Saturday, 31 March 2007

Team digging back into Headland's past

A WEEK-LONG archaeological dig could be about to shed more light on a community's history. The Headland, in Hartlepool, is currently a hive of activity thanks to an excavation being carried out by Durham University's archaeological services.

It is digging on the land in front of the medieval Manor House and on the site of the former Friarage sports hall and youth centre buildings. Daniel Still, project manager for the dig, said he was hopeful of unearthing Saxon or medieval remains. He added: "The Manor House was originally much larger than it is now, so we are expecting to find some remains of that. We also think we might reveal some traces of the monastic settlement on the Headland – perhaps part of the medieval cloisters. Previous digs have also uncovered Saxon remains, so it is possible that we could come across some of those as well."

The dig will involve six trenches - each more than 6ft wide - being excavated. They will range from 30ft to 120ft long. The dig has been funded by the North Hartlepool Partnership, which is using money from regional development agency One NorthEast to regenerate the Headland. Although the work of the Partnership itself comes to an end at the end of this month, it's hoped that in the longer term the Manor House can be restored and brought back into use, so the dig will reveal any archaeological remains which future developers would need to be aware of.

Councillor John Marshall, chairman of the North Hartlepool Partnership, which has funded the dig, said it was a win-win' situation because people would gain historical knowledge of the Headland as well as bringing back to life a well-loved old building. He said: "Let's hope we can do all of them so we have an area to be proud of."

(Hartlepool Mail - 23 March 2007)

Friday, 30 March 2007

Turning Back Time to York 1300


RESEARCHERS from York Archaeological Trust have identified a remarkable artefact which shows that in 1300, York was at the forefront of science and engineering.

The object, a small circular copper-alloy disc, was discovered during excavations on the site of the former York College For Girls in Low Petergate.

It has been cleaned to reveal an abbreviated Latin inscription around its edge - SIGNUM ROBERTI HOROLOGIARII - which translates as "The seal of Robert the clockmaker".

What makes the discovery exceptional is the fact that early historical records indicate that the first clocks prevailed at a number of major English churches only a few years before the seal was made, with York previously notable for its absence from this list - until now.

Experts say it is likely that Robert the clockmaker was engaged on works in York in 1300 with the most likely venue for his skills being York Minster, although the first references to a clock there do not appear in the surviving documents until much later.

Dr Richard Hall, director of Archaeology at York Archaeological Trust, said: "This is one of the most interesting single objects that we have found for some time. We are still trying to find out more about it - for example, we haven't yet managed to read the last part of the inscription, which should tell us where Robert came from. It opens up a new insight into the sounds and wonders of medieval York."

(The Press - 23 March 2007)

Thursday, 29 March 2007

Viking woman had roots near the Black Sea


The bones of one of the women found in one of Norway's most famous Viking graves suggest her ancestors came from the area around the Black Sea.

The woman herself was "Norwegian," claims Professor Per Holck at the University of Oslo, who has conducted analyses of DNA material taken from her bones. But Holck says that while she came from the area that today is Norway, her forefathers may have lived n the Black Sea region.

olck, attached to the anthropological division of the university's anatomy institute (Anatomisk institutt), isn't willing to reveal more details pending publication of an article in the British magazine "European Archaeology" later this year. He told newspaper Aftenposten, though, that he's recommending the woman's bones be retrieved for further study. They were first found in 1904, when the Oseberg Viking ship was excavated, and analysed by the university.

The analysis data was withheld, however, and the woman's remains were returned to the Oseberg burial mound in 1947. Holck has only worked with the DNA extracted at the time, and he thinks they should be reexamined. He worries, however, that her bones may have been damaged during the past 60 years. If the remains are intact, he said, it would probably be possible to take more DNA tests that could reveal more about the woman and another female's bones also extracted from the Oseberg site.

(Aftenposten - 27 March 2007)



Wednesday, 28 March 2007

Castle Reveals Secrets after 900 Years

AN ancient castle which has been off limits to the public since it was built in 1088 is about to reveal its secrets for the first time.

Aberlleiniog Castle, located on the south east corner of Anglesey, has been witness to a long and fascinating series of owners and events. The little-known castle has been the site of a murder mystery, love triangles and even fatal duels, but few people are aware of its significance and no one has been allowed to visit for almost a thousand years.

All that is now set to change thanks to a £317,500 grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund.

The money will fund crucial restoration work of the castle masonry and strengthen the fabric of the castle mound to preserve its historic features and, through improved access, will ensure it remains a well-preserved focal point for the community for years to come.

Aberlleiniog Castle holds an important place in Welsh history.

A site of conflict between Anglo-Norman colonists and the indigenous Welsh Princes, it was built by Hugh of Avraches, Earl of Chester, after his victory over Gruffydd ap Cynan, King of Gwynedd.

Later it was also significant in the struggle between local families which characterised the Civil War in mid 17th century Anglesey.

The castle remained privately owned from the 11th century until 2004 when Menter M n, the Rural Development Agency for Anglesey, purchased the castle and the 26 acres of adjoining land to give ownership to the people of Anglesey.

The funding will ensure this significant archaeological resource, which holds vital information about Anglo-Norman structures, will be secured for future generations. Recent work has discovered that a fourth tower has already collapsed completely and two of the remaining towers would almost certainly be lost if this essential maintenance work is not carried out.

Jennifer Stewart, Heritage Lottery Fund manager for Wales, said, "Wales' many castles are a key element of our heritage and help to make Wales unique.

"This latest project will secure the future of a castle that is steeped in history but largely unknown outside of the local area.

"Menter M n can now share its fascinating story not only with the local people of Anglesey but across the world. Castles are a big attraction for European and American visitors to Wales and Aberlleiniog will be no exception.

"Once restoration is complete Aberlleiniog Castle will undoubtedly give the area's tourism a boost providing the perfect setting for a rural day out where families can learn about our past while exploring our natural heritage."

The grant will also support the employment of a two-year community coordinator to encourage local people to get involved in the project as volunteers on the site or to assist in the creation of a interpretation panel and leaflet.

The castle is located in ancient woodland in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty that is the perfect habitat for birds, insects and bats, so volunteers will undergo training on how to manage the biodiversity of the site, which Menter M n hopes will achieve Local Nature Reserve status.

Neil Johnstone, an archaeologist and Menter Mon project leader, said, "This is without doubt a very important archaeological site and we are totally focused on increasing interest in promoting the island's heritage."

The untold story of Aberlleiniog Castle

Aberlleiniog Castle was built by Hugh d'Avranches, Earl of Chester, pictured, at the time when Gruffydd ap Cynan was ruler of Gwynedd. When Gruffydd escaped imprisonment at Chester and raised an army, the castle was captured and burnt to the ground.

Sometime later a stone-built castle was constructed on the site, probably by a colourful 17th century character called Thomas Cheadle.

Cheadle, who worked for the Bulkeleys of Baron Hill, had a relationship with Sir Richard Bulkeley's wife. Lady Ann and Cheadle were accused of Sir Richard's murder, but were cleared and later married.

Cheadle professed to be on the side of the Royalists in the Civil War and held the post of Constable of Beaumaris Castle.

But his loyalty appears to have been questionable and he was accused of negotiating to hand the castle over to the Parliamentarians.

Some years later the sons of both Bulkeley and Cheadle fought a duel in which Bulkeley was killed. Cheadle was tried for murder, found guilty and executed by public hanging in Chester.

(Rin Simpson, Western Mail, icWales - 24 March 2007)

Tuesday, 27 March 2007

Heritage Bodies Sponsor Study into Illegal Removal of Archaeology

Oxford Archaeology is to undertake a new project to collate intelligence and monitor activity around the illegal removal of antiquities, otherwise known as nighthawking, from archaeological sites.

The Nighthawks Study will collect data on the extent of damage to our archaeological heritage caused by nighthawking, and a web portal allowing people to fill in an online questionnaire will be launched in April/May 2007.

Backed by English Heritage, Cadw, Historic Scotland, National Museums of Wales and the Portable Antiquities Scheme, the project will cover the whole of the UK and the Crown dependencies of the Isle of Man, Jersey and Guernsey.

It will also seek to foster a climate of opinion within all partners in the heritage sector and the government that the illegal search, removal and sale of antiquities is unacceptable.

Damage to archaeological sites caused by illegal searching and excavating and the sale of archaeological items on internet auction sites is still causing concern amongst heritage bodies, but there is a lack of robust data that details and quantifies the extent of the damage. Convictions are also rare.

