How To Create A Golden Age: Instructions for Use January 27, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, Medieval, ModernThere are grey moments in history and there are black moments and, then, every so often there are wonderful conflagarations as the very paper that the past is written upon catches fire. Think the sheer brilliant evenescence of Athens in the fifth-century B.C.; Baghdad in the ninth century; or, indeed, Florence in the fourteenth and […]
The Dragon’s Tail! A Continent or a Ghost? January 24, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernLa cola del dragón (the Tail of the Dragon), was a book published in 1990 by Paul Gallez (obit 2007), a Belgian/Argentinean historian. In this book Gallez alleged that a map by Martellus (obit 1496), dating to 1489 showed South America. If you are trying to understand why this should matter read the last sentence again: […]
Condoned Torture and Revenge in Eighteenth-Century New Orleans January 22, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Modern***Warning this post has some very unpleasant material: if you are having a bad day, do yourself a favour and just click away…*** ‘The west’, that monolith to which most readers of this blog belong, has gradually over the centuries, shied away from torture. But there are moments in history when societies return on themselves […]
Horror and Scarcity: Reading Supernatural Fiction January 20, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Actualite, Contemporary, ModernYesterday the postman brought three beautiful volumes of Sheridan Le Fanus’ short stories (Ash Tree Press). They are exquisitely made, not so much books as orgasms between covers, and they have exceptionally good introductions by Jim Rockhill. They were also expensive, particularly once you factor postage to another continent and the Italian’s government’s banditry in […]
Pre-Columbian Trips to America? Ballast! January 19, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernImagine the excitement of the archaeologists who had gathered at NA-57 off the Florida coast near Fernandina in 1972. In some offshore piles they had found various bits of ‘rubbish’ from European settlers: ceramics, pipes, glass fragments… Nothing special you might think. But what was unusual was the dating. British settlements began in the area in […]
Purring: A Taxonomy and an Exhibition at Wigan January 15, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThis site has a small tag on the history of purring, the sometimes noble and often incredibly ignoble Lancashire marshal art whereby a man repeatedly kicked opponents or victims as hard as he could. We return to the theme today because of the exciting news that a Purring Display is going up in Wigan Museum, […]
The British and Invasions January 13, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, Medieval, ModernI watched a few years ago an even then old documentary in which a celebrated/notorious British Member of Parliament Enoch Powell interviewed (God knows how they pulled this off) a Soviet general and shared with him an unusual geographical philosophy. EP said that Britain and Russia were both protected by geography, one by water ‘as […]
Welsh Leaf Mould, Pies and Cunning Magic January 10, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernA nineteenth-century letter detailing some very unusual goings on at Hawarden on the Welsh borders. On Sunday the 17 inst., it was discovered that some earth had recently been dug up under the east window of the church. At first it was supposed that some still-born infant had been deposited there [!!!]; but on procuring […]
Spirit Photo Fakes: Katie King January 5, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThe Count (a regular contributor here) is to blame. Beach had hoped to spend just a couple of thousand nano-seconds on spirit photography, but it is so extraordinarily interesting. Last time we looked at some late nineteenth-century photographs where ghostly loved ones were portrayed with their families in the most transparent fakes. But what about […]
A Scottish Earthquake Remembered? December 29, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernDavid Murray Rose was a late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century historian and, a far nicer word, an antiquarian. This comes from a letter he wrote in 1930 to the Inverness Courier and relates to an obsession of this blog: the degree to which information can be transmitted orally through time. First, the legend. Many years […]
English Vampire in Spain December 27, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThis article comes from the later 1860s and describes the misfortunes of an Englishman who the locals decided was a Vampire. You have to cross the straits of Gibraltar and probably the Sahara to get this kind of incident today: memories of that fine Luise White book Speaking with Vampires. Lorcea is Lorca in Murcia. […]
The Durham Lights 3#: The Margaret and Jane December 24, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernTo finish off this series on the mystery of the Durham Lights we turn to the description, in late December 1866, of the Margaret and Jane’s misfortunes at Whitburn. The public inquiry offers one of the clearest accounts of what mariners actually saw when they talked of ‘false lights’. First, though the ship. We have […]
Was Nessie a Kelpie? December 22, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernA post a couple of weeks ago on the kelpie of Loch-na-Bestie got Beach thinking about the most famous kelpie in Caledonia. Who else but that stalwart of Scottish tourism, that gift to fake photographers everywhere, the greatest floating log of them all, Nessie? Yes, it is true that Nessie has been seen, photographed and […]
Montanelli and the Martyrs of Spielberg December 20, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernA wonderful story that could probably only come out of Italy. First, some necessary background. Indro Montanelli was perhaps the finest Italian journalist of the twentieth century: he was able to interview and work with Andreotti, Berlusconi, Hitler, John-Paul II, Mussolini and many other notables whose deeds changed the peninsula and Europe (mostly, being notable, […]
The Durham Lights #2: The Candidates December 19, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernIn a previous post we set out, with some help from Charles Fort and David Clarke the history of the Durham Lights, shipwrecking lights that turned up on the jagged coast at Whitburn (North-East England) in the mid late 1860s and that were only banished with the opening of the Souter Lighthouse in January 1871. […]