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Sunday, January 29, 2012

I for one am stoked! Tourism and History in Bruce-Grey-Simcoe

Have we snow? I offer three words. 'Wax up dudes.'



So says historical figure John Graves Simcoe in Bruce-Grey-Simcoe's new advertisement campaign, highlighting this area of Ontario's yearly winter wonderland. In the ad on the radio John Graves Simcoe is purportedly raving about the ski conditions in the county that was named after him. If you look at the advertisement campaign on the web, Sir James Bruce, 2nd Earl Charles Grey and Lt. Governor Simcoe all have something to say. An historic photo of them has had ski gear added to it, and the photo speaks. Simcoe's contribution is mentioned above. Bruce says 'Another robust winter is upon us. I for one am stoked!,' and Grey says 'I quite fancy skiing. Especially the Apres."


Many tourist sites are also historic sites. If you think of a location and you are trying to think of what there is to see there, often you think of the old structures and the museums, the sites where specific events happened. No? Just me? Well anyway, for the sites where it is less about seeing and more about doing, like skiing and theme parks and mini putt, history perhaps plays less of a role. However those kind of tourist sites often break out around historic locations, because those places have been interesting to generations of people, like Niagara Falls, or Wasaga Beach. Skiing is a little different though. The hills are not centres where people have been coming and going for centuries, like harbours, or river intersections. But it is the best place for skiing.

I thought the campaign was so interesting. First of all, people are actually going to engage with historical photos of some of Ontario's first founders. These are not people that are well-known. I am familiar with John Graves Simcoe myself, but I even have not done a lot of research about Charles Grey or James Bruce. People are still not going to know who they are, but they are at least going to realize that the county's are named after specific people. This is the most interesting kind of historical education, because it will open the door for certain people to ask more questions, and it brings that tourist approved historical significance to a tourist attraction devoid of that kind of connection or cultural significance.

How effective it will be as an advertisement campaign is harder to judge. I will certainly remember it. And it's quite clever.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Dragons, Romanesque and Parliament: Medievalisms at the Legislative Assembly of Ontario as expressions of power

When you stand on the edge of Queen’s Park, the site of the Ontario Legislative Assembly since 1893, you find yourself in what is the most medieval-esque looking area of the city. Medieval-esque is a frightfully vague word, but in its vagueness describes that feeling we get when we get the sense that something is inexplicably medieval. Then again, maybe its not that inexplicable.


A medievalism is a number of things. The way we think about the Middle Ages changes as we change, so even when we study the Medieval period that is a medievalism, because we have to interpret the past through our own eyes and our own version of historical events. However, it is also a medievalism when we use elements of what we think the Middle Ages were to create something new. Likewise, we can also call it a medievalism when elements have continued on from the Middle Ages and we use those elements in our own, modern way. A medievalism is anything where the Middle Ages is being interpreted and transmitted to a more modern audience.

There was no European Middle Ages that occurred geographically here in Toronto, so the medievalism we encounter all around us in the architecture at Queen’s Park is where people use symbols from the Middle Ages to create something new. We’re next to the Gothic structures of U of T, including the awe inspiring Trinity College.


Gothic and Romanesque are two quintessential Northern European Medieval Architectural styles. At Queen's Park the central figure is the massive Romanesque Revival structure. So, built in 1893, why did Canadian Victorian society decide to refer to medieval precedents when constructing their civic structures?


In the early Victorian era medieval and not classical elements are sometimes chosen in Canada to emphasize the Britishness of the cultural influence, which is in opposition to their U.S. neighbours, who want to skip Britain and go back to classical roots (see some of the conclusions reached in the project Mapping Medievalism at the Canadian Frontier). That is in play here, especially in the structures of U of T which are referencing the medieval university traditions at places like Oxford, or Cambridge with their Gothic style. But I don’t think that is the whole explanation. I think in this time, approx. 1870-1885, they use a medieval style of architecture only in part to emphasize Britishness, but mostly they see this as an appropriate symbol for power. It can’t be wholly to separate themselves from the United States because this is a uniquely American form of Romanesque.

Richard A. Waite, British-born Buffalo architect, was given the contract to design the building. This was after as a member of the selection committee he had decided that the Gothic design (the other most recognizable medieval architectural style), proposed by Darling and Curry was unsuitable. The architectural style Richardsonian Romanesque was developed by Henry Hobson Richardson , and it was perfected in New England. When they were designing the civic structures in Toronto they favoured this Richardsonian Romanesque style. E.J. Lennox designed Old City Hall in the Richardsonian Romanesque style, and R.A. Waite chose the style for these, the Ontario Parliament Buildings. These buildings are associated with power. So at that time Richardsonian Romanesque, this Medieval style tempered with American influence, was how Torontonians, as well as New Englanders, expressed power through a structure.

