Author Archives: Natalie Bennett

Notes from Queens of Jerusalem: The Women Who Dared to Rule

p. 4 On 15 July 1099, after gruelling years of war and marching across Europe and Anatolia, the crusaders took Jerusalem. The result of this success was that, for nearly 200 years, |Western European occupited Outremer. They created Christian states there, built fortresses that still dominate the landscae today, and for 88 years, held Jerusalem itself as a Christian capital. The deeds of men in Outremer in this period are a hyperactive field of study, yet the study of the deeds of the women is comparatively dormant. Women plated a key role in both the crusades themselves and the governance of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. When armies mached east from Europe, women marched with them. Men who could afford to often hrought their families and poorer women also travelled with the army. These women prepared meals, washed clothes, nursed the wounded, collected firewood and were the lovers of the soldiers. On rare occasions they even sallied onto the battlefield either to bring water to the men or to fight themselves. In the established territories of Outremer noblewomen organised the logistics of sieges and negotiated with the enemy and the women of the lower classes toiled with the men to undermine fortifications. They endured unimaginable hardships, died alongside the men and also fell victim to rape, imprisonment and slavery. Thousands of European women found themselves traded in the slave markets of Aleppo and Damascus during the 12th century. When the male rulers of Outremer overplayed their hands and found themselves rotting in enemy dungeons, they were ransomed by their wives.”

p. 52 Given Alice’s position as the mother of the heir of Antioch and the possessor of such important lands, she was too valuable a commodity to be allowed to remain single. According to the laws of the land, she should have been given a choice between three suitors but she would have nad no say in who those options were and would have been forced to marry one of them very quickly..If she was to reject Jerusalem’s suzerainty, then all of a sudden she was the highest status noble in the Principality. With her father and his armies far away in Jerusalem, the chance was Alice’s to seize Antioch and claim control of her own life. Thus, in an act of open rebellion against Jerusalem and her father’s authority, she assumed the regency of Antioch and proclaimed herself in control of the city. While it was not particularly shocking for rulers of one area to reject the suzerainty of another, it was shocking indeed for a daughter to reject the authority of her father, as this challenged the partriarchal fabric of society and transgressed established gender roles and the Christian doctrine of deference to parents”

p. 111 It is unclear how long Melisende’s renovations of the Holy Sepulchre and the surrounding area of the city took, but testimony of the Muslim geographer Muhammed al-Idrisi in 1154 demonstrates that the Holy Sepulchre’s bell tower at least was finished by this point.. This indicates that the bulk of the construction was carried out during the period of Melisende’s primact in the Kingdom of Jerusalem. Given her other demonstrated interest in ecclestiastical patronage, it is certain that she plated a large part in arranging and commissioning this renovation, in cooperation with the Patriarch of Jerusalem.. Eminen t crusades historian Hans Eberhard Mayer has suggested further that Melisende’s support of the renovation went further than a display of her personal piety and patronage, but rather was a bid to consolidate her political position by winning the support of the church as her son grew older. The importance of this would be demonstrated in the coming years. A storm was brewing that would fracture the relationship between mother and son.

Melisend had a strained relationship with her eldest son. She favoured her second child Amalhric, who remained her staunch supporter all of his life. Melisende much have always regarded Baldwin III with unease. Given the laws of succession, he was always going to be the one to supplant her, and she much have lived with the fear that he too might try to exclude her from rule, just as Fulk had tried to. .. he was an annoited co-ruler, and queenship was less secure than kingship.”

p. 154 “For all the reams writen about Eleanor of (Aqutaine) she is also one of the most mysterious women of the medival period. Even before her death, she was written into the narrative of medieval romance… The talk of her infidelity proved fertile fodder for the rumour mill, and soon stories were circulating in literature and by word of mouth that, beyond having an affair with her uncle, Eleanor had attempted to elope with Saladdin himself, and that she had been reclaimed by her husband with one foot on a Saracen ship, preparing to sail off into the sunset. It is worth noting that at the time of Eleanor’s journey to the Holy Land, Saladin was not yet 12 years old.”

