Alan Turing’s Breasts September 24, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryAlan Turing’s efforts at code-breaking at Bletchley Park 1939-1945 led to Enigma decrypts and gave Britain and later the US a window into Hitler’s parlour in crucial years, allowing, inter alia, victory in the Battle of the Atlantic. Indeed, it is sometimes said that Turing was one of three or four individuals without whom Britain […]
Secret Weapons September 22, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernIdeas for books very often begin with nagging questions that compulsively irritate authors and that they then work through – think of it as therapy – by writing tens or even hundreds of thousands of words. Beach suspects that the nagging question that saw Brian Ford pen Secret Weapons: Technology, Science and the Race to […]
Burning a Shed in Wales September 21, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary(Image Alan Fryer) For Beachcombing, the Welsh are one of those elect nations who, along with the Maoris and the Finns, stand at the right side of the throne of God. Yet Welsh history in the last century has been quiet and uninspiring: in marked contrast, say, to that country’s Gaelic neighbour, Ireland, which sweated […]
In the Margins September 20, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, Medieval, ModernMarginalia: things scribbled in margins. There is a lot to be said for this form of literature that, to date, has been little studied: there are only a handful of books including Robin Alston’s Books with Manuscript: A Short Title Catalogue of Books with Manuscript Notes in the British Library (1994) and Henry Richards Luard’s […]
Deviant Burials September 19, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, Medieval, ModernThe dead are prepared for the after life in almost every way imaginable. In some cases they are eaten, in some cases they are burnt, in some cases they are fed to animals, in some cases they are embalmed and in some cases they are buried in the ground. Beach has not yet come across […]
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 […]
Strange Historical Personal Names September 15, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, Medieval, ModernFull crisis here. A think tank that Beachcombing sometimes works for needs some urgent help with a text: in a format that no program on his computer can open… And Mrs B has a pressing deadline – more help needed – with a project she has worked up about what good Europeans (ha!) the young […]
Bartering Chinese Women: Mao and Kissinger September 12, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryThe honour! Strange History is, as we speak, being hacked by a bunch of Chinese ruffians. If the fairies and mermaids disappear under a swelter of fake Tiffany bags you’ll know why. To celebrate this epoch-making event Beachcombing thought that he would bring China centre stage and also throw Kissinger into the mix. It is […]
Pietro Montini: A Tribute September 10, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernFirst, sincere apologies for not yet getting the comments up this month. Beach has written about 30,000 words on fairies and is still getting over it. Sunday night is his self-imposed deadline and then he’s going to forget the red-capped ones ever existed and think about making our young into better citizens (ahem). Today though […]
Did You Hear the One about the Fairy and the Alien? September 9, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, Medieval, ModernBeachcombing has never bothered to write them down, but he has a mental list of irritating academic titles ranging from ‘The Erotics of Medieval Backgammon’ to the ‘Semiotics of Transgression in Aquitanian Saints Lives’ etc etc etc. When he recently then stumbled across ‘Between One Eye Blink and the Next: Fairies, UFOs and Problems of […]
Dubious Archaeology September 4, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Actualite, Ancient, Contemporary, Medieval, ModernReading Kenneth Feder’s Encylopedia of Dubious Archaeology Beach was reminded of an adage by Benjamin Franklin. Franklin once said that before you start arguing with someone you need to make a fundamental decision: do you want to change that person’s opinion or do you want to draw blood? It is a frightening question because 90% […]
The Sausage War August 26, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryBeachcombing has been paying perhaps too much attention to Finland in the last two months: the result of a long infatuation with Mannerheim, the aristocratic military commander who twice saved his young country from the Soviets. He kicked off with the tale of Mannerheim’s cigar. He moved onto a WIBT moment in the court […]
Christopher Columbus’s Origins August 24, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, Medieval, ModernThere are many different kinds of historical controversies. But Beachcombing’s favourite by far are what he thinks of as ‘identity debates’: nice examples of which include the arguments over the location of Atlantis, the ‘real’ King Arthur and the ‘true’ Shakespeare. Identity debates are characterized by four things: (i) an orthodox academic position; (ii) multiple […]
The Family that Commits Suicide Together… August 22, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary***This is an image post, but as the image involves three dead people it is hidden below*** Germans led the suicide stakes in Second-World-War Europe. Whether it be Captain Langsdorff lying on his ensign and blowing his brains out; Rommel deciding to save his family by taking poison; the desperate Leonidas kamikaze pilots; or Himmler […]
Naval Blunders August 20, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, Medieval, ModernBeachcombing has been having a bit of a naval season and it was in celebration of this that he picked up Naval Blunders by Geoffrey Regan. Now, of course, books on blunders in history are commonplace. But this is arguably the best of all those with which Beach is familiar, in part because of the […]