The carvings on the building reflect the Richardsonian Romanesque style. They are largely floral and whimsical, though there are some allegorical. For instance, the building is covered in gargoyles. Some of them look like they should be spouts,which would have been part of their function on Romanesque cathedrals, but is not their function here. They reflect the medieval tradition of the gargoyle, which adorned medieval Romanesque and gothic structures of power. Gargoyles protect the building, and keep evil from it, while at the same time they are whimsical.





The rose window with the Gothic tracing that can be seen on the southwest corner of the central structure of the building was not part of the original plan. Originally it was supposed to house a clock, but during construction they ran out of funds and so the clock was never built. The building opened in 1893 with that area boarded up. They eventually installed this round window. But the carving around the window reflects the original intent to put in a clock and reflects medieval traditions. The signs of the zodiac were placed around the circle as they were in medieval calendars. It shows a conscious effort on the part of the architect R.A. Waite and possibly chief carver William McCormack, to build a Romanesque building while referencing the Romanesque roots and time period.



A Romanesque cathedral might have figures of apostles or saints, figures which are meant to lend power to that location, and give that power spatial representation. Here it is no different. On either side of the building are important political figures who, in a very similar way, give power to the activities that go on here. These figures say that Canadian politics is represented here in this building. What they give to the abstract concept of politics is a spatial representation in this building and a sense of importance, by giving the history of Canadian politics the sense of a past of mythic and monumental proportions.


Waite wanted to use natural light, to compensate for the darkness of the heavy walls. Part of the result was the use of stained glass, a common medieval art form, which look out on to laylights. This is another medievalism that was used as a tool by Waite to increase the sense of grandeur of this building, and is in keeping with dynamic interior space which is part of Richardsonian Romanesque.







Dragons recur throughout the building, inside and out. Here are the dragons at the base of the pillars on the first floor of the east wing. In the Middle Ages the dragon represented the ‘other.’ The knight defeating the dragon was conquering the other - restoring order. In this case the placement of the dragons at the base of the pillars shows, in a similar way, the wild creatures being subdued. Likewise, the tops of those pillars, on the third floor east wing, have dragons adjacent to the ceiling, so that dragons appear on both ends of the pillars. Not to take away the element of whimsy, but in British culture the dragon has special meaning because of St. George, patron saint of England who slew a dragon, and is it is pervasive as a popular symbol in keeping with the medieval style of the building. The moral is: Victorians like dragons! But there are reasons as to why they like dragons.








For the art and architecture a medieval style was chosen, but when we look at the debts and carry-overs in the parliamentary tradition from the Middle Ages we can see why medieval symbols are appropriate to help represent a British Parliament. One carry-over from the Middle Ages is the use of standards to represent people or a group (in this case a nation). Even before the Middle Ages people would give themselves a symbol, often a symbol to rally around during battle. It was in the medieval period, however, that heraldry becomes more formalized. It might be that heraldry, flags, coats of arms, standards, developed at first because people needed to other recognize people on their side during a battle once armour began to obscure who was who, though some historians argue that it was more a fashion and individual vanity that prompted the use of such signs. At first people chose their own symbols, and eventually, when they were associated with nobility, they became hereditary.The origins of Britain's heraldry are very medieval. The British Flag is made up of the cross of St. George (England’s flag),

the cross of St. Andrew (Scotland’s flag)

and the cross of St. Patrick (Irelands’ flag).
These countries are still represented (in the British flag at least) by their respective saints, a tradition that continues on from the Middle Ages. There has also been a perceived continuity to the British monarchy since 1066. In fact, our concept of Britain, the nation, as we understand it took shape during the Middle Ages.

Ontario's Coat of Arms was established in 1909, so it is easy to tell which parts of the building are more recent additions or were reconstructed because the Coat of Arms won't appear on anything original to 1893. The Chief Herald of Canada is the one who, using elements and tropes established from the Middle Ages onwards, is able to create new Coat of Arms for new groups. Even though the Chief Herald is creating something new the Coat of Arms and heraldry is rooted in tradition, so the forms and symbols the Coat of Arms uses are fitted into pre-existing medieval patterns.