“What we are going to do is try to get some reasonably reliable data about the scale of the problem and raise the profile of it with the Police and the Crown Prosecution Service, so that when potential prosecutions present themselves they are pursued,” explained Pete Wilson, English Heritage’s Head of Research Policy (Roman Archaeology) and a leading figure in the subject area of portable antiquities.

Dr Wilson points to a recent case in Kent that saw a metal detectorist’s house raided and several items found with mud still on them. The detectorist even had the find locations of the pieces logged on his computer, but the case never made it to prosecution.

There have even been reports of a team in a white van armed with equipment that would rival English Heritage’s own geophysical teams, whilst at Warborough Roman site in Surrey a team of nighthawkers turned up with a lorry and a mechanical digger and started taking up great parts of the earth for sifting and sorting at another location.

“There is a feeling that the level of organisation is such that there is an element who are, as much as you can do with these type of antiquities, finding things to order,” said Dr Wilson.

Most metal detectorists belong to bona fide clubs that responsibly log their finds and work closely with the Finds Liaison Officers (FLOs) of the Portable Antiquities Scheme (PAS), which helps finders log their finds and map locations.

Every year thousands of objects are discovered in England, Wales and Northern Ireland - mostly by metal detector users. PAS, which is managed by the British Museum on behalf of the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, offers the only proactive method for systematically logging and recording them for the public benefit.

The Finds Liaison Officers work with local organisations and museums to help members of the public to record their archaeological finds and navigate their way through the Treasure Act. The data is then made available through the scheme’s website at www.finds.org.uk

By law, certain objects, such as old gold and silver coins, can only be sold if they are reported under the 1996 Treasure Act.

Metal detecting clubs, key archaeological organisations, and landowners’ organisations came together on May 2 2006 to launch a Code of Practice on Responsible Metal Detecting in England and Wales. The code built on earlier efforts to provide guidance for all users of metal detectors.

But despite the good work of the PAS and Metal Detector Clubs there are still a minority of irresponsible individuals who use their hobby illicitly for personal gain.

“Metal Detecting, if done properly and responsibly, has an important part to play in understanding our past, however - there is still a minority of metal detectorists who do so outside of the law,” said Michael Lewis, Deputy Director of the PAS.

“What we hope the nighthawking project does is raise the issue onto the political agenda. The basis of the problem is that it is so difficult to quantify this activity, which is the whole point of the study.”

Data on nighthawking activities will be collected through a questionnaire filled out online or on paper. Key organisations will be asked to contribute information to the project and interviews will be conducted. The project will also collect data on the illicit sale of goods of archaeological material online and elsewhere.

For their part, the popular online auction site eBay.co.uk launched an online guide in October 2006, created with the assistance of the British Museum and PAS, to buying and selling antiquities safely on the auction with advice about reporting obligations.

PAS say they have noticed a marked decline in the amount of archaeological antiquities on the site and sellers of such items have also begun noting when something has been logged by a Finds Liaison Officer or been through the Treasure process. But the perception persists amongst heritage bodies that illicit sales continue; and the monitoring of the illicit sale of antiquities being traded on eBay and elsewhere is still relatively piecemeal and under-resourced.

“We’re in the very early stages of this,” added Dr Wilson. “Oxford Archaeology are leading the research and will be talking to archaeologists, FLOs and metal detectorists but we don’t know at this stage how the project is going to look at the problem of data validation. There are obvious sensitivities when compiling data on what is essentially criminal activity.”

(By Richard Moss, 24 Hour Museum - 16 March 2007)

Monday, 26 March 2007

Hill of a fight looming over Bannockburn

IT PLAYED a key role in the greatest ever Scottish victory over the English but - almost 700 years after the fight ended - it now faces annihilation.

Robert the Bruce's camp followers sheltered behind what became Gillies Hill during the 14th-century Battle of Bannockburn until their legendary, and decisive, charge against the enemy towards the end of the conflict.

But the historic mound - renamed after the battle in their honour - is set to be eradicated as a result of quarrying for stone to use in making roads. Although the site has been scarred by small-scale quarrying for more than a century, the local council admits far more extensive work is about to begin and there is nothing anyone can do to stop it.

Historians and campaigners last night warned that an important landmark in Scottish history was about to be obliterated. Bannockburn expert Dr Fiona Watson, a lecturer in medieval warfare at Stirling University, said the site played a "huge part in the story of the historic battle in 1314. Traditionally, the Gillies Hill provides the setting to a turning point in the Battle of Bannockburn," she said. "Bruce's 'small folk' were concealed behind the Gillies Hill, and when they emerged the English thought they were reinforcements. It was the final straw for the English and chaos ensued. Whatever was left of the English army fled. This was the moment when Edward II was persuaded to leave the field."

The "reinforcements" were in fact servants, members of the baggage train and men who had joined Bruce's ranks late on.

"Others may simply have been locals who wanted to claim they had been a part of such a famous victory," Watson said. "There is no doubt in my mind that this event happened and it would be a great shame if something like this hill, which still represents such an important moment in our history, was lost."

The new quarrying plan has also angered locals. One, who asked not to be named, said: "This physical icon of Scotland's greatest battle should not be smashed away. It is a beautiful area for people from Cambusbarron and further afield and the impact of the quarrying on wildlife will be immense."

Cambusbarron Community Council has set up the Murrayshall Quarry Liaison Group to ensure the concerns of the community are heard.

Convener and former community council chairman Michael Graham said the proposals would involve the removal of substantial proportions of the hill.

"There is an awful lot of history at Gillies Hill and I am sure 99% of local people would back the sentiment that it should not destroyed. The impact of quarrying there is a real concern but whether anything can be done about it is another matter as a planning consent is already in place."

Stirling Council's regional archaeologist Lorna Main said that quarrying the Gillies Hill would also impact on an Iron Age fort in the area.

"The area has been nibbled at for up to 150 years," she said. "When they [the quarry companies] are finished there may be no hill left."

The two companies involved in the quarrying plan are Hanson Aggregates and Tarmac, which will extract whinstone for road building.

A spokesman for Stirling Council's planning department said consent to quarry the site was originally granted in 1982 and that the new work could start within "a couple of months. Both companies propose to reactivate the Murrayshall Quarry at Gillies Hill. Tarmac will begin work again in the next few months, and Hanson have advised they will start in the summer. A substantial part of the area will be quarried out."

The spokesman confirmed that the council could not stop the work taking place as consent to quarry the area had already been given. "There are conditions affecting access, hours of working, dust, noise, blasting and vibration, but nothing to prevent the work taking place," he added.

A spokesman for Tarmac, which owns part of the Murrayshall quarry, said: "There is already a hole in the hill, and that hole will become larger.

"There is an approved planning scheme, but it is difficult for me to picture the difference to the overall size of the hill."

A spokesman for Hanson Aggregates said the company could reactivate part of the quarry "later in the year" but added: "We are aware of local concern and we are speaking to the local community council.

"We have also spoken to Historic Scotland and Scottish National Heritage and have also had archaeologists look at the site to review our information. It is not in Hanson's interests to work against communities."

(by George Mair - Scotsman.com - 18 March 2007)

Sunday, 25 March 2007

Bedford Book of Hours to go on display


The Bedford Book of Hours, described as "an outstanding work of late medieval manuscript art", is to go on display at the British Library next week.

The lavishly illustrated book is described as "the finest manuscript to survive from the renowned library of John, the Duke of Bedford (brother of King Henry V of England)".

It appears alongside the Sobieski Hours, another richly illustrated 15th century manuscript, which has been lent by The Queen for the purposes of this exhibition entitled The Bedford Hours: Owners and Illuminators.

Both books are the work of the 15th century artist known as the Bedford Master.

It had previously been thought that the Bedford Hours was made to commemorate the duke's marriage to Anne of Burgundy on 13 May 1423, as their portraits appear in its pages. However, the manuscript was probably started earlier, between 1410 and 1415, for another patron. The duke was English regent in France from 1422 to 1435.

(By James Burleigh, Daily Telegraphy - 17 March 2007)

Saturday, 24 March 2007

20 coffins found at ancient burial site

At least 20 coffins thought to date back to the medieval period have been discovered at an ancient burial ground found at a Preston building site.

Construction work on a new hotel and student accommodation behind the Brunel Court flats on Marsh Lane stopped when developers uncovered five coffins last month. Experts were called in to investigate the discoveries, thought to be from the 14th or 15th centuries, and it is understood at least 20 coffins have now been identified. A source at the site said some of the remains of bodies have been destroyed but many of the coffins have been exhumed in superb condition, with the wood still intact.

