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Quick! What do these celebrities--Will Smith, Elizabeth Taylor, Tina Turner, Monica Potter, and Bradley Cooper--all have in common? Hint: It's something medieval....

Each bears the last name of a medieval/early modern occupation. (Smith and taylor/tailor are self-explanatory, but a turner operated a lathe, a cooper made barrels, and a potter, well, potted).

I was thinking about this--how many early modern guilds are still represented in surnames today--as I was doing research for my second novel, From the Charred Remains (2013). 


I had come across the occupation of “cordwainer.”   Cordwainer?   I knew this was an occupation, like a tinker, or a wainwright (wheelmaker) or a hooper (another name for barrel-maker), but I have to admit, I never thought to look this one up.

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The cordwainer crest
Any guesses?..... No?

Well, it turns out a “cordwainer” is a shoemaker.

The term originated in medieval Cordoba in Spain, a region controlled by Muslims who excelled, among other things, in the production of high-quality specially-tanned leather. (See the goats in the guild crest?)

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cordwainers at work
The French referred to those who made shoes from this leather as cordonnier, which became “cordwainer” in England (you know, after that little Norman invasion of England in 1066). 

According to the website for the Worshipful Company of Cordwainers--yes, the medieval guild still exists today as a charitable group!—the cordwainer must be distinguished from the cobbler. The cordwainer only worked with new leather, while the cobbler could only work with old.
(Indeed, cobblers could get in a lot of trouble if they were found with new leather).

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mmm...leatherless cobbler pie
And the more important question of all? 

What does any of this have to do with blueberry cobbler? 

(Only that early American settlers used to make pie from any foodstuffs on hand-- cobbling it together as a cobbler would piece together shoes...Maybe Will Smith likes blueberry cobbler too, I don't know.)

What do you think? Do you know of any surnames--celebrity or otherwise--that have an interesting history?


 
 
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Chaucer--the man knew birds
I'll leave it to other writers to focus on the fascinating, but much contested, history of Valentine's Day. 

They can sort out how the medieval Church may have appropriated the ancient Roman festival of Lupercalia (already being held in mid February); decide whether Valentine, a third century Bishop, had indeed been beheaded for holding secret marriages; and debate whether as a saint,  he truly restored a blind woman's sight.

(And for goodness sake, will we ever agree whether Valentine really signed his final letter with these immortal words: 'From your Valentine?')

These questions are important--after all, an entire industry depends on these re-purposed, glossed-over events to thrive.


But, for me, the history of Valentine's Day would be nothing without the birds and, of course, the buns.  

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some really smart birds
First, the birds. 

I've seen repeated many times this story that medieval people believed that birds mated on February 14.  

It doesn't help that Chaucer seemed to confirm this belief in his fourteenth century Parliament of Fowls, "For this was on St. Valentine's Day, When every fowl cometh there to choose his mate."

(Birds, apparently, were smarter than people. Despite all the calendar changes--from Julian to Gregorian--that confused ordinary people, birds could figure out when February 14 was).

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caraway buns--the makers of romance?
So, of course, with birds, must come buns...

Logically, then, if you believed that birds mated on Valentine's Day, then it's only rational to eat as birds do.   Thus,  many people ate buns with caraway seeds on February 14 too, hoping to entice a mate.


(Am I the only one imagining people sitting around with their pints of ale, taking turns pecking at buns on their own and other people's plates...?)

So this year, why not forgo the chocolates, and bring on the seeds?! And here is a traditional caraway seed bun recipe, in case, like me, you've never made such a thing  in your life. So long as you don't say "Romance is for the birds!" (Sorry, couldn't resist!) 

I'm curious, though, does anyone still eat these buns on Valentine's Day?  And other than chocolate and candy, does anyone have any traditional Valentine's day food?