It was the signing of the Magna Carta in 1215 which made the King subject to the law and redefined where authority was derived from (that is the basic statement, since as one of the West's favourite documents it is one of the most debated, but for arguments sake lets take this classic view of it). It was signed by King John, but it was King John’s son Henry III who first referred any matter to a ‘parliament,’ meaning he is the first British monarch to also use the word ‘parliament.’ Parliament comes from the French word parlement (remember the French origins of Britain’s rulers since 1066), which is from the Latin parliamentum. Basically it means discussion. He was also the first king to ask his subjects for regular taxation, as the revenues from Crown lands were no longer enough to run the realm. Many of the first members were barons, who were asked for taxation, but eventually they had to ask for taxes directly from representatives of towns, clergy and counties. Length of sessions were based on need, and most often they met in Westminster, but they could meet anywhere. The commons emerged in the 14th century as a group distinct from the barons, but they were usually knights and burgesses. The parliament was also considered the highest court, as people could bring their issues and petitions that they would like to have answered. (For more information see the BBC's History of Parliament).


The medieval borrowings in the building and the Legislative Chamber are then really appropriate, because it is from those traditions that our modern form of government has developed. If you look around the Chamber, in addition to inheriting the parliamentary traditions, there is again a conscious use of medieval style, for instance the gargoyles and the figures of whimsy and power.









We again have human faces carved into the Chamber, though unlike the carved political figures on the outside of the building, these ones are tributes to the artists.They are enhancing the whimsy of the space, but they are also people who will forever watch the parliament, so they are not devoid of symbolic meaning.




But there are actual gargoyles around the Chamber, subdued at the base of pillars.

Finally, resting under the Clerk's table is the Legislative Mace, which is placed on the table when the House is in Session to symbolize Ontario's Parliament's authority to make it's own laws. But, as young grade fives are quick to point out, the mace starts out as a medieval weapon, carried into battle by fighting members of the clergy who are not permitted edged weapons. Its use by important people causes it to be used as a symbol of authority.
By the 1200s, the times of the first real parliaments, the mace is being carried by the sergeants-at-arms who protect the king. In time it comes to stand for the authority of the monarch. All British/Commonwealth parliaments still have them. The mace conveys authority, derived from the monarch, to the parliament. Authority is given through it to the speaker, as no one is allowed to pass between the speaker and the mace while the house is in session. Authority is also given to the Members of (Provincial) Parliament, since they are not allowed to have a session without it, and since the mace still points to the Government, and specifically the leader of the government. It’s role as stand in for monarch is also preserved, because when a Vice-Regal representative or the monarch is in the Chamber the mace is, in our case, placed under the table.

In the Chamber there are more examples of heraldry, standards derived from the Middle Ages. For instance, the Royal Coat of Arms behind the Speaker’s Chair, which includes the three lions of England, the harp of Ireland, the unicorn of Scotland on the shield, is derived from the symbols used during the Middle Ages. For instance, the three lions go back to the symbol used by Richard I and which has endured as a symbol of England.

The question is do we still perceive those symbols as something medieval? I do, but I study medieval things. Do most people just see it as tradition, from a non-descript past?



The Legislative Building houses the Ontario Art Collection. Started by founder of the Normal School, Egerton Ryerson, when he went on his ‘Grand Tour’ of Europe. The grand tour was a custom for Victorians, who would go to Europe to collect copies of masterworks. Ryerson brought the copies back to the school museum to be used as educational tools. He brought back paintings as examples of ‘culture.’ So let’s look at what Victorians thought ‘culture’ meant. The subjects of the paintings are classical and biblical, but the original works are renaissance or medieval. Culture was rooted in the past, not the present or the future. It is in this way, through the art and the architecture, that the Victorians brought the medieval into their present. This painting of St. George and the dragon is one of those copies, brought back to educate people who, living in Canada would probably never see the like otherwise. As was mentioned above, St. George, depicted here, who, even when divorced from religion, is symbolic for the whole English nation. St. George is known for slaying a dragon, to save a princess. He is the Victorian ideal of a medieval hero. The frame around the painting has dragons on it, indicating it was made for this painting. But St. George, again, is part of the reason why the dragons are everywhere in the building.

One thing that is striking is that the medievalisms at Queen’s Park, the parliament, Romanesque, dragons, the mace, all incorporate the medieval as symbols of power. The parliament is the decision making body, the grandeur of the Romanesque is seen as appropriate to be associated with sites of power, the mace confers authority on the parliament, and the dragons are both a power that has to be subdued and represent the power of Britain. So the sense that we get that we are surrounded by the medieval is because we are, though we are also well aware that this is an interpretation both by Canadian Victorian society as well as by modern society. The medieval elements we decide to use in our culture tell us a lot about how we view the medieval, but they also show how our distant medieval past influences our present.