p. 217 “A compromise was brokered whereby the barons made Sibylla an offer … the trone of the Kingdom of Jerusalem on the condition that she consented to divorce Guy. Sibylla countered this with the conditions that her daughters remained leitimate, that Guy kept his lands as a nobleman of the Kingdom, and that she be allowed to choose her next husband from among the nobility of the region. This was duly agreed, the consensus being that no one else could be as incompetent a king as Guy, and preparations began for Sigylla’s coronation. … perhaps the most dramatically charged episode in the history of the Queens of Jerusalem. T… once the sacred oil had touched Sibylla and the crown had been settled on her brow, she was invincible in her court and had absolute authority… the first time a woman would be crowned in her own right without a husband alongside her. Melisende had been crowned for her blood right, but jointly with two men, her husband and son. Other queens had been crowned as consorts with their husbands, but here Sibylla was setting a precedent with an unmarried female monarch with the power to choose her own consort. Her first deed as monarch was an act of daring brilliance …Sibylla stood. She ‘invoked the Grace of the Holy Spirit’… She declared ‘I, Sibylla, choose for myself as King and as my husband Guy of Lusignan, the man who has been my husband… Sibylla had been very crafty indeed.. she had artfully constructed a loophole and at her coronation darted through it triumphantly.”

Notes from The Storyteller’s Daughter by Saira Shah (2003)

p. 44 With the air of one opening an important conversational topic, Halima’s husband asks: ‘Tell us, what are orfinary people in the West saying about our lives?”

At this time, in spring 2001, people are saying nothing whatsoever about Afghanistan. They’ve barely even heard of Kabul… Now sitting here in the gloom, feeling rather than seeing this family’s expectant faces – I cannot bear to tell them any of this. So I take a coward’s way out. I quote them lines of the poet Sa’adi of Shiraz:

The people of the world are limbs from one body, sharing one essence,

When a single limb is oppressed, all the others suffer agony.”

To the family, this concept is so familiar it is self-evident. They wait for me to make my point, because they already assume people in the West believe oppression in the world concerns us all. But they are wrong; they have been abandoned.”

p. 135 “A hawk beloning to a king flew away and landed at the house of an old woman. She had never seen a hawk before, and she decided to look after it. She trimmed the hawk’s curved beak into a straight line, cut off its crest and clipped its claws. “There,” she said, when she had finished. “Now you look much more like a pigeon” Masnavi, Jalaluddin Rumi

p. 153 Rumi’s father and his young son fled their hometown of Balkh in northern Afghanistan and joined the tide of starving civilian refugees being pushed before the invaders. [Mongols]. They took refuge in Nishapur, in present-day Iran. But the Mongols were hot on their heels. Behind them the entire population of the city of Herat was massacred…. Six months earlier people had joked that you could not stretch out your leg in Herat without kicking a poet or a philosopher. … Rumi, who had lost his family, his home, his country, his future – and all hope of peace or stability during his lifetime – refused to be limited by the parameters of his collapsing world. “From the point of view of a man,” he says in his Discourses, “a thing may appear to be good or evil. But from the point of view of God, everything is good. Show me the good wherein no evil is contained, or the evil in which there is no good. Good and evil are indivisible.”… The world of the West was telling me there was a battle going on between good and evil. The Society bloc saw things the same way – it just reversed who was good and who was evil. But here, on the back of a buzkashi horse, was a view gleabed from the sowing and reaping of countless invasions: there are no absolutes in our fragmentary world; the divisions we create and believe in are artificial. Time itself is no straight line of ordered progress, but an endlessly repeayting cycle – throughout our lives and throughout history – from which we are at liberty to learn if we wish. The rest is a swirling mass, a primal force, a dustcloud of thindering feet and shouting voices, the thrill of the chase, the cutting down and the building up.”

p. 154 “Even our beloved national dish, pilau, is said to have originated on those wild rampages, when the troops of Genghis Khan laid out their round shields to catch the dripping from the carcasses they had pillaged, and threw in a little rice – a grain they had never seen until they came to Afghanistan – to mop it up.”

