Cauls in the Deep South September 5, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, Medieval, ModernBeach has been obsessed the last couple of weeks with baby’s cauls. The caul for readers who don’t know (and Beach was vague previous to the obsession) is the amniotic sac which holds us in our mother’s belly. In some very few cases, a baby is born with a caul in place, in the same […]
Knock on Wood/Head August 23, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Actualite, Contemporary, ModernVictorian and, to a lesser extent, Edwardian writers loved explaining superstitions with bold comparative examples, sweeping generalizations and daring exegeses. However, more recent scholars have been less sure of our ability to unpick the origin of our taboos. Take this brief passage on superstition from Keith Thomas in his Decline (747-748): The virtue attributed to […]
William Thornber and the Witches, Boggarts, Sorcerers and People of the Fylde June 7, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernPart of the StrangeHistory project is to put up sources that for some reason have not made it onto Google Books and the like. In an attempt to do just this Beach spent a long hour typing out, yesterday, 3000 words from William Thornber’s The History of Blackpool and its Neighbourhood (Poulton 1837). I know, […]
Broad Beans, Paschal Candles and Graveside Stories February 25, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernPopular superstitions survived surprisingly late in many parts of Europe. However, these superstitions had two enemies, Christianity and urbanization, enemies that gradually scoured them out of mind and memory. From the arrival of Christianity on the scene (any time between 300 and 1000) and increased urbanization (any time from 1700-1950) any superstition would have to […]
A Magpie Parliament? February 11, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, Modern***Dedicated to Ed*** Magpies are often seen in small groups and this has had a predictable reflex in folklore where there is a charming rhyme (with some regional variations) that children still learn in the UK: One [magpie] for sorrow, two for joy, three for a girl, four for a boy… As to bigger groups […]
Clipping the Church December 16, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Modern***Nine precious days to write a book on the Medieval North Atlantic, expect then a profusion of posts on this subject – there have been a few already. Expect also break down in answering emails. Sorry. Must focus.*** Clipping the Church: a cute little custom that Beach has not been able to properly parallel. On […]
William Bottrell and the Strangest Funeral Procession in the World November 28, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThe year is 1881 and Willam Bottrell has just passed away after a horrific final illness: he lay paralysed in bed for the last year, his mind as fine as ever, his body drying up. Bottrell, for those many who don’t know, was a hero perhaps the hero of Cornish folklore studies because despite having […]
Welsh Candles and a Ghost October 30, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernA couple of weeks ago we travelled to the Church Porch at midnight to see who would die in the coming year. Here is a Welsh equivalent (kind of). Down to the last hundred years it was usual in many a district in Wales to burn candles in the parish church on the eve of […]
Church Porch Devilry October 9, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernMidsummer’s eve doubtless had significance to our distant pagan ancestors, yoked to the land and to the seasons like oxen. What is striking is how often these traditions survived Christianity, the Reformation and even industrialisation. Take one of Beach’s favourite: looking for the dead-to-come on Midsummer’s Eve. Tradition claimed – traditions that still survive in […]
Indecent Lifting and Heaving May 6, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernBeach recently came across the custom of ‘lifting’ for the first time courtesy of Invisible and Two Nerdy History Girls (an excellent blog should you get the chance). The girls describe an instance of lifting in Shrewsbury. This is part of the relevant extract: the full extract is to be found chez Nerd following the […]
Burning Libraries! Two Lost Folklore Collections January 20, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernHistorical blindspots: every age has them. Take the relative lack of interest in folklore prior to the eighteenth century. When folklore heats up in the later nineteenth century you cannot walk across the parlour without tripping over a book on fairies or witches. This means that anything written before say 1860 is particularly precious and any loss all […]
Don’t Play with Fire (in Scotland)! November 29, 2011
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, Modern, PrehistoricIn prehistoric times early humans – or, depending on which chronologies you follow, man’s ancestors – were not able to create fire but harvested it from natural conflagrations. Even in more recent times – ask any scout who has ever had to start a fire without matches on a camping trip – the creation of […]