One big problem: they are going on the right side of the street, especially the Knight. They should go on the left. But you can probably just flip the image…
Sure people would throw water on some noble man like he wouldn’t sue you.
I’ve got bad news for you if you thought that was just water.
It isn’t a chamber pot but a regular bucket. So it’s just soapy water from cleaning, not piss.
my comment was more of a jest but I think you might be overlooking some details.
the building the woman is coming out of is an inn. you can see the sign below the window that has multiple crests displayed on it. these were likely the crests of noble houses that had visited the inn and they used it as a way to show “we are a quality inn, look at how many nobles we have served”.
it was common practice for the innkeeper to collect chamber pots and dispose of them together to save on time.
not saying you’re wrong, but there’s always more to the story if you look deeper.
Well the main idea is that people in the Tudor period would have never thrown their only source of ammonia for dyeing, black powder production and tanning on the street like it was some useless waste product.

Don’t Jim the camera.
Abed



