences of the past. By engaging with these topics, the series offers a deeper, more nuanced understanding of an era that continues to captivate our imagination. Listen for thoughtful analysis that’s both accessible and rigorously informed, reminding us that history is often more surprising than any fiction.
Author: Language: en-us Episodes: 74

'tis but a scratch: fact and fiction about the Middle Ages
Podcast Episodes
The First King of England: Æthelstan (with David Woodman) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:00:23
Send us Fan Mail Ironically, the most famous date in Anglo-Saxon history is that of its demise, 1066, which is why when in 1930 W. C. Sellar, a former schoolmaster, and his classmate at Oxford, the humorist R. J. Yeatman…
A Florentine Pilgrimage to Bethlehem and Jerusalem in 1384 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 20:35
Send us Fan Mail This is an addendum to my previous episode with Peter Konieczny. One of my listeners sent me an email asking why we never covered Frescobaldi's, Gucci's, and Sigoli's accounts of their experiences in Jer…
Three Accounts of A Pilgrimage To Egypt and the Holy Land in 1384-5 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:06:01
Send us Fan Mail In the year 1384 a company of six wealthy merchants from Florence, each accompanied by a servant, went on a ten-month long pilgrimage to Mameluke Egypt, Palestine, and Syria. Upon returning to Florence,…