Flying Boy Across the Mersey? December 16, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThis interesting but very confusing passage comes from Aubrey’s wonderful Brief Lives. It is, more specifically, from the chapter on a Lancastrian mathematician named Jonas Moore who had been taught by one William Gascoigne (this becomes important). Aubrey includes several fascinating facts including the unforgettable sentence that: ‘Sciatica: [Sir Jonas] cured it by boiling his […]
The Durham Lights #1: Introduction December 15, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThe Durham Lights (aka the False Durham Lights or the Whitburn Lights) are a nice example of a few chance and unclear facts morphing out of control and spawning suspect Forteana. From 1864 to 1870, particularly though not exclusively in the winter, wrecks became common on the Whitburn Steel, some aptly named rocks, between Sunderland […]
The Gannet Club: Parachuteless in WW2 December 14, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryJumping out of a plane without a parachute is never a good idea. But it is striking that some individuals walk away, or more likely are carried away, with a few token broken bones and a story to dine out on for the rest of their lives. Most modern examples are of parachutists who have […]
Maid of Hatfield: English Shaman Shyster December 13, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThis unusual story dates to the reign of Charles II, the son of the unhappiest monarch in the pantheon, Charles I. Beach has decided to include it for two reasons. First, because it reminds him of some of those shamanistic individuals who he has sometimes celebrated as fairy witches; and second because there is almost […]
The Wessel Coins 5#: Ian McIntosh Interview December 12, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, Medieval, ModernHuge thanks to Dr Ian McIntosh who agreed to this interview about the Wessel Coins, about progress in last summer’s expedition and about hopes for next year. Previous posts on the medieval African coins that ended up in Australia are gathered together in this link. All readers please note that there is also a relevant […]
In Praise of Bouncer and Co December 11, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Modern***note because of stupid mistake yesterday’s post was posted in the wrong place late, look below for a possible medieval reference to hippopotami*** Another in our strange sport series: today it is trail hunting. This was completely new to Beach but it seems that trail hunting was actually a fairly common nineteenth century sport and […]
In Search of the Hippophugi December 10, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalRecently reading a good deal of medieval beast lore and came across this curious creature. As always there is that half-formed suspicion that this must be something real, if only we could pare back the description to its absolute essentials: In the same regions of the river Briso [in Ethiopia, there is much debate?] there […]
The Duke, His Brother and the Locomotive December 9, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryGreat story, recently found, relating to the Spanish Civil War, presumably 1938. The narrator, of Jewish descent, has fled anschluss and arrived in Paris, en route to more permanent exile in the UK. I had run into Duke Dantin when he was a refugee in Paris, during the Spanish Civil War, he had fled from […]
Men Wearing Mirrors: Portuguese Conquistador in Northern Australia? December 8, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThe Portuguese ‘discovery’ of Australia is one that has excited Australians and Europeans for most of the last century, since, in fact, it was first realized that there was a very real chance that Portuguese ships could very easily have headed south from their base at Timor and have run smack-bang into ‘the lost continent’. […]
Fairies and Funerals December 7, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernFairies are often associated with death: indeed, many fairy theorists have suggested that the ‘good people’ were originally believed to be the spirits of the dead. Then there are the various minions of fairy who predict death including the banshee in Ireland and various bogeys in northern and western Britain. Fairy funerals are commonly described […]
Fitzgerald’s Dagger and a Child Thief December 6, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernLord Edward Fitzgerald was the great hero of the hopeless Irish revolt of 1798. When he was arrested on 4 May of that year he determined to sell his life dearly and set about his assailants with a knife causing many injuries. He died a month later of his wounds: wounds from the same fight. […]
The Medieval Water That Would Not Boil! December 5, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalAn early thirteenth-century source comes up with this strange little story. The modern editor suggests that Piroletti may be Piolenc near Orange in southern France: but the names are not that close. In any case whatis far, far more interesting is the fact that water from a local stream, wherever we are, does not boil. […]
Selling Alaska/Louisiana/Manhattan by the Pound December 4, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernHistory could be usefully defined as one long territory grab: who has the desire to take these acres, and who has the will and the resources and enough young ready to die on the other side? You can almost see the archangels of history pouring blood and bullets into two sides of a balance. But […]
Killing a Nineteenth-Century Nessie December 3, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThere is a fabulous Scottish water beast story that is worth repeating. Today we scour lochs for fantastic animals. In the early nineteenth century they scoured at Loch na Beiste (literally Loch of the Beast) to kill the same. The story of the celebrated water-kelpie of the Greenstone Point is very well known in Gairloch. […]
Napoleon and the Great Pyramid: Myth and Reality December 2, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, ModernOne of the best WIBT (wish I’d been there) moments in history must have been that wonderful occasion when Napoleon ascended to the royal chamber in the Great Pyramid and asked to spend a minute alone with the pharoahs: perhaps it is so fantastically attractive as history because no one was there and so there […]