The expert said: "We have found at least 20 graves altogether and some of them were found on top of each other. Some of the coffins have been in extremely good nick. We have got quite a few walls coming out which could, hopefully, be the church."

Oxford Archaeology North will continue to comb the area for further coffins. A spokesman said they hope to complete their work at the site by the end of next week. Construction work has now resumed on areas of the site where archaeologists have completed their excavations.

(by Matthew Squires - Preston Today, Lancashire News - 16 March 2007)

Friday, 23 March 2007

Mystery Plays for the 21st Century


CHESTER'S medieval Mystery Plays will be given a 21st-century look when staged in the city next year.


The Bible plays, following the history of the world from the Creation to the Crucifixion, will include sections omitted from the last production in 2003, explains artistic director Robin Goddard.

He promised it would be even better than that production of the play series, staged only once every five years. "This next version will surpass everything done before," he said. "In using the medieval script of the timeless story to produce an entertainment to appeal to 21st-century audiences, we intend to create a unique theatrical experience that is innovative, thought-provoking, all-inclusive and relevant to everyone."

The new staging will include a revolving stage and special effects including water and pyrotechnics. He would also be looking for people with circus skills to take part.

Goddard explained: "The words may be medieval in origin but the interpretation will be very much that of now, involving the latest lighting techniques and sound equipment. Any translation has to stay true to the original, but it must also present a modern understanding of the stories. It will deal with the central universal conflict between good and evil. For the audience, it will be a memorable emotional journey."

The production running between June 28 and July 19 next year will be very much a show, as in the past, using everyday people in leading roles. Those interested in taking part are asked to contact project manager Sarah Mather on 07789 727 413.

Booking is already open on 01244 304 618.

(by Philip Key, Liverpool Daily Post - 14 March 2007)

Thursday, 22 March 2007

English, Irish, Scots: They’re All One, Genes Suggest

Britain and Ireland are so thoroughly divided in their histories that there is no single word to refer to the inhabitants of both islands. Historians teach that they are mostly descended from different peoples: the Irish from the Celts, and the English from the Anglo-Saxons who invaded from northern Europe and drove the Celts to the country’s western and northern fringes.

But geneticists who have tested DNA throughout the British Isles are edging toward a different conclusion. Many are struck by the overall genetic similarities, leading some to claim that both Britain and Ireland have been inhabited for thousands of years by a single people that have remained in the majority, with only minor additions from later invaders like Celts, Romans, Angles , Saxons, Vikings and Normans.

The implication that the Irish, English, Scottish and Welsh have a great deal in common with each other, at least from the geneticist’s point of view, seems likely to please no one.

The genetic evidence is still under development, however, and because only very rough dates can be derived from it, it is hard to weave evidence from DNA, archaeology, history and linguistics into a coherent picture of British and Irish origins.

That has not stopped the attempt. Stephen Oppenheimer, a medical geneticist at the University of Oxford, says the historians’ account is wrong in almost every detail. In Dr. Oppenheimer’s reconstruction of events, the principal ancestors of today’s British and Irish populations arrived from Spain about 16,000 years ago, speaking a language related to Basque.

The British Isles were unpopulated then, wiped clean of people by glaciers that had smothered northern Europe for about 4,000 years and forced the former inhabitants into southern refuges in Spain and Italy. When the climate warmed and the glaciers retreated, people moved back north.

The new arrivals in the British Isles would have found an empty territory, which they could have reached just by walking along the Atlantic coastline, since there were still land bridges then across what are now English Channel and the Irish Sea.

This new population, who lived by hunting and gathering, survived a sharp cold spell called the Younger Dryas that lasted from 12,300 to 11,000 years ago. Much later, some 6,000 years ago, agriculture finally reached the British Isles from its birthplace in the Near East.

Agriculture may have been introduced by people speaking Celtic, in Dr. Oppenheimer’s view. Although the Celtic immigrants may have been few in number, they spread their farming techniques and their language throughout Ireland and the western coast of Britain. Later immigrants arrived from northern Europe had more influence on the eastern and southern coasts. They too spread their language, a branch of German, but these invaders’ numbers were also small compared with the local population.

In all, about three-quarters of the ancestors of today’s British and Irish populations arrived between 15,000 and 7,500 years ago, when rising sea levels finally divided Britain and Ireland from the Continent and from one another, Dr. Oppenheimer calculates in a new book, “The Origins of the British: A Genetic Detective Story” (Carroll & Graf, 2006).

As for subsequent invaders, Ireland received the fewest; the invaders’ DNA makes up about 12 percent of the Irish gene pool, Dr. Oppenheimer estimates, but it accounts for 20 percent of the gene pool in Wales, 30 percent in Scotland, and about one-third in eastern and southern England.

Still, no single group of invaders is responsible for more than 5 percent of the current gene pool, Dr. Oppenheimer says on the basis of genetic data.

He cites figures from the archaeologist Heinrich Haerke that the Anglo-Saxon invasions that began in the fourth century A.D. added about 250,000 people to a British population of one to two million, an estimate Dr. Oppenheimer notes is larger than his but considerably less than the substantial replacement of the English population assumed by others. The Norman invasion of 1066 A.D. brought not many more than 10,000 people, according to Dr. Haerke.

Other geneticists say Dr. Oppenheimer’s reconstruction is plausible, though some disagree with details. Several said that genetic methods did not give precise enough dates to be confident of certain aspects, like when the first settlers arrived.

“Once you have an established population, it is quite difficult to change it very radically,” said Daniel G. Bradley, a geneticist at Trinity College, Dublin. But he said he was “quite agnostic” as to whether the original population became established in Britain and Ireland immediately after the glaciers retreated 16,000 years ago, as Dr. Oppenheimer argues, or more recently, in the Neolithic Age, which began 10,000 years ago.

Bryan Sykes, another Oxford geneticist, said he agreed with Dr. Oppenheimer that the ancestors of “by far the majority of people” were present in the British Isles before the Roman conquest of A.D. 43. “The Saxons, Vikings and Normans had a minor effect, and much less than some of the medieval historical texts would indicate,” he said.

His conclusions, based on his own genetic survey and information in his genealogical testing service, Oxford Ancestors, are reported in his new book, “Saxons, Vikings and Celts: The Genetic Roots of Britain and Ireland.”

A different view of the Anglo-Saxon invasions has been developed by Mark Thomas of University College, London. Dr. Thomas and colleagues say the invaders wiped out substantial numbers of the indigenous population, replacing 50 percent to 100 percent of those in central England.

Their argument is that the Y chromosomes of English men seem identical to those of people in Norway and the Friesland area of the Netherlands, two regions from which the invaders may have originated.

Dr. Oppenheimer disputes this, saying the similarity between the English and northern European Y chromosomes arises because both regions were repopulated by people from the Iberian refuges after the glaciers retreated.

Dr. Sykes said he agreed with Dr. Oppenheimer on this point, but another geneticist, Christopher Tyler-Smith of the Sanger Centre near Cambridge, said the jury was still out. “There is not yet a consensus view among geneticists, so the genetic story may well change,” he said. As to the identity of the first postglacial settlers, Dr. Tyler-Smith said he “would favor a Neolithic origin for the Y chromosomes, although the evidence is still quite sketchy.”

Dr. Oppenheimer’s population history of the British Isles relies not only on genetic data but also on the dating of language changes by methods developed by geneticists. These are not generally accepted by historical linguists, who long ago developed but largely rejected a dating method known as glottochronology.

Geneticists have recently plunged into the field, arguing that linguists have been too pessimistic and that advanced statistical methods developed for dating genes can also be applied to languages.

Dr. Oppenheimer has relied on work by Peter Forster, a geneticist at Anglia Ruskin University, to argue that Celtic is a much more ancient language than supposed, and that Celtic speakers could have brought knowledge of agriculture to Ireland, where it first appeared. He also adopts Dr. Forster’s argument, based on a statistical analysis of vocabulary, that English is an ancient, fourth branch of the Germanic language tree, and was spoken in England before the Roman invasion.

English is usually assumed to have developed in England, from the language of the Angles and Saxons, about 1,500 years ago. But Dr. Forster argues that the Angles and the Saxons were both really Viking peoples who began raiding Britain ahead of the accepted historical schedule. They did not bring their language to England because English, in his view, was already spoken there, probably introduced before the arrival of the Romans by tribes such as the Belgae, whom Julius Caesar describes as being present on both sides of the Channel.

