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Welcome to the Medieval History Morning Time Session!

Click on the button above to download the entire PDF,
or download only the sections you want below.


Schedule



Prayer & Scripture Memorization

For Bible reading, we will make suggestions for your morning time reading. However, if you’d prefer a more in depth schedule, we recommend checking out various plans that will help you read the Bible through.

For a one-year plan, we recommend YouVersion’s One Year Bible: https://www.bible.com/readingplans/60. You can also listen to it being read aloud on the app.

Download a two-year reading plan from the Gospel Coalition here:
https://media.thegospelcoalition.org/static-blogs/tgc/files/2010/12/TGC-Two-Year-Bible-ReadingPlan1.pdf

If you prefer to go even slower, Ambleside Online offers three, four, and five-year Bible reading
plans: https://www.amblesideonline.org/L/Lbiblesch.html

This session, we will learn Make Me an Instrument of Thy Peace and focus on writing and memorizing one scripture a week: Isaiah 26:3, John 14:27, John 16:33, Romans 15:13, Philippians 4:6-7, & Colossians 3:15.


Artist Study

This session’s featured artist is Simone Martini. We’ve included six art selections for your kids and teens to use for picture study. They are:

  • Maestà
  • St. Louis of Toulouse Crowning Robert of Anjou
  • Petrarch’s Virgil
  • Guidoriccio da Fogliano at the Siege of Montemassi
  • Clare of Asissi
  • Angel of the Annunciation

Composer Study

For this session, our music study will include Gregorian Chant, plus songs and instrumentals from Medieval England (featuring The Dufay Collective):

  • Benedictine Monks of St Maurice and Saint Maur Clervaux,
  • Luxembourg Playlist
  • Psalm 90 & 91
  • Gregoriano Monjes del Monasterio de Silos Playlist
  • Miri It Is: Songs and Instrumental Music from Medieval England

Listen to each piece below:

Gregorian Chants by the Benedictine monks of St Maurice and Saint Maur Clervaux, Luxembourg

Psalm 90 & 91, Harpa Dei

​​Gregoriano Monjes del Monasterio de Silos

Medieval Songs & Instrumentals (Miri It Is Playlist)


Hymn/Folk Song

Hymn

The beautiful hymn “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel” is one of the most enduring sacred songs of the Christian faith, particularly associated with the Advent season. With origins dating back to the early medieval church, its lyrics are derived from the ancient “O Antiphons,” a series of prayers sung in monastic communities during the final days of Advent, each invoking a different title for Christ from Old Testament prophecy.
The hymn’s Latin text, Veni, Veni, Emmanuel, is believed to have been composed between the 8th and 12th centuries, while its solemn yet stirring melody first appeared in 15th-century France. Over the centuries, this hymn has transcended time and culture, with numerous translations
and adaptations, making it a cherished part of Christmas traditions worldwide and ensuring it endures to this day.

Listen to the music and sing along with it below:

Veni, Veni, Emmanuel / O Come, O Come, Emmanuel

Folk Song

One of the most famous pieces of medieval English music is “Sumer is Icumen In,” a lively musical round that celebrates the arrival of summer. Written in the mid-13th century, the song is a key milestone in Western music history. It’s one of the earliest known examples of English secular “polyphony,” a type of music where two or more melodies are sung together in harmony. Whether sung in its original language or a modern version, its melody continues to celebrate the arrival of summer across the centuries.

Listen and sing along with it below:

Sumer is Icumen In


Poetry

This session’s featured poet is Geoffrey Chaucer. We’ve included four poetry selections for your kids and teens with listening links so they can hear the poetry in Middle English, as well as links to interlinear translations or paraphrases to better understand what they are hearing.
Have fun with these poems by letting your students listen to each one first and see just how much they understand. Can they pick out words? Do they understand the gist of the poem?

  • “Whan that Aprill…” (opening lines from Canterbury Tales)
  • Controlling the Tongue
  • The Love Unfeigned
  • Balade


For copywork, we have included Zaner-Bloser style handwriting sheets for primary, elementary, and cursive, as well as college-ruled for older students. The poems and content we have chosen are:

  • The Lady of Shalott
  • O Come, O Come, Emmanuel (& Veni, Veni Emmanuel)
  • Knights’ Code of Chivalry

Copywork


Tea Times

In this session, we are giving you six recipes for our hospitality tea: Plum Tart, Angel’s Food, Medieval Gingerbread, Applemoys, Fine
Cakes, & Custard.

