Abstract :
This paper reviews the position of old age in the societies of post-Roman Europe,
from the fifth to the 10th centuries. Drawing on both primary and secondary
literary and material sources of the period, I suggest that living beyond the age of
60 years was an uncommon experience throughout the early Middle Ages. Not
only was achieving old age a minority experience, it seems to have been particularly
concentrated among the senior clergy. This, together with the growing
importance of the Christian Church as the institution that stabilised post-Roman
society, the decline of urban living and its attendant culture of leisure and literacy,
and the transformation of kinship into a symbolic ‘family under God’ contributed
to a more favourable status for old age, or at least one that was particularly
favourable for older men. This was based not so much upon the accumulation
with age of wealth and privilege, but upon the moral worth of old age as a stage
of life. The early Middle Ages, the so-called ‘Dark Ages ’, was in this respect a
relatively distinctive period in the history of old age. With all around instability
and the future uncertain and often threatening, survival into old age was a rare
but frequently revered attainment.
Keywords :
CHRIS GILLEARD , old age , early Middle Ages , Christian Church , Life expectancy