Notes From The Horde: How the Mongols Changed the World

p. 5 “”In some senses, manufactured objects were luxuries for the nomads, yet the nomads were not frivolous. Long-distance exchange and circulation of manufacturer goods were not essential to subsistence, yet they were the backbone of the social order. Mongol economies relied on the circulation of these goods, in particular their redustribution from the khan to the elites to the commoners, a system that sumulaneously reinforced social rank, created bonds of dependence, and gave even the least in society a reason to feel invested in the success of the regime. Steppenomads further understood circulation as a spiritual necessity. Sharing wealth mollified the spirits of the dead, the sky and the earth.”

p. 10 “Horder when it was applied to the people of Jochi, was an old word for a new regime…To the Mongols themselves, horde had a wide and complex meaning. A horde was an army, a site of power, a people under a ruler, a huge camp. These meanings did not exclude one another: in concert, they captured the sense that the regime was coextensive with its mobile people. A horde did not have to be in one place in order to govern itself or sedentary subjects: hordes migrated, dispersed and gathered anew, all while exercising control.”

p. 12 The Horde was socially diverse and multiethnic, but its leadership came from a core of dominant steppe clans, most of them Mongol subgroups… The heads of these groups bore the title of beg. As the Horde became increasingly oligarchic in the late 13th century, power fevolved from the khan to the begs… The begs acknowledged the khan’s primacy because he was a descendent of Chingiss Khan’s eldest son Jochi. Bu that status did not make the khan all-powerful. To be elecated on the felt rug – the procedure of enthronement – an aspirant had to associate himself with powerful begs. Similarly, to rule effectively, a khan needed the begs on his side. They supported him and, if he failed, deposed him. This was especially the case after the 1350s, during and following a period known as the bulqaq – anarchy.”

p. 13 If the Horde were projected on today’s maps, it would stretch across a region occupied by Ukraine, Bulgaria, Moldavia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Ukbekistan, Turkmenistan and Russia, including Tatarstan and Crimea. … Where nationalisms solidified in opposition to Mogol rule, historians have told one kind of story: where nationalisms presume continuity with the Mongol past, historians have told another kind of story.”

o, 26 In summer 1219 Mongol armies were gathering in the Altai Mountains, near the source of the Irtysh River. Chingiss Khan … sent for Master Qui Chuji, the most respected Taoist leader in northern China. The 71-year-old Qui Chuji was highly influential, and his flock growing as people looked to his guidance amid war and famine. Until this point, Qui Chuji had refused to work with the Mongols, just as he had refused to work with the Chinese emperors. For Chingiss, Taoist support would be priceless, helping the Mongols pacify northern China while they were busy conquoring Central Asia. But there was another reason … the khan was no in his late fifties, while the typical warrior barely reached his forties. Chinggis could no longer take each year for granted, and he hoped to learn from Qiu Chuji the secret of longevity… At their first meeting, the conqueror asked the monk “Have you a medicine of immortality?” Qui Chuji replied “There are means for preserving life, but not medicine for immortality. Satisfied with Qui Chuji’s honesty, Chingiss have him the appeallation shinsen, the immortal, and ordered Qui Chuji’s tents be pitched just each of his own… The Taoist master spent more than a year in Chingiiss Khan’s camp and in Samarkand, which the Mongols had taken in 1220. In conversations, Qui Chuji explained the doctrine of the Tao and addvised Chingiss Khan to avoid cruelty and sensulaity and warned him not to go hunting anymore… helped Chingiss secure the surrender of the northern Chinese and their acceptance of the Mongol order. An able administrator, Qui Chuji knew the Mongols would provide better governance of the region.. In 1224, on his way back to northern China, the monk stopped in Zhongdu, where he ordered his new headquarters built. That same year, he sent his followers throughtout the region to take control of temples and summon the Buddhist and Taoist clergy to submit to the Mongol Empire.”

p. 36 The Birth of the Mogol Ulus In spring 1206, the Year of the Tiger, an assembly of the Felt-Walled Tents, known as a quriltai, gathered near the sources of the Onion River. As they collected for the meeting, Temuhin’s standard was hoisted. The standard was a pole with the tails of nine white-haired horses at the top, symbolising the peace and unity of the Felt-Walled Tents under Mongol rule … According to Rashid l-Din, a Persian historian of the Mogols writing in the early 14th century, the creator of Temuijin’s enthronement ritual might have been Teb Tengri, an influential shaman who also suggested Temuijin’s new title… Chingiss Khan, a term meaning “mighty” or possibly “universal”… This was a clear break from recent political practices.”

