Love Goddess #10: Lactating German Virtues May 25, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernAnother love goddess, though this time from Germany. If you go to Nuremberg and make sure you don’t get distracted by recent traumatic events there (trials, fire storms etc) you will discover a beautiful medievalish city in the heart of Bavaria. On the edge of Lorenzer Platz you will find perhaps the most curious fountain in Western […]
Religious Mania at Torrox May 24, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernEvery so often rural communities take on acts of high religious eccentricity. There was, for example, Datten in Germany where in 1901 a fit of dancing mania broke out (another post another day). There was the case at Kherson in Ukraine in 1896-1897 of a religion sect allowing its members to be buried alive (wth! […]
Science, Neurology and Being Misled by Fairies May 23, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernAll European fairy traditions have two features: kidnapped children (the changeling tradition) and misled travellers (the pixy-led tradition). Being pixy-led (a Cornish or Devon term originally but one that has come to apply to a much wider area) varies in different parts of the continent. But typically, it unwinds as follows. A man or a woman […]
A Duel in the Middle of a Battle! May 22, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernDu ***Thanks to Chris S for sending this story in*** Attentive readers may have noted that StrangeHistory has recently been indulging in duel stories. Today’s duel comes from the American Civil War and involves a confederate and a union soldier. Of course, the first reaction to any such story is the sheer redundance of this […]
The Fortune Teller and the Children Tax May 19, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThis appeared in a news report from 1888 A remarkable trial has been opened in the city of Mexico [i.e. Mexico City]. During the past year an old woman, living in a little town near the capital, has been exacting a monthly tax trom the fathers of families to prevent her from taking the lives […]
Swearing Fetuses and the English Sausage Seller May 17, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernA nasty little episode from the late 1860s and London with a most curious annex. A sausage seller gets roughed up by a group of young London Jews, after saying something anti-semitic. This led to a trial. When his wife or ‘missus’ was called into the witness box though, something rather peculiar happened. To corroborate […]
The Cuckold’s Horns May 16, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, Modern***Thanks to Ricardo and Neil for help with this post*** The cuckold’s horns is a sign, usually indicated by two fingers placed over the head, of a man whose wife has been unfaithful. In many countries – not least the UK, see photo – the actual symbolism has been forgotten and only the offence remains. […]
Telegraph Wire and Oasis Jewellery May 15, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernGovernments and multi-nationals have long had problems with locals (particularly criminally-inclined locals) stealing their wire. Most collectors get out their pliers because, say, copper is worth a lot of money. But in the early years of electricity and telegraph wire there were other reasons for stealing: more principled and practical reasons. Take Thomas Stevens’ description […]
Homemade Beer at the Vampire Inn May 13, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernEvery so often, as your eye is running down the columns of documents past, you run into an unlooked for detail that you just can’t leave alone. It happened to me a week ago when I was checking through the records of bankrupt British businesses from 1869 (as you do). In that year on Hampton […]
Duelling Schoolboys May 7, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernDuelling is really all about grown men acting like complete asses. However, at least in one case in 1874 it appears that early teens in Lincolnshire, the UK emulated their elders. One Gerald Maurice Burn shot, 7 March 1874, at George Seagrave, both boarders at a local school run by a reverend no less. Burn […]
Hawker and the Pixy? May 6, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernWe have visited Robert Hawker before on this blog, not least in his gadding about as a mermaid. However, there follows a peculiar episode in which he claims to have seen a supernatural creature in a letter written in 1856 (or was the experience 1856, the source Byles Life and Letters is not clear?). R.A.J.Walling […]
Fighting the Plains Trains May 3, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThe transcontinental railways across the American plains not only made a nation, but destroyed the way of life of hundreds of free indigenous peoples living there. The train made military control of the interior easier and, of course, the train also brought the buffalo killers: the Federal Government and its agents had long understood that […]
11 Burning Libraries: Book Lovers Beware April 29, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, Medieval, ModernThis blog has pioneered a series of burning libraries: books that didn’t make it (23 to date)… But what about real burning libraries? Libraries that, at some point in Antiquity or the Middle Ages, were gutted by fire, accidental or deliberate. I have included here a list of eleven devastatingly bad ‘burning libraries’ or ‘burning […]
High Noon at Carcassonne April 28, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernCarcassonne is a stunning medieval town in the south of France, famous today for the attrocities carried out there against the Cathars, or those who were believed to be Cathars, in the thirteenth century. However, I recently ran across this news story from 1894 and the most recent in our practical jokes series: long time […]
A Pre-Christian Custom in Eighteenth-Century Scotland? April 26, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernA recent article on Chris’ Haunted Ohio Books quoted an eighteenth-century source for an unusual form of Scottish divination: the whole passage (from Martin Martin, obit 1718) is well worth reading, as is Chris’ thoughts on the same. But one bit particularly stood out: it relates to the Hebrides. The second way of consulting the […]