Once upon a time in medieval Paris, a man and a woman met and fell madly in love. Their names were Peter Abelard and Héloïse: two intellectuals whose relationship, though ill-fated, has inspired and fascinated people through the ages. But how do we know their story, and why are they remembered with such veneration? The simple answer is that the pair wrote a series of remarkable letters to one another in their later lives, recounting the story of how they met and discussing their relationship as well as matters of philosophy and religion. These letters have been preserved and studied since they were first discovered around 100 years after their deaths, and have provided an incredible insight into a loving, if doomed, relationship from the medieval period.
AN AFFAIR TO REMEMBER
In 1115, Peter Abelard was hired to tutor the young Héloïse by her uncle and guardian Fulbert, a canon at the Cathedral of Notre Dame. "We do know that Abelard was a teacher and like any other teacher of his day he was a cleric. He was a very brilliant, argumentative figure and he would have been probably in his mid 30s when he met Héloïse," says Constant J Mews, a professor of medieval religious history and thought at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia. "There's a little bit of argument about the age of Héloïse but my judgement would be that she was probably about 20 or 21 when she met Abelard. There are some people that have a custom of imagining her to be very young. She had been brought up at the convent of Argenteuil but she was not technically a nun: she was living as a boarder."
This story is from the Issue 133 edition of All About History UK.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the Issue 133 edition of All About History UK.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
STALIN HAD CONTINUED WEST AFTER BERLIN?
Having used the Allies for his own ends, the Soviet dictator plots to overthrow the rest of Europe
THE GLORIOUS FIRST OF JUNE
ATLANTIC OCEAN, 400 NAUTICAL MILES WEST OF USHANT 28 MAY - 1 JUNE 1794
LIFE AS AS A GODDESS
Jasmine Elmer uncovers the complexity and darker sides of ancient deities and delivers history with soul
TUDOR FASHION TIPS
From farthingales and ruffs to codpieces, ten ways to achieve the styles of the Tudor court
THE FIRST AMERICANS
Discover indigenous life before the colonists landed
THE LAVENDER SCARE
How a national fear of communism led to the American government outing and firing thousands of gay and lesbian workers
STARS BEHIND THE BARS
Ten iconic celebrity mugshots and the stories behind them
The Making of JAPAN
The rise of imperial power and a flourishing of the arts and culture in the Land of the Rising Sun can be traced back to the Asuka period
SIEGE OF TOULON
TOULON, FRENCH REPUBLIC SEPTEMBER-DECEMBER 1793
REDISCOVERING THE FORGOTTEN LIVES OF QUEER MEN
We speak to the editor of a groundbreaking new collection that uncovers what life was like for gay men when homosexuality was illegal in Britain