p. 84 During the Russian campaign (1235-1242), the Mongols gained control of some 20 cities. They did not destroy all these cities. Rostov, for example, was spared after its inhabitants accepted peace terms. Kiev, on the other hand, rejected an identical offer and was sacked.. The Mongols were experts in siege warfare and had accumulated even more experience throughout their recent operations against the Jin… The Russians were helpless when faced with seige engines they had never seen before. Adapting Chinese technology, the Mongols built catapults 26 feet high and weighing five tons. Such a machine could throw a stone heavier than 132 pounds up to 164 yeards. For a commander like Subotei, who had conquerored more than 30 stone and brick fortresses in China, Central Asia and Iran, the wooden and earthern walls of Russian cities presented no real challenge. What was challenging for the Mongols was the terrain. Muddy and swampy grounds limited their operation to the coldest months and restricted their range of activity. They could move quickly on frozen soil and rivers, but with the snow already melting in March, their armoured troops and heavy seige engines got stuck in the mire.”

p. p. 102 In 1237 Ogodei went a step further and established a preferential marriage system between the male and female descendents of Chingiss Khan and the Qonggirad. Imperial chief wives were thus sipposed to be of Quonggirad origin, although Ogodei’s order was not rigorously followed. The decision probably reflected the fact that Borte, Chinggis Khan’s first wife, was the daughter of Dei Sechen, chief of the Qonggirad. A khan had many khatun because marriage was a political partnership but only few of the women were chief wives, with their own extended households. Secondary wives and concubines often stayed with the chief wives who controlled them. The chief wife could be highly influential: she might have her own court of secretaries, treasurers and traders and sit at the quiriltai.

p. 109 The fattening of horses and camels during periods of calving and milking was crucial to the pastoral economy. During these months, usually from May to September, the herds needed to rest. When the mares were milking, they did not march with the khan’s horde. The Mongols used this five-month long season not only to relax – these were essentially peaceful stretches – but also to organise extensive political meetings and take governing decisions. It was no accident that the Mongols planned enthronements and great quirltai during the drinking festival they held in the summer.

p. 111 The Mongols did not consider humanity superior to nature, and humans were not the masters of the environment. Mongols saw animals, plants, terrain, and insects as lifeforms to be feared and respected. They believed in the “land masters”, the intangible entities of the land, defined by the anthropologist Gregory Delaplace as “localised at a certain place, commanding such diverse phenomena as weather, luck for hunting, and encironmental conditions in general. And the Mongols handled the earth and wildlife with great caution, as these entities could be vengeful and hostile. Mongols worshiped nature and cared for it deeply.”

p. 112 Preparing kumis required experience, skill and patience, for it entailed stirring or chaurning raw mare’s milk for hours. It was also a symbolically loaded task that only men were able to perform. A fizzy drink. kumis typically had an ethyl alcohol content of between 1 and 2.5%, but the level could be raised if the milk fermented longer. … more than a shared tradition. It was also a vital part of the Mongol diet. Shamans knew kumis was an unparalleled energy booster and used it in various rituals… researchers have shown that kumis from animals milked around June, exactly when the drinking festival was in full flow – yields especially high levels of vitamin E, niacin and dehydroascorbic acid, a form of vitamin C… Fresh kumis strengthens the immune system and treats and prevents typhoid, dysentry, and other diseases that were common … also has antibiotic properties and is still used against bacterial infections. The Mongols recognised that kumis was useful in treating kidney stones, which was likely a prevalent ailment. As avid meat eaters, the Mongols probably had elevated levels of uric acid, which leads to painful afflictions such as kidney stones and gout.”

