Lord Acton’s Lost Work March 23, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernLord Acton is often reckoned one of the great historians of nineteenth-century England. Yet he published all too little despite tens of thousands of hours of study: a handful of essays and talks… His great book was to be have been a whig classic, a discussion of the growth of modern liberty. But that book […]
The Name ‘America’ and Amerigo Vespucci March 22, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernThere are perhaps a score of different theories as to where the word ‘America’ comes from. These range from various Amerindian etymologies to a Bristol-based merchant with the surname Ameryk! The theory which enjoys the greatest prestige though is that America is based on a feminised Latin version of Amerigo, as in Amerigo Vespucci, the […]
Dogs of God! Christian Werewolves? March 21, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThis is one of those rare times in the early modern witch craze where one feels sorry for the judges. I mean they turn up at Jurgensburg in Livonia on the Baltic expecting an easy burning: old man widely thought to be a witch hauled up in front of them (though on another charge) and […]
The Last Witch in Dorset? March 20, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThis news story comes from the first quarter of the nineteenth century and from Bridport (Dorset, UK). It is a particularly vivid bit of witch-hunting from the south-west of the country at a date when these things were quickly vanishing into the past: though there would be another century of such attacks in rural Britain. […]
Fairy Exorcisms in the Hebrides March 18, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Modern***Huge apologies, this story briefly came out yesterday by accident. I’ve been doubled over with fever*** A scary fairy story from the Hebrides from about 1902. The events described here seem to have taken place on Lewis though the writer is not absolutely clear. Beach stumbled on this while looking for information about fairy dog […]
Fairy Witches #1: Joan Tyrry of Taunton March 15, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernWho was Joan Tyrry [Terry]? Beach knows very little, too little, in fact. And everything he does know about this sixteenth-century woman comes from Keith Thomas who in the 1960s visited Wells Diocesan Records and opened the dusty old boxes with A21 and A22 where her trial is recorded. KT never gave a detailed description […]
Mather’s Fortean Rulebook March 14, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernMatthew Poole’s seventeenth-century Fortean project was recently celebrated in this place. Beach was unable to track down any of the instructions that Poole chose to employ to direct his project, but we did quote from Increase Mather’s Essay for the Recording of Illustrious Providence. There Increase, who was inspired by Poole, joined together with a […]
Irish Ghosts and Irish Judges: the House on the Marsh March 13, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernIts always satisfying when the legal system and the paranormal come crashing together. Take this case from late nineteenth-century Ireland. The report appeared in a British newspaper and the writer just couldn’t hide his delight. We could have edited this down but the style is very Victorian and most splendidly supercilious. Most people are familiar […]
Mass Misunderstandings and Worse March 12, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Medieval, ModernWhat is a Catholic or an Orthodox Mass? Well, it is essentially an act of magic, a miracle, the bread and the wine that are brought together become the flesh and the blood of Christ, which Christians then devour. Put in these brief, crude terms Christianity is a cannibalistic and highly unpleasant: though, of course, […]
Is the Pope Catholic? March 11, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernHere follows a potted biographer of one of those seventeenth-century Quakers who enjoyed riling the world. In fact, this was the period when the Society of Friends was anything but… One case, in London, may be given as an illustration in John Perrot, an Irishman, who during the times of stripping from death or imprisonment […]
Zen Letters and Names March 10, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernThe Zen letters are the now lost and the perhaps never existing fourteenth-century missives that described a Venetian visit to the northern Atlantic and perhaps to New England or Canada. A supposed outline of them survive in a sixteenth-century publication by Nicolò Zen, a scion of the family. NZ describes the northern Atlantic and offers […]
Review: Witches, Fantasies and Fairies March 8, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernIn 1966 Carlo Ginzburg, a WANW Italian historian, published I Benandanti. In this book, Ginzburg argued that a group of sixteenth-century Friulian peasants, who believed themselves to have super powers – they could fly and fight witches – were the last traces of a pre-Christian fertility cult in the region. Ginzburg went on to argue that […]
Lucy Bruce, Iona and the Fairy Investigation Society March 5, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernMiss Lucy Bruce is a virtually forgotten twentieth-century mystic, who spent some of her life on the Isle of Iona in Scotland. She interests the writer of this post because she was a member of the Fairy Investigation Society and he is presently trying to learn more about the organization by tracking all members down: […]
England’s First Anomalist and A Missing Manuscript? March 4, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernMatthew Poole (obit 1679) was an English Biblical scholar from an age and a place when that meant simultaneously the most mind numbing parsing and sensationalizing of God’s word. He wrote tracts, he preached sermons and he would generally have made rather dull if hell-fire warm dinner company: perhaps the only really interesting thing that […]