dragonfly: (BT white shirt)
Dragonfly ([personal profile] dragonfly) wrote in [community profile] writing_religion2011-08-27 01:29 pm

Medieval Catholic practice in everyday life

Can anyone recommend a good source for information about how people practiced their Catholicism on a daily basis in the late Middle Ages?

More specifically, I am wondering what the English royal family in the early 1500s would have considered pious behavior.

I am writing Henry Fitzroy from Blood Ties, who is now a vampire, but was born in 1519. He is still (even as a vampire) a practicing Catholic, and, while I assume his worldview and practices would have changed with the Church somewhat over time, I'd like to follow that journey and need to know where he would have started.
quinfirefrorefiddle: Van Gogh's painting of a mulberry tree. (Compass Rose)

[personal profile] quinfirefrorefiddle 2011-08-27 11:18 pm (UTC)(link)
So I'm guessing we're talking pre-Anne Boleyn, but are we talking post Henry-and-Catharine? Because if so, I have an Alison Weir book around here somewhere....
quinfirefrorefiddle: Van Gogh's painting of a mulberry tree. (Compass Rose)

[personal profile] quinfirefrorefiddle 2011-08-28 12:51 am (UTC)(link)
In particular I suggest "The Six Wives of Henry VIII"- very readable, nonfiction, and has quite a bit on the religious issues and practices of the day, as she spends a lot of time contrasting the wives to each other and Henry on that score.