A Ghost Rabbit as Big as a Sheep January 17, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernWelsh ghost stories always have something extra: maybe it is the water, maybe Methodism, maybe coal dust… They are, in any case, always worth reading. This one starts with a nun that is admittedly not very promising but bear with her. Llangynwydd, which is in the Llynvi Valley, has a ghost scare on just now. […]
New History Books: Kursk January 16, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : New History BooksThe Last English Hobbits? January 16, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernLudchurch (aka Lud’s Church, Lud Church) is not a church. It is a haunted ravine in the English midlands, Staffordshire, that has been frequently associated with the supernatural. The photo above will hopefully give some idea of what it is like. It has also been associated with an underground race of hominids in caves that […]
Daily History Picture: Gas Mask Fun January 15, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : Historical PicturesMy Name Writ on Glass January 15, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernOne of the eternal human problems is how to transmit facts – history, fame, infamy, love… – from one generation to another. We have tried to do it on calf skin, on papyrus, on the tongues of the tribal singers and on stone. But never forget we have also tried to do it on glass. […]
Daily History Picture: Challenger in Flames January 14, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : Historical PicturesPhantom Rabbit Monster: Rochdale, Lancashire January 14, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernBeach has recently been looking for the stranger monsters of British mythology and with some pride he comes today to the Baum-Rappit, a monster from Rochdale in Lancashire. What was the Baum-Rappit? Well as the name suggests it seems to have been a diabolical rabbit. Wright in his incredibly useful dialect dictionary comes up with […]
Daily History Picture: Camouflage Fun January 13, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : Historical PicturesDid the Russians Off Archduke Ferdinand?! January 13, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryThere follows that rarest of things. A credible conspiracy theory. Our two heroes are Dragutin Dimitrijević (aka Apis, obit 1917) Chief of Serb Military Intelligence and Viktor Artamonov (obit 1942), a Russian military liaison officer in Serbia. Apis is remembered by history as the organizer of Archduke Ferdinand’s assassination and the organizer of the Black […]
Daily History Picture: Kobe Bombed January 12, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : Historical PicturesCellphones and the Paranormal January 12, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ActualiteBeach this last weekend enjoyed re-reading one of the greatest books ever written on the supernatural, Andrew Lang’s Cock Lane and Common-Sense (1894). Lang, an extremely learned Victorian Scot, has a simple position. There are, he believed, a core of paranormal experiences that repeat themselves in every culture at every time: invisible knocking, levitation, throwing […]
Daily History Picture: Bison Pyramid January 11, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : Historical PicturesLovers Leaping, Shooting and Drowning January 11, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernLove suicides are happily today a rare thing. But they were common enough from 1700 to, say, after the Second World War to enter folklore: many places in the English-speaking world have their ‘Lovers Leaps’. (Derbyshire, a small British Midland county has four!) Why were love suicides so popular? Perhaps we can separate the pull […]
New History Books: The Earliest Christian Meeting Places January 10, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : New History BooksThe Noontide Hag in Luton! January 10, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernWalter Scott refers, in one of his poems, to ‘the noontide hag’, a creature he explains in a note as ‘a tall, emaciated, gigantic female figure, is supposed, in particular, to haunt the district of Knoidart’ and ‘which, contrary to the general rule of ghostly creatures, appeared in the full blaze of noon.’ Quite how […]