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Bringing up a youth in the middle ages

Middle ages Family.jpg Monk in ScriptoriumThumbnailsMen-at-Arms, Fourteenth CenturyMonk in ScriptoriumThumbnailsMen-at-Arms, Fourteenth CenturyMonk in ScriptoriumThumbnailsMen-at-Arms, Fourteenth CenturyMonk in ScriptoriumThumbnailsMen-at-Arms, Fourteenth Century

The manner of bringing up a youth of good family in the Middle Ages was not to send him to a public school and the university, nor to keep him at home under a private tutor, but to put him into the household of some nobleman or knight of reputation to be trained up in the principles and practices of chivalry. First, as a page, he attended on the ladies of the household, and imbibed the first principles of that high-bred courtesy and transcendental devotion to the sex which are characteristic of the knight. From the chaplain of the castle he gained such knowledge of book-learning as he was destined to acquire—which was probably more extensive than is popularly supposed.