The Belgae may have introduced some socially transforming technique, such as iron-working, which would lead to their language supplanting that of the indigenous inhabitants, but Dr. Forster said he had not yet identified any specific innovation from the archaeological record.

Germanic is usually assumed to have split into three branches: West Germanic, which includes German and Dutch; East Germanic, the language of the Goths and Vandals; and North Germanic, consisting of the Scandinavian languages. Dr. Forster’s analysis shows English is not an off-shoot of West Germanic, as usually assumed, but is a branch independent of the other three, which also implies a greater antiquity. Germanic split into its four branches some 2,000 to 6,000 years ago, Dr. Forster estimates.

Historians have usually assumed that Celtic was spoken throughout Britain when the Romans arrived. But Dr. Oppenheimer argues that the absence of Celtic place names in England — words for places are particularly durable — makes this unlikely.

If the people of the British Isles hold most of their genetic heritage in common, with their differences consisting only of a regional flavoring of Celtic in the west and of northern European in the east, might that perception draw them together? Geneticists see little prospect that their findings will reduce cultural and political differences.

The Celtic cultural myth “is very entrenched and has a lot to do with the Scottish, Welsh and Irish identity; their main identifying feature is that they are not English,” said Dr. Sykes, an Englishman who has traced his Y chromosome and surname to an ancestor who lived in the village of Flockton in Yorkshire in 1286.

Dr. Oppenheimer said genes “have no bearing on cultural history.” There is no significant genetic difference between the people of Northern Ireland, yet they have been fighting with each other for 400 years, he said.

As for his thesis that the British and Irish are genetically much alike, “It would be wonderful if it improved relations, but I somehow think it won’t.”

(By Nicholas Wade, The New York Times - 5 March 2007)

Wednesday, 21 March 2007

Arrival of abbey relics was important day for museum

THE Vale of Evesham Historical Society will mark the 50th anniversary of the opening of Almonry Museum later this month. Gerry Barnett has been trawling the archives and found a big day from 50 years ago.

It came in the form of the announcement in March, 1957, that the great chair of Evesham Abbey, described as the most important relic of old Evesham and a priceless exhibit in the history of English furniture, would be on show at the Almonry museum from April onwards.

Mr B G Cox, honorary secretary of the Vale of Evesham Historical Society, the honorary curator of the museum, said that the Rudge Estate had consented to the society having custody of the chair for exhibition.

With the chair would come the Quarter Boys, the carved oak figures of medieval soldiers that were at one time erected high on the eastern face of the bell tower, and various other important, but smaller, abbey relics.

The chair and the other articles have for many years been preserved by the Rudge family at Abbey Manor, where visitors have been allowed to see them, and on two occasions they have been loaned for short exhibitions in Evesham organised by the historical society under the auspices of the town council.

But the latest decision of Mr J E Rudge represents an important development in their story. Mr Cox, who had heard of it from the town clerk, Mr N F Davies, said: "This news will be received with much pleasure, as it has long been felt by many in Evesham that these important relics should be available for the enjoyment of the public in the town's museum.

"I think it would be wrong to say that it should have happened years ago, because there has not been any suitable repository for such things until now.

"In my opinion, the public should be grateful to the Rudge family for having looked after and maintained these priceless relics of the former abbey for so many years and now to have made it possible for all to see them."

The chair is about 650 years old and is one of the few survivors of an age when chairs of any kind were extremely rare - the symbol and seat of authority. There is believed to be only one other chair in England of comparable historical significance and that is at York Minster. But in its style and fine state of preservation, the Evesham chair is probably unique. It is certainly priceless.

George May (History of Evesham, 1845, p65) describes it as "a chair of state, of dimensions suited to contain the lordly abbot in the plentitude of his array". After the dissolution in 1539, the chair became a fixture in the Almonry, and in 1664 passed with the abbey site into the hands of Edward Rudge, esquire, citizen and alderman of London.

Until about 1860, the Quarter Boys stood over the eastern clock face of the bell tower, on a ledge under a canopy. They were then taken down, cleaned and transferred to Abbey Manor. Originally, they struck the quarters on two small bells placed between them and were worked by a mechanical contrivance from inside the bell chamber.

E A B Barnard (The Tower and Bell of Evesham, 1910, p16) says: "How many years they were in position it is impossible to say, but it is quite likely that they were placed there when the Tower was first built (c.1520). The armour they wear is of the period of Edward IV (1442-1483). The figures are of oak - for many years obscured by successive coats of whitewash - and each is about 3ft 6in in height."

(Evesham Journal - 8 March 2007)

Tuesday, 20 March 2007

The pilgrim way

Your skin's rubbed raw by four days of marching in a woollen tunic, your entertainment is reciting Latin prayer and each night you sleep on a bed of straw.

It may sound unappealing but 18 people have already agreed to don cloth hoods and bring Chaucer's Canterbury Tales to Norfolk this September. A troupe of 14th century characters from the prim prioress to the flour-caked miller will embark on a 35-mile pilgrimage from Norwich Cathedral to Walsingham to raise money for the Sprowston-based Mediaeval Trust.

But the trip will be no Disney ride, pilgrims will wear lurid woollen or linen tunics and hoods, sleep in barns, eat a medieval diet of bread and ale and rely on storytellers and musicians playing the lute and the bagpipes to pass the time.

Trust member Ian Pycroft is appealing for people to fill the remaining six places on the pilgrimage and says it will be a unique opportunity to learn more about both mediaeval and modern times.

Mr Pycroft said: “This is not just a jaunt but is a piece of serious research into what it was like on a medieval pilgrimage, eating their diet and wearing their clothes. We want to make it rough and ready and take it right back to basics and see how people fare without their mobile phones, modern high-sugar diet and coffee. During the 14th century Walsingham was as important as Jerusalem or Santiago de Compostela and taking part in this kind of pilgrimage would have been a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for many people. We are using characters from Chaucer's Canterbury Tales and everybody will keep to their role as much as possible. We have people from all walks of life taking part, from computer programmers to employees of Norwich Union.”

Not everybody will be suffering to the same degree, true to the tales there will be more privileged characters such as the knight and prioress who will be on horseback while other less fortunates, such as the miller and the cook, will carry packs on foot.

Pilgrims will set off on the four-day trek on September 11 from St. Lukes Chapel in the cathedral, sail up the River Wensum in a medieval sail boat to New Mills and march along bridleways, footpaths and across open countryside until they reach the Slipper Chapel in Walsingham to celebrate the Feast Day of the Holy Cross.

The trust hopes to raise £5,000 to pay for its annual running costs, as well as funds for other local organisations.

* The trust is also looking for businesses to sponsor the pilgrimage. For more information or to take part ring 01692 535613, visit www.mediaevaltrust.freeuk.com or e-mail: medieavaltrust@gmail.com


(Fakenham & Wells Times - 14 March 2007)

Monday, 19 March 2007

Medieval Manuscript to be Put Online

More than 800 years ago, a scribe labored to copy down a Latin translation of one of Plato's dialogues, the Timaeus. Elsewhere, a different scribe copied down the Old French story Chanson de Roland. The manuscripts, complete with centuries of notes in the margins, were later combined into one codex called Digby 23 and eventually bequeathed to Oxford University, where it has rested quietly since the 13th century. Some of the margin notes, called glosses, may have been unread for years, said Sarah Jane Murray, assistant professor of medieval literature and French at Baylor University.

If Murray has her way, Digby 23 will still rest quietly in Oxford, but it won't be unread. She proposes to make the manuscript and all its notes available on a Web site: http://timaeus.baylor.edu/home . "The glosses are important historical witnesses to the way that people at the time were reading the Timaeus," Murray said. "Language is a cultural witness of society at the time and to be able to provide scholars a chance to study it is very interesting."

Murray first became interested in the possibilities offered by the field of humanities computing, using electronic technologies to study humanities, as a graduate student at Princeton University, where she was involved with one of the earliest humanities computing projects. "As I became involved in the process, it taught me new ways to read documents that really cannot be approached in critical editions," Murray said. "It taught me the value of the manuscript but also the value of electronic technologies to help us study manuscripts and to learn to ask new questions about the medieval period that we could not have asked before."

The Digby 23 project differs from other projects because it does not just transcribe what the text says, but also all the different characters used in the text. "Just like secretaries used to use shorthand, scribes use different symbols to represent different words," said Amanda Weppler, a Cypress, Texas, junior and one of Murray's research assistants. "There are also some that don't seem to serve a specific purpose except stylistically."

