[This is a quiz I used to hand out in the last lecture of my sadly-defunct early medieval history survey course, 'Between Empires', for a lark and because getting the jokes relies on having paid at least a little bit of attention. It is a bit old now (2009) and pretty York specific in reference to pubs and clubs, most of the latter having closed subsequently (!) but I am sure you will get the gist.]
Answer the following
questions:
1: You feel as though you have a bit of a
cold coming on. Do you:
A:
Go to the pharmacist and ask for the most appropriate cold medicine they have?
(1 point)
B:
Ignore it. It’s that time of year and
it’ll probably go away? (2 points)
C:
Go to the tomb of Saint Martin of Tours and lick some dust from the top of his
tomb? (3 points)
2: You a see an unkempt man with
dishevelled clothing and wild hair approaching you. Do you:
A:
Think ‘Goodness me, it’s a professor of history’ (2 points)
B:
Prostrate yourself before him and beg him to bless this year’s harvest? (3
points)
C:
Cross the road on the grounds that it looks like a bit of a ‘care in the
community’
case? (1 point)
3: You are down the pub. As an opening gambit in a conversation, which
of the following would you choose?:
A:
So, doesn’t look like this’ll be a good season for The Blues, after all that. (2
points)*
B:
So, anyone seen that new Jack Black film? (1 point)
C:
So, the Divinity. One nature or two? (3
points)
4: When considering Tony Blair and the Iraq
war, your view is that:
A:
It was an illegal war and as a so-called Labour prime minister he had no
business
going to war as Bush’s poodle. (1
point)
B:
Well, it was an unfortunate business and it’s turned out as a bit of a mess but
hey,
wars are what heads of state have to
do sometimes. (2 points)
C: Consider him a craven coward and no sort of
head of state by anyone’s definition for
not leading the troops into the
attack in person. (3 points)
5: A good night with the lads involves:
A:
Getting tooled up, crossing the border into Scotland, carrying off anything
that
isn’t nailed down and setting fire
to everything that is. (3 points)
B:
Several rounds in the pub followed by a night of debauchery in Ziggy’s/Salvation/The
Gallery (2 points)
C:
Getting in some cans and watching the footie on Sky Sports (1 point)
6: At the next election you will vote for:
A:
The Tories (2 points)
B:
The Greens (1 point) **
C:
Vote?
(3 points)
7: Do you shower:
A:
Every day? (1 point)
B:
Only when it’s raining (3 points)
C:
I prefer to have a bath, preferably with 50 of my best mates (2 points)
8a: Boys: Which of the following to you
find most attractive? ***
A:
B:
C:
A; 3 points, B: 2 points, C: 1 point.
8b: Girls: Which of the following do you
find most attractive? ***
A:
B:
C:
A: 1 point; B: 2 points; C: 3 points.
9: In a closing-time fracas, a young
ruffian punches you on the nose. Do you:
A:
Swear and cuss, but leave it – these things happen when you’ve had a few? (1
point)
B:
Call ‘Injury Lawyers Are Us’ and sue their sorry ass? (2 points)
C:
Get several of your mates together, wait for the culprit or any member of his
family, kill them and hang their body on a fence, possibly burning their house
down too for good measure? (3 points)
10: The most important quality you would
look for in a mayor would be:
A:
The ability to look after and effectively represent the interests of his or her
constituents (1 point)
B:
A refusal to take any crap from foreigners (2 points)
C:
A hammer (3 points)
Notes:
* If, by ‘The Blues’, you mean Chelsea FC deduct one point from your score; if,
however, by ‘The Blues’, you mean the Blue circus-racing faction, add one point to your score.
** Unless, by ‘The Greens’, you mean the Green
circus-racing faction, in which case add
two points to your score.
*** With apologies for the shameless
hetero-normativity of this question…
How did you
do?
26-30 points: Congratulations! You really are a very
early medieval sort of person, although perhaps not someone I’d like to get to know
too well. It might be a good idea to get
a wash, too. There’s a reason no one
sits by you in the lecture. You will go
far, perhaps not far enough for your class-mates, but nevertheless with a good
chance of ending up as Pope, Emperor, or at the very least, Vice-Chancellor.
21-25 points: Very good, but there’s still room for
improvement. Perhaps, if male, you could invest in some edged weaponry or, if
female, experiment with the erotic use of wildfowl when next on the dance-floor
at Ziggy’s.
16-20 points:
Not bad but you clearly aren’t trying hard enough. Try growing your hair longer and cutting some
bits of it off or tying it up in an interesting ‘ethnic’ fashion. Alternatively, why not try and start a heated
debate on an obscure issue of Christology when next down at The Charles,
preferably one that descends into a full-blown car-park barney?
10-15 points: Rubbish. Not medieval at all. You clearly invest far too much of your
self-image on such flighty modern things as technology, labour-saving devices,
health-care and personal hygiene. I can
see we have work to do with you ! There are
things you can do to help yourself, though.
See below for our useful self-help advice.
How can I make myself more
early medieval?
You
may well be asking yourself this. Don’t
worry, though: there are many things we can all do in a number of areas, no
matter how un-medieval we might feel ourselves to be.
- You
could start by spending more time on Micklegate on a Friday night. From there you could graduate up to The
Spread Eagle or even, if you feel really confident about your growing
early medieval-ness, The Beeswing.
- Remember,
though, that small steps are always the best. Gradually work your way down through
un-perfumed deodorants eventually to none at all.
- You
can change your diet, too. Cut out
modern imported fruit and vegetables from outside Europe
(many of the things we take for granted in our cosseted modern lives were
unknown to medieval folk: potatoes, oranges, tomatoes, etc). Then cut out meat – remember only the
rich could afford such luxuries.
Then cut out fish, and then cut out everything else except apples,
lentils, cabbages and onions. Don’t
rule out the occasional treat though: feast on some road-kill cat once a
month. Every other autumn, you
could go for a month or two without eating anything at all, except mouldy
grain or grass. Watch those pounds
fall off!
- As a
conversation-starter, try catching an amusing skin-disease, or the
plague.
- But
don’t neglect life’s little pleasures, like romance! Boys, when you’re about twenty-five and
tired of hunting, fighting and spending time with prostitutes, find a nice
girl and settle down. More
specifically, a nice girl who has only just hit puberty – there are plenty
to be found on street corners in the Tang Hall area. Remember, boys, as a real early medieval
man you don’t want them too old! Girls, as unmarried 18- to 20-year-olds,
let’s face it you are on the shelf but you can always take a life-style
choice which is both rewarding and genuinely early medieval …
and become a nun!
Good
luck, but remember, above all, that we at the University of York Department of
HistoryTM are always here
to help!
©
Ave! Magazine 2009