In Search of Allied Atrocity Photographs July 30, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryA provocative and very difficult question from CS in a post two days ago about an infamous Holocaust photograph: are there WW2 Allied attrocity pictures? Beach spent an hour thinking about the question this evening and as the quality of his thought is not always top notch he’s going to try and lay his logic […]
The Wessel Coins #3: Kilwa and its Sultanate July 27, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, Medieval, ModernKilwa (or Quiloa as it was often called in European sources) was a small almost-tidal island off the coast of Tanzania. ‘Almost tidal’ because in its early history there was allegedly a causeway and even in later centuries it was possible to wade to Kilwa at low tide. The city of Kilwa was a […]
The Wessel Coins #2: The Coins July 23, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, MedievalIn a previous post we examined the background to the discovery of the Wessel Coins. Today, instead, it is time to look at why the coins are so exciting. It will be remembered that Morrie Isenberg came across nine coins on the beach in Jensen Bay. These coins break down into two classes, and this […]
The Wessel Coins #1: Morry Isenberg’s Discovery July 14, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, Medieval, Modern28 February 2013 the Indiana-University-Purdue-University sent out a press release announcing modestly: ‘IUPUI led expedition seeks source of thousand-year-old coins in Aboriginal Australia’. Nothing to see, move on? Well, it took the world’s press some time to catch on, the real interest only came in May. But, of course, ‘thousand’ year old coins in Australia […]
Crowds #7: Fleeing July 4, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernBeach greatly enjoyed, last year, writing a series of posts on crowds: i.e ransacking the web for likely images with the philosophy that groups, particularly ecstatic, tense or ‘altered’ groups make for interesting studies. There was crowds as art, those silly men with straw hats from August 1914, listening crowds, religion and crowds, prisoner crowds […]
Turning Back the Years in Oz July 3, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, Modern***With thanks to Invisible and Wade*** Consider a curious thing. Australian prehistory is far easier to rewrite than American prehistory. If you begin to question the route by which the Aborigines arrived in Australia, or posit an early Indian influx onto the continent or even begin to speculate about mahogany boats and seventeenth-century Caucasoid skulls […]
Indians in Australia, c. 2000 B.C.? May 28, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Prehistoric***Beach dedicates this to an old friend of the blog, Wade, presently recuperating in hospital: the New York Changeling needs you, Wade!*** There is a case to be made for not writing about bizarre history research when it first comes out, but waiting six months for the shouting to die down. In six months new […]
Forgotten Kingdom: The Bird-Shit Island January 20, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernNauru is a small island (about eight square miles) half way between Hawaii and New Zealand made largely of bird droppings. If that does not sound particularly promising consider two further points. First, that its European discoverer named it Pleasant Island in 1798: it was once extraordinarily beautiful. And second that the bird droppings can […]
Men and Women Out of Balance September 17, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, ModernA bit of a cookie-dough post today as Beachcombing tries to make sense of something that has being going around and around in his head. Last week, during the infamous hacker attack of Sept 2011, Beach noted the extraordinary gender imbalance in modern China where perhaps – the numbers are much contested – 119 boys […]
Fifteenth-century European Knowledge of Australia? August 5, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernHere is one of these sources that Beachcombing just doesn’t know that to do with. It seems to show knowledge of southern Australia/ Antarctica being shared with a European in Java at the end of the fifteenth century. Perhaps this is not so extraordinary as, after all, knowledge is not discovery: and ‘knowledge’ here could […]
The Emu War of 1932 July 18, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryIn the aftermath of the First World War different countries wrestled with the problem of how to reintegrate their veterans into society. In Britain houses were built ‘fit for heroes’, in Italy soldiers coming home were invited to beat up socialists and in Australia veterans from that country were given land to farm. These Australian […]
King Arthur In Australia? June 15, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalThe Beachcombings are overjoyed as they have finally found a new aupair, an Australian tango dancer (truly). And in her honour Beach thought he would offer up today an obscure, indeed, an almost forgotten source for the Arthurian legend, a twelfth-century poem by the name of Draco Normannicus (Norman Battle Standard) with an almost impossibly […]
The Strangest Instrument June 5, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, Medieval, ModernIn his forlorn attempts to bring the bizarre into melody Beachcombing has done a little browsing through music-history books in the last six months. And one of the manila files that he consequently opened – now stored in the rusty filing cabinet in the downstairs bathroom – was entitled ‘weird instruments’. Beachcombing is going to […]
Origins of the Two-Finger Insult May 19, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, Medieval, ModernThe sun is in the heaven, term is over and with the good luck that characterises him Beachcombing has come down with a cracking summer cold. Indeed, as he walks up and down the stairs he feels as if his head is banging on the walls on either side. In this emergency situation he […]
Flinders Island May 5, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernBeachcombing tries to get a geographical spread going with his posts where – if there is a depressing bias towards Europe and Blighty – he covers pretty much the whole globe in at least a token fashion. However, some parts of the world are underrepresented. Take Australasia. Bar some reports of moas in New Zealand […]