This may not seem important, Murray admitted, but she added, "We're trying to preserve, as best we can, all the information in the manuscript. So we are not telling people what to study; we're making it possible for people to ask any question they want about the manuscript."

This is also important for scholars who are interested in studying not just the text itself but also how the language changed over time and how scholars in the past studied the text. "If you're interested in studying how the Timaeus or the Song of Roland was read by medieval readers, they were nothing like the paperbacks that are published today," Murray said. "And we're interested in studying how people read the Timaeus then."

The Digby 23 project will also eventually allow scholars to search for other things in the manuscript, such as themes and images. Many projects just scan manuscripts online so people can view them, Murray said. "The problem with this is ... we're using the computer just as a photocopy machine that's making pictures available, but you still have to read them by hand just as you would if you were sitting in front of the manuscript," she said. "Imagine a world where all the manuscript images were completely searchable." Murray said she and her team hope to create a transcription of each image that is not meant to be read, but allows the engine to make the picture searchable.

Another way technology is changing the study of humanities is by offering scholars a different way to make an argument, according to Vika Zafrin, who is pursuing a Ph.D. in humanities computing at Brown University. "(Humanities Computing) is research and presentation of materials that either can't be easily done on paper or can't be done on paper at all," she said. "We now have the technology to do all kinds of exciting things."

She said she was especially interested to see that the Digby 23 project would be encoding themes in the manuscript. Generally, projects similar to this track the number of times each word is used in the text and what part of speech it is. Murray and her team intend to not only do this, but also to cite each time different themes occur in the text. For example, a search for "love" will pull up every passage in the text that relates to that theme. Identifying what part of speech a word is in a sentence is not subject to debate, Zafrin said. "But saying, 'This word means fear in this sentence' is," she said. "Encoding themes is inherently subjective."

She also said the normal process of writing a scholarly article in response to another article can take months or even years because of the peer-review process, but sites like the Digby 23 project Web site offer a quick and easy way for scholars to respond to one another. "It's a really exciting way to express an argument differently than a linear-written article and should be more likely to elicit responses because it's easier to provide a short response to very specific questions," she said.

Murray is assisted by Stephen Bush, a Waco, Texas, graduate student, and Weppler. Bush manages the technical aspects of running the Web site and Weppler transcribes the text.

Weppler, who also invents names for new or unusual characters, said this experience has taught her more than just how to read medieval Latin. "I've also learned the ability to be flexible and solve problems," she said. "I've learned to deduce what a word means and what a symbol means, even if I'm not familiar with a symbol. It's pretty rare for even graduate students to get to do this sort of thing. This is really a remarkable opportunity."

The Digby 23 project has been funded by a grant from the Young Investigator Development program of Baylor, Murray said. This funding has enabled her to pay Weppler and Bush, as well as to cover other start-up expenses. "I would love to get to the stage where we have enough funding to employ a team of students and not just two," Murray said.

She said she has applied for a $30,000 Digital Innovation Grant from the National Endowment for Humanities, which would allow the team to finish building the prototype over the next year. "We're excited, but at the same time we realize that the competition is fierce and it would be almost completely unexpected for us to win the first time around, so we'll re-apply," she said.

Murray said one of the things she enjoys about her research on the Digby 23 manuscript is exploring connections between the two texts. Though people often assume their attachment was arbitrary, Murray said she believes there is a reason the texts were put together. "Everybody has assumed that these two manuscripts were attached for no reason whatsoever, because what would a minstrel story about knights have to do with Plato's dialogue?" she said.

Timaeus, Murray said, contains the first written account of the myth of Atlantis. In the dialogue, a Greek lawgiver visits Egypt and marvels at how old and wise Egypt is. An Egyptian priest tells him that Athens is old as well. "He says, 'We're nothing compared to Athens, but you don't know your own history,'" Murray said.

The priest tells the story of a country called Atlantis, which tried to conquer Europe and Asia. Athens saved the world by defeating Atlantis in battle, but shortly afterward a tidal wave swallowed the whole city. Since Athens did not write the story down, no one remembered it but the Egyptians, who recorded it in their temples. The story connects to Chanson de Roland because Roland is the first recorded account of a great battle in French history, Murray said. This battle helped to define France as a nation.

"Plato, I suppose, understands the point of the myth because he's the first person to write it down and so it comes to us," Murray said. "The motto, I think, of the myth of Atlantis is that, without writing, we have no knowledge of the past. Without writing, we have no idea where we came from. Without writing, we too are children."

And it seems that, with the help of Murray and her research team, these myths will be rerecorded in a new form of writing to reach yet another generation.

Baylor U. prof. hopes to put ancient manuscript online

(By Kate Boswell - The Lariat Via / News for Medievalists - 7 March 2007)

Sunday, 18 March 2007

Silbury Hill reveals Roman settlement

Archaeologists have discovered a Roman settlement at the base of Silbury Hill, an ancient man-made mound in Wiltshire, southwest England, English Heritage said on Saturday.

The 5,000-year-old hill is the largest man-made prehistoric monument in Europe and appears to contain no burial or shrine. Its original purpose remains a mystery. The find shows Romans were living in its shadow some 3,000 years after the 34-metre (112-ft) high mound was built.

The village-sized settlement straddled the Roman road from London to Bath and lies where the road crossed the Winterbourne River, an obvious stop-over point for travellers. It was laid out in a typical Roman ladder grid, with buildings and small streets running off a central North-South thoroughfare.

"We had no idea that a Roman village of such a size lay this close to Silbury Hill," said English Heritage Geophysicist Neil Linford. The settlement was discovered by archaeologists using specially developed caesium magnetometers.

These sensitive instruments pick up disturbances in the Earth's magnetic field caused by human activity, particularly the use of fire on iron oxides in soil.

"It could be that what we have here is something like a roadside village, where Roman travellers would have changed horses and stayed overnight on the way to Bath, but also a place of pilgrimage focussed on the Hill," said English Heritage Regional Director Bob Bewley.

(Reters.uk - 11 March 2007)

Saturday, 17 March 2007

Experts reveal 'ancient massacre'


Bones found at a prehistoric burial site indicate they belonged to victims of an ancient massacre, say scientists.

Remains of 14 people were discovered at Wayland's Smithy, near Uffington White Horse, Oxfordshire, in the 1960s. Latest techniques date the bones at between 3590 BC and 3560 BC, and have led experts to believe the people may have died in a Neolithic Age massacre. English Heritage carried out the work with the help of Cardiff University and the University of Central Lancashire.

Flint arrowhead

Michael Wysocki of the University of Central Lancashire says the findings suggest the Neolithic Age was more violent than previously thought. The victims - three of them probably killed by arrows - could have died in a rush for land or livestock, he added.

He said: "We know one person was shot through the lower abdomen because we have found the tiny tip of a flint arrowhead embedded in their pelvic bone. We also know that the bodies of two people were scavenged and partially dismembered by dogs or wolves before their remains were buried in the monument. All this new evidence suggests that the period between 3625 BC and 3590 BC may have been one of increasing social tension and upheaval."

Revealing comparisons

The research also indicates that the use of Neolithic long barrows was short-lived - and did not take place over hundreds of years as previously thought.

English Heritage radiocarbon dating expert Alex Bayliss said: "With this research, we can now think about the Neolithic period in terms of individuals and communities and make useful and revealing comparisons between their choices and behaviour in the remote past. This dating programme demands a revolution in our thinking about prehistory and not just that of early Neolithic burial monuments in southern Britain."


(BBC News - 12 March 2007)

Friday, 16 March 2007

Restoration grants earmarked for Scottish churches

A SCOTTISH church featured on the BBC's Restoration Village series is among nine houses of worship that hope to receive a generous gift to its offering plate.

Cromarty East Church received initial financial support - known as a stage one pass - of £641,000 from the Heritage Lottery Fund, it was announced today. The church, which is in a perilous state, is thought to date back to medieval times when the area included an economically thriving port.

The lottery money will be used toward restoring the church and will focus on getting people involved and providing opportunities for education. Once complete, the building will be a venue for concerts, occasional worship, weddings and events.

Colin McLean, Heritage Lottery Fund manager for Scotland, said: "There is a huge amount of public support for this building so we are delighted to be involved in saving it. It will be magical to see such an historic church once again take its rightful place as a hub for community life."

