Blue Bottoms and Samurai in 17 C. Spain June 24, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Actualite, Modern***This story came from Invisible for which many thanks*** In 1613 a group of Japanese soldiers and diplomats undertook an extraordinary journey that would end with blue spots on the bottoms of babies in Andalucia (Spain). The diplomatic group was led by a northern aristocrat, Hasekura Tsunetaka and a crew of 180 under HT sailed the Pacific landing […]
Starving Duel in Idaho June 22, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernBy the nineteenth century duels were falling out of fashion. The state typically prosecuted and even the girl (or very occasionally the boy) who were argued over resented the fact that blood was going to be spilt on their behalf. There came, then, an interesting rash of fighting duels without weapons: because there was some legal […]
Buried In a Fish’s Belly June 20, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThis is an almost unbelievable story that made a splash in the UK in the late May of 1833. We quote one G.S.Gowing who was the owner of a ship, but who was not a witness. On Monday last, the 20th inst., a fishing vessel belonging to Lowestoft [Norfolk], Robert Gowing master, engaged in the […]
Do Fairies Hate Lawnmowers? June 18, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Actualite, Contemporary, ModernBoggart Hole Clough is a nook, a small valley within the Manchester connurbation that has miraculously remained without housing development or industry. Its name should immediately excite those interested in fairylore as the boggart is a northern solitary fairy: note that there have been several boggart posts on strangehistory including boggart catching, a misplaced Calderdale […]
The Horror of 69 Charlotte Street June 16, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernOne of our occasional series of ghost stories from the English press. This one appeared in 1940 – as if a World War wasn’t enough to keep you busy – and relates to Devonport (Plymouth) in the south-west. Note that the south-west is over-represented in English newsreports of Fortean affairs. Relieved peace once more reigns […]
Comparing Present Money with Past Money June 15, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Medieval, ModernMoney makes the world go round, but how much? Today the question is relatively easy to answer because we ‘feel’ money: but if you got back in time all your coordinates are gone, it is an extreme version of travelling to another country where they use a different currency. In most other countries you can […]
Prodigious Portrait of a Seven-Headed Monster June 14, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThis peculiar creature appeared in a seventeenth-century English pamphlet. The pamphlet limits itself to two pages and tells a simple story. The true Portraiture of a prodigious Monster, taken in the Mountains of Zardana [in Syria]. the following Description whereof was sent to Madrid, Octob. 20, 1654, and from thence to Don Olonzo de Cardines, […]
Immortal Meals #14: Food Orgy on Twelfth Night June 13, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernFrom long before the times of Trimalchio there have been extraordinarily sumptuous banquets. These died away with the shriveling of economic possibilities in the early Middle Ages but then returned with avengeance in the fourteenth and fifteenth century. A British contribution to the category of exaggerated banquets and one for the immortal meal tag was […]
Were Ancient or Modern Soldiers More Likely to Die? June 11, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, Medieval, ModernSoldier, forget principle, forget country, forget pride, forget hate: your one aim is to survive, with or without your legs. Now ask yourself this: given that you want, at all costs, to live would you prefer to fight in WW2 battle or a battle in the Punic wars in antiquity? Perhaps the first thing to […]
Last Meals of US Condemned June 10, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Actualite, Contemporary, ModernA book on the history of the last meal (including attempts to intoxicate the soon to be executed) would be a fascinating one. Not least is the rather poor taste in banning the custom in some states in the US, that seems an unnecessary act of spite to criminals living their difficult last hours. There […]
Hallucinogenic Fairies on the Isle of Wight? June 9, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernThere are fairy-dead counties in England, counties from which no or few fairy legends survive, particularly in the south-east. At the top of the league table is fairyless Kent, but not far behind is the Isle of Wight. To the best of my knowledge there is only one nineteenth century-legend (and nothing before) and that […]
Remembering and Forgetting Robert Herrick June 5, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernRobert Herrick is famous today for his bit part in The Dead Poet’s Society, where he makes Robin Williams look good (briefly). But he had a much greater range, writing about sex, alcohol, sex, death, sex, folklore, sex and (rather unconvincingly) God. Basically, his poems smelt of semen and noone who has ever read his […]
A Travelling Chair June 3, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernBeach has recently been trying to explain to his daughters the meaning of an heirloom. Interesting how children lack the essential measure of time – Beach’s eldest is 5, and doesn’t really do ‘centuries’. ‘This ring was in our family before Granddad’s granddad was born’ cue blank expression and ‘Let’s watch Tom and Jerry’. Anyway […]
Dragons in Sixteenth-Century Devon? June 2, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernChallacombe is a small village to the west of Exmoor in Devon in the south-west of the UK. On the edge of the moor there are many ‘hillocks of earth and stones, cast up anciently in large quantity’, i.e. prehistoric burial mounds. So far so normal, this is a classic landscape in a marginal agricultural area, that […]
Islands, Epidemics and Local Knowledge May 30, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernHuman beings have immune systems. These immune systems are supposed to protect us from illnesses. Usually the immune system is up to the job, but every so often a new virus comes along that can skip around all defences with fatal consequences. The ‘new’ Black Death, for example, killed perhaps a third of medieval Europeans […]