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zakruti.com » Knowledge, science, education » TED-Ed
What is a butt tuba and why is it in medieval art? - Michelle Brown

What is a butt tuba and why is it in medieval art? - Michelle Brown

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Rating: 4.0; Vote: 1
A rabbit attempts to play a church organ, while a knight fights a giant snail and a naked man blows a trumpet with his rear end. These bizarre images, painted with squirrel-hair brushes on vellum or parchment by monks, nuns and urban craftspeople, populate the margins of the most prized books from the Middle Ages. Michelle Brown explores the rich history and tradition of illuminated manuscripts. Lesson by Michelle Brown, directed by WOW-HOW Studio
Date: 2020-08-22

Comments and reviews: 6


This was all stolen from Egypt and their books of the Dead people can personalize their own books of the Dead by purchasing prayers spells whatever and they also had their parchments illuminated with pictures not just hieroglyphics
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I feel like these were the equivalent of memes back then, for example.
THY HAS BUTTE IN TUBA LMAO, THY JUST CANT WRAPE THY HEAD AROUND DEAFEATING SNAILS, YE OLD UNICORN IS VISIBLY ANGERTH AT THEE VIRGINS FOODS

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The snails were a rootless cosmopolitan class who have no homeland, who are slimy, eat your crops from under you, and are so powerful you cannot criticise them. I'll let you guess who it represents.
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If these weird pictures are medieval memes then its like if someone's trying to tell an epic story and memes keep popping in and up staging the storyteller
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Dude, monks had gardens that were constantly plagued by snails. The snails are literally snails. Monks just had an unending battle with snails.
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There's a saying here in our country An early person always beats a hardworking person. Just thought of it about the snail and the knight.
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