The Lottery Fund announced similar grants today for eight other churches around Scotland. They include:

  • St Magnus Scottish Episcopal Church, Lerwick - £125,000
  • Scottish Episcopal Church of St Mary and St Peter, Montrose - £90,000
  • Tillicoultry Parish Church, Tillicoultry - £79,700
  • St Columba's Church, Glenrothes - £95,000
  • Reid Memorial Church, Edinburgh - £27,500
  • St John's Church Renfield, Glasgow - £103,500
  • St Paul's Roman Catholic Church, Whiteinch, Glasgow - £129,000
  • St Teresa's of Lisieux, Possilpark, Glasgow - £142,000

All of the churches received a stage one pass grant from the Lottery Fund. This means that money has been earmarked by the organisation for the project but it must pass a second application before securing the full grant.

Today's awards total £1.4 million. To date, the Lottery Fund has invested in more than £450 million to Scotland's heritage.

(By Will Springer, Scotsman.com - Heritage & Culture - 12 March 2007)

Thursday, 15 March 2007

Big sum for medieval calculator

An astrolabe quadrant, a forerunner of the pocket calculator, is expected to fetch up to Pounds 100,000 at auction.

The brass instrument, made in England in 1388, was used for telling the time, surveying, mapping the stars and making calculations. It is one of only eight known examples and was found during building work at a restaurant in a medieval building in Canterbury, Kent, in 2005. It will be sold by Bonhams in Knightsbridge, London, on March 21.

(The Times of London - 15 February 2007)

Wednesday, 14 March 2007

Digs turns up secrets of historic gardens

AN archaeological dig is already uncovering secrets of Gisborough Priory Gardens’ past.

The first day of the dig by experts from Durham University Archaeological Services has uncovered a section with mysterious stones under the grand terrace. Medieval pottery and glass fragments and roof tiles have also been found.Archaeologists are looking for evidence of the surface of the terrace.

Gisborough Priory Project secretary Ann Roe said: “This archaeological investigation is one of the first stages in the planned restoration of woodland and 18th century gardens on land next to Gisborough Priory.

“The archaeologists will be working in several areas in the woodland. Volunteers have already spent more than 100 hours working to clear the areas where trenches will be dug. Archaeological evidence will be put together with other information to help plan the way in which the gardens will be restored over the coming years.”

The work has been made possible by the award of £21,500 from the Heritage Lottery Fund and a further £3,500 from Guisborough Market Town Partnership.

Mrs Roe said: “A great big thank you goes to all the hard-working volunteers who have helped us to start uncovering these lost gardens over the last few days.”

The dig will continue over the next two weeks and anyone interested in finding out what is happening is invited to come along this Saturday and Sunday to find out more.
Visitors must enter via the English Heritage Gisborough Priory site.

Normal entrance charges apply.

(Evening gazette - 8 March 2007)

Tuesday, 13 March 2007

Medieval treasure from a junk pit: Archaeological dig throws up high-tech instrument

WHEN the owners of a restaurant in the historic British city of Canterbury dug the foundations for an extension to their period property, they may have hoped to find an old coin or two. Instead, they unearthed a rare scientific instrument.

Nestled among shards of pottery in a 14th century rubbish pit, archaeologists watching over the dig spotted an astrolabe quadrant — a complex astronomical calculator for telling the time and calculating latitude.

Such devices are extremely rare — and this is only the eighth such instrument ever to be discovered. And finding it in what was probably a rubbish dump is even more unusual.
The building that houses the restaurant dates back to the 16th century, so when work on the extension began in 2005, Andrew Linklater of the Canterbury Archaeological Trust was assigned to watch over it — just in case. As the foundations were dug, the builders uncovered the remains of a medieval building. By the back wall was a pit containing shards of pottery dating to 1375-1425, which Linklater speculates might have been a rubbish pit. Among the fragments, he picked out a dirty brass plate in the shape of a quarter circle.

Unable to identify the plate, he took it to the British Museum. He recalls, “They held their hands up and went ‘wow’.” Experts there identified it as an incredibly rare astrolabe quadrant, and suggested sending it to Elly Dekker, a Dutch independent scholar with expertise in historical astronomical instruments, for full analysis. Her study is now complete, and she believes the find dates to around 1388.

The quadrant has a series of curves and markings engraved on it. Along one edge of the instrument are two sighting holes which the user would have lined up with the sun. An attached plumb bob (now missing) would have hung down vertically, aligning with the engraved calibrations and allowing the user to tell the time of day. It could also be used to determine the time of sunrise and sunset, or to work out the latitude.
Dekker says the quadrant is quite recent compared with the few others known. But the Canterbury version can only be used during the day, unlike the other instruments that were designed to line up with the stars as well as the sun. It may be that its designers realised it was too difficult to fit so much information onto a small instrument, and so created a simplified, stripped down version.

Dekker says the object would have been very expensive in its time, and that it is extremely rare to find such a valuable object buried in the earth — most pieces such as this get passed down through the generations and are eventually rediscovered in someone’s attic or private collection. “We don’t find instruments of this type in archaeological sites,” she says.

Linklater adds that he is more used to digging up coins or buckles, and is mystified by how the quadrant ended up in the pit. “It would have been exceptionally highly prized; it was the peak of the technology of the day,” he says. “It was the sort of thing you had to have if you wanted to be ahead of everything in science. But it must have been discarded.”

He speculates that the owner might have been a member of the church, which was interested in science. And this person may have been travelling, perhaps even on a pilgrimage. Astrolabe quadrants were the “pocket” version of a more common, circular instrument called an astrolabe. Back in the 14th century, the street where the restaurant stands was lined with inns for pilgrims coming to Canterbury.

The quadrant is being sold by London auctioneers Bonhams on 21 March, and is predicted to net the owners between £60, 000-100,000. The extension to the restaurant is now complete, and has been named the Quadrant Bar.

Linklater says archaeologists generally frown on the selling of artefacts, as they often then don’t end up in a museum. But h’'s happy just to have discovered it. “To find something as rare as this is incredibly exciting,” he says. “It’s certainly the most valuable thing I’ve ever found.”

(The Statesman - 8 March 2007)

Monday, 12 March 2007

The Romans are Coming Home


ANCIENT treasures including Roman shoes, clothes and chariot straps discovered near Carlisle Castle are coming home to the city.


Some of the most significant finds of the Millennium Dig, which took place between 1998 and 2001, will form the centrepiece of an exhibition marking Carlisle’s rich Roman past.

A lack of facilities in Cumbria meant most of the artifacts were taken to research facilities at Lancaster University for the findings to be preserved and researched.

But, finally, the report has been completed and staff at Carlisle’s Tullie House museum and gallery are getting ready to celebrate the city’s past.

David Clarke, senior curator and collections manager at Tullie House, said: “Some of the pieces have been away with experts being reviewed and studied, some being conserved. Different specialists were needed for different types of materials. It’s a very big process – the writing-up stage is as big as the excavation.

“Long term it (the finds) will stay in Carlisle. Everything found will be kept here, either in store or on view.”

As well as the exhibition, which will bring together the results of 30 years of excavation in Carlisle, plans have been revealed for a new Hadrian’s Wall at the museum.

Although it is unlikely to happen in the very near future, the museum has recently put in a bid for lottery funding to develop the idea.

The last years of the 20th century provided ample opportunity for Roman archaeology in the city, when work to clear the way for new developments revealed significant discoveries.

Among these was a previously unknown site on Botchergate discovered in 1998, which suggested Roman Carlisle was bigger than previously thought, and many ancient artifacts were also discovered when workers were clearing the way for the Lanes shopping development in the city.

Famously, other places in the UK have built on their heritage. The discovery of an ancient fort at Wallsend, North Tyneside, led to the opening of Segedunum, a popular visitor attraction housing museum and Roman baths as well as the archeological site.

And in York, a three-year dig by the city’s Archaeological Trust led to the building of the world-famous Jorvik Viking Centre after a wealth of 10th century remains were discovered.

Hoopers boss Victoria Farley has called for Carlisle to make more of its heritage by turning the Castle Street area of the city into a ‘Roman experience’ as part of the Renaissance regeneration project.

Mr Clarke agrees that not enough emphasis has been placed on the enormous importance of Carlisle in the Roman period: “What the excavation material revealed was that Carlisle was much more important as a Roman town than most people give it credit for. The big thing now is to make sure it is put on the map more than it is at the moment.”

But he also feels that centres like Jorvik can easily become dated and he wants to ensure that Carlisle’s treasures get the showing they deserve: “We will use the latest display techniques. But Jorvik has got something to teach us.”