We will also have three Storytime Teas and one Poetry Tea Time:


Storytime Tea 1: Legends That Every Child Should Know, “Beowulf,” by Hamilton Wright Mabie


Storytime Tea 2: The Tale of King Arthur and the Round Table, ”The Quest for the Holy Graal,” by Andrew Lang


Poetry Tea Time: “The Lady of Shalott,” by Alfred Tennyson


Storytime Tea 3: The Chaucer Story Book, “The Knight’s Tale,” by Eva March Tappan (A PDF has been included to download)


Plutarch

For our Plutarch selection, we have chosen the chapter “The Admiral of the Fleet,” a study of Cimon from The Children’s Plutarch: Tales of the Greeks, and included it on the following pages. The book may also be purchased on Amazon.


Nature Study

Each Friday morning, you will go through two of our nature cards. They are labeled in the upper right corner with the corresponding week. These are short, factual cards with images to help your child become familiar with objects in the natural world.

As you progress through our sessions, you may find it handy to keep your past nature cards in a binder for easy reference when your children come across a familiar object. These seeds you are planting will grow into a wonderful garden of knowledge for your children in years to come.

As you explore nature outside your home, watch and listen for newly discovered delights.


Handicraft

For our handicraft lesson, we will create a medieval-inspired heraldry bunting. We have intentionally kept this lesson simple so that everyone in the family can create together and even experiment with their own designs if desired.

Take this project to the next level by having your kids and teens research their family crests or create a unique design based on their values and interests, then design and paint a shield (using cardboard or wood) with their heraldry on it.


Art Lesson

The Wilton Diptych, photo courtesy of the National Gallery, London.

Medieval Diptych Art Lesson

During the Middle Ages, artists created beautiful and meaningful works of art on wooden panels called diptychs (DIP-tiks). A diptych is a two-panel artwork that is hinged or connected, allowing it to fold like a book. These pieces were often made as altarpieces, devotional paintings, or even personal prayer objects that people could carry with them. Many featured religious themes, gold leaf accents, and intricate details in the style of illuminated manuscripts.

For this project, we’ll create our own version of a medieval diptych using folded watercolor paper instead of wooden panels. We will also incorporate medieval architecture by painting in the style of a Gothic cathedral window.

Supplies needed:

  • Watercolor Paper
  • Markers (or acrylic paints) in traditional colors — I used blue, red, yellow, green, and metallic gold
  • Ruler &/or triangle
  • Pencil
  • Scissors
  • Bone folder (or something with a straight edge)
  • Template

This is the Ohuhu Acrylic Markers set that I used.

Window Template


History & Geography

For geography, you can read chapters 17-22 of Richard Halliburton’s Book of Marvels: The Occident.
Older students can read The Story of Mankind, chapters 25-37.

In the link to your history curriculum, we have selected 3 maps for your family to study: a map of Europe after the fall of the Roman Empire, a map of the Byzantine Empire at the death of Justinian I, and a map of Europe at the height of the Middle Ages.

Below, we have included 9 videos for additional historical research covering topics such as the Crusades, the Hundred Years’ War, the Black Death, and more!

For further study:
Regional Maps of the Middle Ages

History of the Middle Ages
(Please pre-screen these articles.)


The First Crusade by Epic History

Magna Carta and the Constitution by Annenberg Classroom

Why Was the Hundred Years War So Significant? by Captivating History

What Made the Black Death so Deadly? by The Infographics Show

Joan of Arc: Martyr and a Patron Saint of France by World History Encylopedia

Ten Minute History- Charlemagne and the Carolingian Empire by History Matters

Eleanor of Aquitaine: the Medieval Queen of England and France in the High Middle Ages by World History Encyclopedia

The Life of St. Thomas Aquinas by Sanctus

William the Conqueror, the Norman who dared to invade England by FRANCE 24 English


Solfa

Charlotte Mason incorporated solfa lessons twice a week for about 10 minutes each. These lessons are intended to be repeated and you can stay on any lesson for as long as you like. Here is the YouTube channel Lara and her boys enjoy and recommends for practicing solfa, Children of the Open Air:


Brush Drawing

Brush drawing builds motor and observation skills. We have included a link to videos by Bestowing the Brush below which are great for all ages to learn together: