Crowds #2: Speaking to Crowds June 18, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernW.B.Yeats once wrote that the most important thing for a ‘man’ was, in his day, no longer a sword but a tongue to speak to the masses. Yeats was living in an age when that was still true. Microphones were allowing the amplification of voices and transport meant that a politician or preacher could travel […]
Worthless Currencies June 12, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Actualite, ContemporaryAs Beach writes Mrs B is travelling on a plane to [first destination deleted] to open a bank account in [second destination deleted] to get the Beachcombing family ‘fortune’ (ahem) as far as possible from the Euro Zone. It may or may not work as, while the Italian State has provided lots of identification documents, […]
Germany über Alles? June 11, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryAccording to many paranoid British and French scholars the history of the last century and a half has been the story of Germany’s attempt to dominate continental Europe. It began with Napoleon III giving up his sword to Bismarck in 1870 and has continued down to the present day with Germany’s EU plotting. Is there […]
Admiral Byrd and Nazi Cobblers June 6, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary***Dedicated to KMH who, not for the first time, inspired the hunt*** The following is the record of an interview with American admiral Richard Byrd which appeared in El Mercurio, a Chilean paper, 5 March 1947: it was written by a US journalist, Lee Van Atta, but seems never to have been published in English. […]
Exclaves! June 4, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Actualite, Contemporary, ModernA strange post today – just for a change… Beach has recently been troubled by the Kaliningrad Oblast, a peculiar bit of Russian territory that stands several hundred kilometres to the west of the Russian frontiers. Now an exclave of Russian life on the borders of Poland and Lithuania, Kalingrad would be just the kind […]
Welsh Pre-Marital Sex, c. 1850 May 11, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernA German tourist in Wales in the 1850s. Our hero befriends, Sarah the girl of the house where he is staying and on whom, Beach suspects, he had something of a crush. However, Sarah, who is the only member of the house who can speak English, is walking out with Owen, the elder son of […]
Aggressive Ghost in Fourteenth-Century Germany May 8, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernBeach is taking a long trip today on a plane with his three-year-old daughter: a first visit to the patria with Little Miss B who is thrilled because she is going to see otters AND eat fish and chips. In this time of holiday and reduced writing he has lined up several reserve posts taken […]
The Babel of History May 2, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, Medieval, ModernThe past according to a much worn-line is ‘a foreign country, they do things differently there’. Of course, if this were all then history would be a doddle. It would be enough to fill the Cutty Sark with sabres and give the natives music sheets for their acres. But, unfortunately for those who like […]
Singing Enemy Songs: Lili Marleen April 13, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryOne of the most moving moments in cinema is the extraordinary ending of Kubrick’s Paths of Glory. A young German girl is pulled in front of a crowd of French soldiers and forced to sing. The poilu mock her but as she nervously begins the mood changes. The soldiers join in and drown her anxious, […]
A Witch’s Secret Letter April 11, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernThis is perhaps the most extraordinary ‘witch’ source of them all. In 1628 Johannes Junius, aged fifty five, burgomaster of Bamberg was taken in by the local authorities as a witch. After days of interrogation he writes a secret letter to his daughter explaining his decision to confess to witchcraft. Here is the voice of the victim that […]
Frau Feie and Jousting April 10, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalAnother book from the burning libraries file, this time from thirteenth-century Saxony. The book is, as the burning library tag suggests, lost but we learn something of its subject matter from a surviving town chronicle. In 1281-1282 Magdeburg decided to hold a jousting tournament with an unusual prize: a woman. Now it must be remembered […]
Suicide and Historical Loopholes April 7, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Actualite, Ancient, Contemporary, ModernSuicide has proved abhorrent to most spiritual traditions. Certainly, the great monotheistic religions and most of the far Eastern religions have condemned ‘self-murder’: cue lots of pulpit bashing and descriptions of hell or unpleasant reincarnations. This begs the question though of what you can do if you live in 500 BC or 500 AD or […]
John Lukacs: The Legacy of the Second World War April 5, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryJohn Lukacs’s The Legacy of the Second World War is, like most books by that brilliant and maverick historian, a bit of a mess. The chapter headings say it all. Chapter One, ‘Seventy Years Later’ and Chapter Two ‘the Place of the Second World War’ can pass muster. However, then everything is thrown off kilter. […]
Crowds #1: And so it begins… Images from 1914 March 21, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary[students in Berlin, off to enlist] Beachcombing has recently become interested in crowd photography: large groups of people, preferably in rather strange or extreme situations. And as part of this ‘project’ he started collecting photographs from perhaps the dizziest month in western history: August 1914. The war is just beginning and young and not […]
Swallowing or Choking on (Operation) Mincemeat February 23, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary***Dedicated to Glyndwr Michael*** Operation Mincemeat is often celebrated as the single greatest act of trickery of the Second World War. In 1943 a Welsh suicide victim was dressed up in the uniform of a British royal marine, put on dry ice in a submarine, thrown into the sea off the coast of Spain with […]