(News & Star - 6 March 2007)

Sunday, 11 March 2007

Work on medieval home may lead to prosecution

ALTERATIONS carried out without permission to an historic house in a South Lakes village could lead to a criminal prosecution for the owners.

A planning row has blown up over unauthorised work to Priory Close, a Grade II* listed building in Cartmel.

The two-storey property, parts of which are medieval, overlooks the ancient priory church, and South Lakeland planners are being recommended to take enforcement action.

SLDC planning officer Fiona Clark says she does not know who the owners are as yet, but is waiting for information in order to find out.

She said that when the house was visited in September repairs were being carried out to first floor windows and panelling and a hot air duct heating system being removed.

But following complaints about a “considerable amount of work taking place” planning officers made another inspection in February.

Among unauthorised alterations found was the removal of ground floor joists, floor boards and tiles and a concrete floor being laid. Lime plaster had been removed from lath and plaster walls; plaster board inserted into lath and plaster walls and ceiling lights inserted in all rooms, including the space between what are assumed medieval rafters.

“The alterations have resulted in the removal of historic fabric from the building, which harms its historic importance,” Mrs Clark says in her report to a planning meeting.

“The materials being inserted are inappropriate given the age of the property. Whilst enforcement action can ensure that the replacement materials are appropriate the damage caused is irrevocable.

“As the harm is irrevocable an investigation is proceeding into whether a criminal offence has taken place.”

Debbie Storr, SLDC’s executive director (central services) “has authority to authorise proceedings for a criminal offence if the evidence justifies this,” said Mrs Clark in her report.

On April 1, 2005, English Heritage became responsible for the administration of the listing system. It’s an offence to demolish, alter or extend a listed building without listed building consent and the penalty can be a fine of unlimited amount or up to 12 months’ imprisonment, or both.

Grade II are considered particularly important buildings of more than special interest, amounting to four per cent of listed buildings.

Council planners are being recommended to “authorise authority to undertake enforcement action with regard to the unauthorised work”.

(North-West Evening Mail - 5 March 2007)

Saturday, 10 March 2007

Medieval fair lost to history

Rules and regulations and a lack of support from the community are being blamed for the end of a major event in the town. St Catherine's Medieval Fair organiser Lyn Waller said that no one has come forward to take over its running, despite a public appeal last year. Time has run out to apply for the necessary grants and licences, and the fair will not take place this year.

Last year's event made a triumphant return after an absence of a year, when the 2005 fair was cancelled after the break-up of the previous organisers, the Town Centre Promotions Group. St Catherine's Fair was revived in 1984 as part of the Frome 1300 celebrations and has been a popular event on the town's calendar ever since.

Mrs Waller said: "You can say that rules and regulations have strangled the event. It's all down to health and safety and the need for any stall holder taking part to have public liability insurance to be able to do so, and for us, as organisers, to have insurance to cover the event. The whole event is not cost-effective. It is a shame because it was something that was part of the community, but it is now impossible to do in a way that will foster community spirit. Where local people used to come and have a stall and take part, they now have to have insurance and so the community is no longer able to take part. We ran it safely for 21 years and have a proven health and safety record. It has become an incredible paper trail to organise and it is not viable. We have got a society where people are not responsible for themselves and if we hold an event we have to be responsible for every child that falls over."

After last year's fair, Mrs Waller and co-organiser Hilary Beardmore decided it would be their last because they both felt the event needed fresh blood and appealed for volunteers to come forward.

Mrs Waller said: "Even if someone came forward now it would be too late as it would be impossible for anyone to get the necessary licences. We had to ask ourselves whether we still enjoyed organising the event, and unfortunately the answer was no."

Mrs Beardmore and Mrs Waller became involved ten years ago when some of the initial impetus had been lost and the event drew criticism. In a statement issued last September, they said: "We are appreciative of all those who enter into the spirit of the event, but sadly it seems to be a decreasing minority. Increasingly, there is an expectation that the fair is somehow delivered rather than contributed to by all. Organising the fair begins in January each year and the workload increases dramatically in the two months preceding it. It takes over the summer, leaving little time for anything else."

(Standard & Guardian / News for Medievalists - 1 March 2007)

Friday, 9 March 2007

'Viking' gold ring finds new home


Flintshire's first piece of Viking treasure has gone on display at Mold Museum, prompting a mystery over how it was lost in the first place.

The gold ring, made in the 9th or 10th Century, was found in a field at Nercwys by two amateur detectorists. The county's principal museums officer, Deborah Snow, said the area has no known Viking settlements.

"It has captured the imagination that 1,000 years ago somebody was walking there and dropped the ring," she said.

The ring, which is decorated with ridges on the outside, was declared treasure trove after it was found 5in (12.5 cms) down in grassland near Mold in October 2004. It was valued at £1,500 and bought by the county's museum service as the first Viking-era piece in its collection.

Ms Snow said: "We can't say definitely it was Viking but the style would indicate so. The high purity of the gold, at 94%, is typical of this early date.

'Stray find'

"It is unusual in this area as there aren't any known Viking sites in Flintshire. The nearest are on the coast or in Chester. Because it was a stray find, there was no context to it. We have no idea who it was who lost it. We've had people suggest that maybe someone was on their way to propose with a gold ring. You can think of many things."

The ring has gone on permanent display on the first floor at Mold Museum and Art Gallery. Admission is free of charge.

(BBC News - 6 March 2007)

Thursday, 8 March 2007

Finds Declared 'Treasure'

THREE sets of finds from the Saxon, Roman and Iron Age eras were declared treasure at an inquest in Lynn on Thursday.

The inquest heard Norwich Castle Museum had already expressed an interest in the incomplete silver Roman ring found by metal detectorist Michael Coggles, of Lynn Road, Swaffham, in a field in Pentney last June.

The hearing was told the British Museum had confirmed the find qualified as treasure on account of its age and metal content. Museums have first refusal on treasure and the finder may receive a reward.

Four Iron Age torc wires and a ninth century Saxon silver-hooked tag fragment found in land near Bawsey by fellow metal detectorist Stephen Brown, of Wormegay, were also declared treasure.

The inquest heard the torc wires made of electrum – an alloy of gold and silver – and traces of other metals, were similar to others found in 1989 and 1996.
(King's Lynn Today - 01 March 2007)

Wednesday, 7 March 2007

£2m Viking centre bid launched

THE preservation of Wirral's Viking Heritage begins later this week with the launch of a £2million three-year project.

Friday morning's event follows the publication of a report detailing the borough's links with the Norse invaders. It also made five key recommendations so that local history can be fully developed for tourist and educational purposes.

Following a successful bid for development funding from the Mersey Waterfront and English Heritage. It was submitted by Friends of Hoylake and Meols Gardens and Open Spaces' steering group The Heritage Project, set up to oversee the study. Chairman, Wirral West MP Stephen Hesford hopes the launch will help put the borough's Norse links firmly on the map.

"I want to thank all those who have enabled us to put together this wonderful snap-shot of Wirral's fantastic cultural heritage," Mr Hesford said. "And whilst it is early days, I believe that what we have had the privilege of starting will grow into a nationally and internationally acknowledged attraction.

"What we have to do now is find partners to help us grow this development both in terms of funding and delivery."

Among the reports' recommendation are that a Heritage Centre is built in Meols with an iconic Viking sculpture erected on site. The second is for a Wirral Heritage Trail and Norse heritage centre at Wirral Country Park in Thurstaston.

The scheme will be launched at Melrose Hall in Melrose Avenue on Friday morning. If the project goes to plan it would take two or three years and could link in with other developments, such as the 2008 Liverpool Capital of Culture.

(Wirral Globe - 6 March 2007)

Tuesday, 6 March 2007

Urology; Research on urology published by scientists at University of North Carolina

Fresh data on urology are presented in the report "Uroscopy by Hippocrates and Theophilus: prognosis versus diagnosis."

According to recent research published in the Journal of Urology, "In antiquity the visual examination of urine (uroscopy) is well documented. Uroscopy gradually evolved from a prognostic indicator to a diagnostic tool."

"Comparison of the uses of uroscopy by Hippocrates (400 BC) and Theophilus (700 AD) illustrates this transformation. We reviewed medical and historical literature as well as the translated works of Hippocrates. Although Hippocrates was one of the first physicians to use urine to interpret human body functioning, urine was mainly used as a means for prognosis and prediction of outcomes of illness. In his text De Urinis Theophilus introduced an innovative doctrine and used uroscopy for diagnosis of illnesses. In this respect uroscopy became a paradigm for later diagnostic strategies and is considered an important milestone in the history of clinical diagnosis. Hippocrates' writings displayed uroscopy used in examination of illness. However, he considered it in the context for accurate prognoses. Theophilus treated uroscopy in a sophisticated objective manner and attempted to use uroscopy in an orderly, systemic method to accurately diagnose illness," wrote E. Kouba and colleagues, University of North Carolina.

