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00:00:00 Introduction and Welcome 00:02:36 Climate and Hardship 00:08:20 Autumn Harvests and Food Preservation 00:20:37 Keeping Warm Indoors 00:34:42 Medieval Winter Clothing 00:44:27 Winter Work and Daily Life 00:58:35 Resilience Sources and Further Reading Bartholomaeus Anglicus (c. 1240). On the Properties of Things (Medieval encyclopedia, on seasons and natural phenomena). Langland, William (1378). Piers Plowman (Middle English allegorical poem depicting peasant life and hardships). Anonymous (1393). Le Ménagier de Paris (The Goodman of Paris) – Medieval household guide (on managing food and winter provisions). Laumonier, Lucie (2020). “A Medieval Peasants’ Winter” (Medievalists.net article on winter climate and peasant life). Navea-Rogers, Tizane (2025). “Surviving the Medieval Midwinter” (Historic UK, on clothing, food, and winter activities in medieval Britain). Singman, Jeffrey L. (1999). Daily Life in Medieval Europe (overview of everyday routines, including seasonal patterns). Jones, Richard (2013). The Medieval Natural World (study of medieval climate and environmental conditions). Gies, Frances & Gies, Joseph (1990). Life in a Medieval Village (detailed social history of peasants, with sections on winter living). Benedict of Nursia (6th cent., rule codified c. 540). The Rule of St. Benedict (monastic rulebook, Chapter 55 on clothing allowances in cold climates). Jordan, William Chester (1996). The Great Famine: Northern Europe in the Early Fourteenth Century (historical analysis of famine and climate impact around 1315–17). Join this channel to get access to perks: / @asmr_historian Support the channel on Patreon: / asmrhistorian Merch: https://histmerch.shop/ How did people survive a medieval winter without modern heating or technology? This video explores the harsh realities of life in the Middle Ages—how peasants, nobles, and monks prepared for the cold, stored food, kept warm, and fought off illness and famine. Learn about medieval clothing, shelter, diet, and survival strategies that kept communities alive through months of darkness and snow. Perfect for history enthusiasts and anyone fascinated by everyday life in the past. Information sourced from Wiki, Gutenburg, JSTOR, primary and secondary sources. All information is congruent with archaeological and history evidence at the time of recording.