Small Pox: the Native American Version February 10, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThe greatest weapons that European colonists had at their disposal when they disembarked in the Americas in the sixteenth through the eighteenth centuries were not their muskets or their swords or their armour. They were, of course, their viruses (and those of their animals) with which they inflicted (at least at first unknowingly) devestation on […]
Hooping Cough Cures September 11, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernWe are in 1862 A correspondent transmits the following account of a superstitious ceremony which took place the other day at Neilston [Lowland Scotland]. The jolly blacksmith there is in possession of a fine young she ass, which, with her frolics, has caused great amusement amongst the boys of the town, while some calculating old […]
Weird Birth Omen and the Youngest Roman Emperor September 10, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient***Thanks for David M for pointing out this fascinating piece*** Diadumenian was one of the unluckiest Roman emperors. He was made emperor by his father when he was about nine and he was dead within just over a year (obit 218), when one of those apparently endless third-century revolts pulled the rug from under his […]
Hydropathy: Roby Comes Through August 31, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernHydropathy was one of Victorian England’s most interesting errors, the belief that by ‘taking the waters’ various serious conditions could be cured. Stuff and nonsense? Well, according to modern medical science, yes: and Darwin in the nineteenth century himself experimented with hydropathy (for his mysterious health condition) concluding that any success was really just a […]
The Amphibiotic Ablutionists August 22, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Modern*** Sorry late, Beach family reunited today*** Diving in the freezing water is now a fairly common guarantee of guts and eccentricity. But in early nineteenth-century England it was the height of weirdness. Beach stumbled on these healthy souls while searching for more information about hydropathy. Beach is going to put up a five dollar […]
Witches and Brambles May 9, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernThis is a summary borrowed from Owen Davies’ excellent Witchcraft, Magic and Culture. In December 1924, Alfred John Matthews, aged forty-three, a small-holder of Clyst St Lawrence, Devon, appeared at the Cullhompton petty sessions for scratching and drawing blood from Ellen Garnsworthy, a middle-aged, married woman of the same village. Matthews had a sow which […]
Vision Quest 1#: Blood Loss April 17, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalAround the world different peoples have pioneered different methods to ‘open the doors of consciousness’ through what doctors call hallucinations. Possible keys to said doors include mushrooms, toad poison and smoked grasses (of various descriptions). Beach knew about all these but he was surprised, recently to read about blood loss causing hallucinations. The science behind […]
CCSVI: The Limits of Placebo January 5, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : ActualiteCCSVI is a medical condition that may or that may not explain one of the most mysterious and debilitating illnesses on the planet, Multiple Sclerosis. We look at it here because it is yet another example of a strange-history theme, the difficulty that new knowledge has in emerging against a strong orthodoxy, something that is […]
Not Suitable for Engineers: Choking Danger December 20, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernBeach is not a huge fan of modern medicine. But when you see what our ancestors had to go through health-wise, every so often he feels a certain warmth towards the white coated ones. Take this horrific account concerning Isambard Kingdom Brunel’s brush with death after a conjuring trick accident (!). Mr. Brunel, the celebrated […]
A Fourteen-Month Pregnancy in Nineteenth-century Cornwall? October 25, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernPolperro Press is a small publishing house that produces excellent quality monographs on Cornish themes. If every town of this size – Polperro is an idyllic Cornish port – had a book producing company of a third of this quality historians would be able to give up their day jobs: history, at least western history, […]
How Cats Create Neurotic Societies September 15, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Actualite***Dedicated to Paschal*** Cats, it has been so long… The last cat tag was about cat clocks back in February, before that it was dried cats in 2011 and then there was cat burial in Iceland, black cats and luck and musical instruments that employ cats. But, thinking of today’s post, how can cats create […]
Are Societies What They Eat? September 11, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, Medieval, ModernThere is no question that food and drink change us. If you begin to drink two litres of coca-cola a day, instead of a litre of fizzy water or if you start chewing on cocoa leaves instead of making banana smoothies your family will quickly notice a difference. Here there is and can be no […]
Gluten, Famine and the Slow Crawl of Medical Knowledge August 20, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, Modern***Beach wants to salute his readers for a couple of days as he is going on his yearly retreat (hermit’s cave etc): he’ll see you on the other side, if the wolves don’t come*** Wheat is the grain of the west. The crop that has followed Europeans wherever they have gone for the simple reason […]
Capital Punishment Cobblers August 19, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernA cute little story from France a country which seems to attract a lot of urban myths around judicial execution: the majesty of the guillotine? Many years ago, a celebrated French physician, author of an excellent work on the effects of Imagination, wished to combine theory with practice, in order to confirm the truth of […]
Protestantism, Statues and Sore Breasts/Fronts August 13, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernA week ago now Beach mentioned the Devon folklorist Miss Theo Brown, a great talent who published in the 1960s. He was particularly interested to read yesterday an article of hers on the effect that the reformation had on religious life and folklore in the West Country in Britain. As ‘the old religion’ Catholicism, got […]