The researchers concluded: "It was through these approaches to uroscopy that Theophilus became one of the physicians who contributed to the birth of medieval medical studies."

Kouba and colleagues published their study in the Journal of Urology (Uroscopy by Hippocrates and Theophilus: prognosis versus diagnosis. Journal of Urology, 2007;177(1):50-2).

For additional information, contact E. Kouba, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Division of Urologic Surgery, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599 U.S.

(News for Medievalists / Gastroenterology Week - 8 January 2007)

Monday, 5 March 2007

Glass May Shatter

STAINED-GLASS windows, more than 500 years old and among the Abbey Museum's priceless collection, are at risk of shattering.

An expert report into the state of the windows, identified as one of the most significant collections of medieval stained glass in Australia, has found it in "dire need" of conservation.

The report by Eumundi-based stained-glass artists and conservators Gerry Cummins and Jill Stehn assessed all the pieces in the collection, spanning from the 14th Century.

It found the 1920 Michael the Archangel window and two 1400s medieval pieces from Winchester Cathedral, Angel Gabriel and Beast of Revelation, need urgent restoration. Natural ageing of the lead has buckled the Cathedral windows alarmingly, according to the report.

A $10,000 donation has kick-started the restoration program of two windows, one a 16th-century piece believed to be from a German building destroyed by Napoleonic troops. But it will cost a total $127,000 for the restoration of 50 pieces in the museum's collection in most need of care.

This has left the Abbey desperate for sponsors. "There is a long way to go; the two major Winchester windows - each one of those will cost around about $10,000 for restoration," Abbey Museum chief executive officer Edith Cuffe said.

Benefactors who fund restoration of a window - anywhere between $500 and $10,000 apiece - will be invited to visit the conservation studio.

Gerry Cummins, who studied stained-glass conservation techniques in Europe, will be guest speaker at a public talk at the Abbey Museum on Saturday from 7.30pm. Cost is $6. Phone 5495 1652.

(By Kelmemy Fraser - The Northern Times / News for Medievalists - 2 March 2007)

Sunday, 4 March 2007

Skeletons Found at Building Site

Builders working in the centre of Preston have discovered bodies at a medieval burial ground.

The discovery of the bodies, which could be up to 700 years old, was made as work continued on the 72-bed hotel and student flats block at the back of the privately-owned Brunel Court flats in Marsh Lane.

Work stopped as experts from Oxford Archaeology North, who were on a 'watching brief' at the site, began to comb the area.

At least five coffins, parts of human skeletons, medieval glass and floor tiles thought to be from the 14th or 15th centuries, have been discovered.

Experts at the site today described it as a "significant" find.

Staff from Oxford Archaeology North are now planning a full archaeological excavation of the patch.

It is believed the area forms part of an old priory and up to 20 coffins are eventually expected to be found.

(Preston Today - 28 February 2007)

Saturday, 3 March 2007

Historic Dig at Planned Mine Site

Archaeologists are to try to unearth some of the historic past of a planned opencast site in Northumberland.

Northumberland County Council has asked UK Coal to conduct a study of the 600-acre (243 hectares) Potland Burn site near Ashington. UK Coal wants to extract two million tonnes of coal and 500,000 tonnes of fireclay over the next six years. The survey will be carried out by the universities of Durham and Sheffield over a 10-week period.

Human activity

The study will involve digging about 550 shallow trial trenches up to 50 metres long and four metres wide - equivalent to 3% of the site - to determine whether evidence of any culturally important historic activity exists. It is expected the dig will cost up to £250,000.

UK Coal's senior geologist Richard Cory said: "Whilst there are no known archaeological sites within the proposed mining area, there are crop marks which suggest a level of human activity which needs to be investigated."

The firm submitted a planning application for the Potland Burn site over a year ago, and a decision has yet to be made on whether to approve the scheme, which would create 65 jobs. UK Coal says rising groundwater levels over the next decade will lead to the site becoming unworkable.

The company has pledged to create a nature conservation area after the site is exhausted.

( BBC News - 25 February 2007)

Friday, 2 March 2007

Find of Roman coin shows ancient Britons in a new light

Experts are excited about a rare coin unearthed by an amateur treasure hunter which could change the accepted ancient history of Britain.

The silver denarius which dates back to the Roman Republic — before Julius Caesar made Rome an empire — was unearthed near Fowey in Cornwall. Dating from 146 BC, it shows how ancient Britons were trading with the Romans well before the country was conquered in AD 43.

"It proves that there was a lot more going on between the continent and ourselves," said Anna Tyacke, Finds Liaison Officer at the Royal Cornwall Museum.

Cornwall had trade significance because of the tin and copper it produced, but that economic activity is not well documented before the third century AD. Coins were relatively rare, of high value and often stayed in circulation for more than 100 years — which makes dating the find harder.

Sam Moorhead, Finds Adviser of Iron Age and Roman coins at the British Museum, said: "It may have been the wages of a Roman legionnaire, who earned about 300 denarii a year in the Roman imperial period — after the conquest. You could probably have got about eight loaves of bread for a coin like this, or eight litres of wine. Vineyard labourers would have earned between a half and one denarius a day. Whereas to be a senator you had to have at least 250,000 denarii in the bank."

The silver coin was minted in Rome and carries the likeness of Roma wearing a winged helmet, plus the name of a Caius Antestius, its maker.

"Roma is a personification of Rome, rather like Britannia is a personification of Britain," Mr Moorhead explained.

The reverse of the coin carries a picture on horseback of the mythological twins Castor and Pollux, who were believed to have helped the Romans in battle.

(Daily Telegraph - 26 February 2007)

Thursday, 1 March 2007

Seton Hill's 'Everyman' keeps medieval text, adds modern music

Performing a morality play - especially one penned in the Middle Ages - might not seem too appealing to an average college theater student.

Dr. Terry Brino-Dean, associate professor of theater and director of the Seton Hill University theater program, has come up with a way to give "Everyman" -- a medieval drama that deals with man's fear of dying and his hope for redemption through his actions on earth -- a contemporary twist.

In a theatrical style that college students can relate to, Seton Hill's new adaptation of "Everyman" is a musical with songs by the American folk rock duo The Indigo Girls. The Everyman character is played by five students who tell the story while sitting around a drum circle on a camping trip.

"Rather than a frightening and lonesome journey to death, our production emphasizes the celebratory message of redemption found in the play," Brino-Dean says. "We were interested in exploring ways that this 15th-century play could have direct relevance to the contemporary time period."

If the idea seems far-fetched, it certainly has taken off with the students at Seton Hill, including junior musical theater major Laura Stracko of Nazareth, Pa., who serves as vocal music director and plays one of the five Everyman characters in the cast.

"It's been a wonderful learning experience," says Stracko, who helped choose the Indigo Girls songs whose lyrics best reflect the lines of the play. She also wrote the harmonies that she says bring the vocal aspects of the production to life.

The production is a creative effort that involved both the theater and music departments at Seton Hill, according to Brino-Dean, who says "it's the first time in a long time that our programs have collaborated" on a theatrical work.

In the Seton Hill adaption of "Everyman," Stracko says "a bunch of kids are on a beach hanging out, and we end up singing and dancing and putting on a play for each other."

Brino-Dean says the "play within a play" concept allows the moral message of the piece to shine through without changing the text as written in the medieval version.

"We could have updated the language, but we decided instead to use contemporary music to convey a modern message," he says.

Stracko says the significance of the play is about "living your life with purpose and with the whole world in mind, and how you can make an impact on the world by what's inside of you."

The unusual format of the musical adaptation of "Everyman" has students and the director already looking past the Seton Hill performance dates to possible future engagements.

"We all certainly wish it could have a life after this production," Stracko says. "It's so different. I'd love to see it reach out to other schools, so other students can share the learning experience."

Brino-Dean is exploring the possibilities of a professional production, or licensing the musical, or even performing it with the Indigo Girls.

"There are a lot of options," he says. "We've had conversations with the band. This has come together so well conceptually. We'd be interested in seeing if something more could be done with it."

(By Candy Williams - The Pittsburgh Tribune Review - 24 February 2007)