The Republic of New Afrika April 2, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryThe Forgotten Kingdoms series continues with an interesting and ultimately bloody recent experiment in nationhood: the Republic of New Afrika [sic]. Created 31 March 1968 the RNA was a post Malcolm-X attempt to create a homeland for Afro-Americans who could not be, the founders believed, represented or protected by the US government. The brain-child of […]
From North Carolina to Chad: Families and Food March 10, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ActualiteAn ‘ill’ day with interesting complications in the throat area so Beach is going to go off topic with this extraordinary book he recently stumbled upon: Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (Peter Menzel 2005). This exercise in photo-journalism has a fair bit of manipulation behind it: but the idea itself is an extraordinarily simple […]
Witchcraft Murder in Modern London March 3, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ActualiteBeachcombing has spent rather more time than is good for him over the last year looking at cases of, what are in legal terms, child abuse. Nineteenth-century Irish families who (to use an inadequate word) ‘punished’ children because they believed that they were fairies or ‘changelings’: the real child had, the families believed, been spirited […]
Cato’s Sword February 9, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : AncientBeachcombing usually plans about two days ahead with his posts. But every so often something emerges from out of the depths of the subconscious and will just not leave him in peace. This morning it was the death of Cato the Younger that tapped like a woodpecker on his inner skull. It had already been […]
Electrocuting African Tribal Hosts January 3, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernOne of the great challenges of any nineteenth-century explorers was to make friends with the ‘primitives’ in such out of the way places as an equatorial rain forest, the upper peaks of the Andes and through much of Darkest Africa. And, of course, to do so they brought gifts along with them: a sensible enough […]
The Everliving Child December 9, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernExams are pressing and so a short African post from an early nineteenth-century British adventurer: In Cromantine [Ghana?] there exists a tradition, or rather a tale, to deceive strangers, that they have still in their possession a male child, who has existed ever since the beginning of the world. This child, they declare, neither eats, […]
The Zambian Space Programme of 1962 December 4, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryOne of the problems of looking for the bizarre in history is that, after a while, you’ve read everything before: mermaid funerals in the Hebrides, tick; bats used in bombs against Japan, tick; Roman legionaries in China, tick… But then every so often something comes along that is fresh and that has completely escaped your […]
John Goodman Household: Africa’s First Flier November 2, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernBeach has now spent a year looking at legends and stories about early pre-Wrightian fliers. Essentially they fall into three categories. The Tower Jumpers, 3000 BC to 1500 AD: lunatics who jumped from heights, hoped for the best and typically died. The Renaissance Gliders, 1500-1800 AD: men who sketched out flying contraptions but for the […]
Cocaine, Nicotine and Ancient Egypt October 24, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : AncientAs regular readers of this column will attest Beachcombing is your typical small-minded historian. He doesn’t much like novelty and if there is a controversy he will float effortlessly into the orthodox camp. But with the argument over cocaine use in the ancient world he risks, however briefly, going the other way: if only to […]
From the Mahogany Ship to Mons Badonicus: An Archaeological Fantasia October 17, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, Medieval, ModernInspired by thoughts of Nag Hammadi, Howard Carter and Leslie Alcock at Cadbury Beachcombing spent an evening wondering about archaeological fantasias, discoveries that he hopes will be made before he himself becomes an archaeological subject and is put into the ground. Boudica’s grave. Boudica was, of course, the queen of the Iceni who gave Nero […]
Hearts, Genies and Gnosticism at Nag Hammadi October 14, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, ContemporaryHoward Carter whispering ‘wonderful things’, Leslie Alcock finding Dark Age timber at Cadbury (‘that was Camelot’), Bedouin shepherds investigating a complex of caves at the Dead Sea… All wonderful, of course. But for Beachcombing none of these quite match the thrill of the discovery at Nag Hammadi in 1945. In that year, possibly in December, […]
Women Warriors of Benin July 23, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernHaving tested the limits of masculinity yesterday Beach feels obliged to pay tribute, today, to the fairer sex. He will pass through time to the late nineteenth century and through space to Dahomey (today part of Benin) in Africa where several thousand women formed an important part of the royal army there. Now, of course, […]
Perpetua’s Death Dream July 19, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : AncientBeachcombing decided to bring night visions into the day a month ago, opening a new tag on – note the failure to alliterate – Historic Dreams. He offered as a start Lincoln’s prophetic dream of the President’s own death and raised some questions about how prophetic said dream really was. Today, he offers, instead, a […]
Incest in Ancient Egypt June 29, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : AncientIncest is a fringe interest in most societies. However, Beachcombing has learnt, on a morning trip to his local library, that there are some curious exceptions: a number of Hawaiian clans, certain tribes in the Solomon Islands and, of course, the most famous of them all, the Egyptian pharaohs. Now, it is common knowledge among […]
The Were-Hyenas of Ethiopia June 26, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernIn the winter of last year Beachcombing had the werewolf mania bad and before he got bored with the hairy-handed ones he started to make notes on the Buda of Abyssinia, a winsome African lycanthrope. The following text was published in the second quarter of the nineteenth century and was written by a one-time European […]