p.118 Around 1250 Batu sponsored the construction of permanent structures at a location the Mongols recorded on their coins as Sarai, meaning palace or city … Not much is known… It is a common mistake to compare Sarai to a classical imperial city, for the khan would neither live within four walls nor have his mausoleum constructed there. He also did not try to impress his people with buildings. Sarai probably served a function similar to that of Qaraqorum, “the sitting city” Ogodei had founded two decades earlier … an enclosed, brick-walled town with two districts, one for Muslim merchants and one for Chinese craftsmen. Next to the great khan’s palace there were a number of palaces for court secretaries, 12 Buddhist temples, two mosques and a church… a meeting point for outsiders. Sarai hosted traders, travelers, secretaries, artisans and religious men, who found there the comforts of sedentary life…. Mongols themselves considered sedentary residences less comfortable than their tents, which were warmer, softer and more intimate… As a centre of trade, religion and craft, Sarai helped to advance the political and economic goals of the Horde and, as it grew, elevated the Khan’s prestige. What Sarai was not was an administrative center. Mongols ruled on horseback.”

p. 128 Since at least the 7th century, Turks, Kiran, Uighurs and other Central Asian rulers had implemented messaging systems. The Mongols merged these regional networks and fit them to their own ambitions. By the mid-13th century, the yam was fully operational. There were hundreds of yam stations, small camps run by Mongols and locals, where official travellers and emissaries could obtain food and fresh mounts. The cost of maintaining the stations fell on the local people, who were required to provide horses, water, food and clothing and to accomodate official travellers foreign emissaries and their escorts. The yamchi, postmen, who staffed the stations, did not give away horses but rather exchanged them for horses that the travelers had received from a previous station. Mongols were selective about horses. They distinguished between pack, post and war horses and between those suited to long distances and sprinters useful for urgent missions across short distances. The army controlled the whole yam system.

In the Qichaq steppe, yam stations were located roughly a half-day’s distance from each other … All the yam horses belonged to the empire; the yam operated like a state-run horse rental company, that covered the whole Mongol territory… The tergen yam, comprising carts pilled by oxen, camels and strong horses, moved heavy loads and only covered portions of territoies. The morin yam, the regular postal route, was limited to riders on horseback, and ran trough th whole empire. And via the narin yam, a secret communication system, a messenger could travel more than 120 miles in a day … The yam made the steppe smaller.

p. 180 Life in the hordes was unusually safe and secure, surprising European visitors. The Jochids tried to ensure similar order in the Russian principalities, so that the people could achieve economic output and population growht that would fuel the khan’s regime. To this end, the Mongols regulated Russian subjects much as they did their own, banning Russians from carrying weapons and riding war horses, while depitizing local rulers to provide security… To confirm the positions of local rulers, the Mongols granted them yarliks – written diplomas, which had long been used across the empire to make formal announcements.

p. 186 the Jochis had to rely on middlement on the coasts, who could connect them to the world beyond Caffa [modern Crimea] was a strategically privleged location … Through the Genoese, the Mongols could control the nearby strait of Kerch, which connects the Black and Azov seas. Whoever controlled the strait controlled Black Sea access to the Horde… the alliance with the Byzantines had strengthened the Jochld’s control over Black Sea access and allowed its people to exit and enter through the Bosporus and Dardanelles, the alliance with the Mamluks gave the Jochids access to the Nile and the Red Sea.”

p. 187 “Another key to Jochid commerce under Mongke-Temur;s reign was southeastern Moldavia… they could watch the end points of the Dniester and Danube rivers, critical trade routes that connected the Black Sea to a galaxy of inland ports. Second, portions – specifically the Bujak steppe and the region of the Danubian lakes – were ideal for winter camps… Since the Bronze Age, it was mostly a nomad’s land.”

p. 217 “In early 1313, with the lunar new year approaching, the hordes converged on the lower Volga for festicities and the entronement of their new khan. But no consensus had been reached. Ozbek learned … his opponents were preparing a coup against him. Upon hearing the news, he rushed out of his tent, gathered his men and allies on the outskirts of the festival site and then returned in full force… slayed Tukel Buqa, while Ozbek’s men killed the begs and princes who opposed him… Soon after taking the throne, Ozbek married his stepmother Bayalun. By doing so, he reestablished his deceased father in the direct lineal succession and tighted his own control over the ruling lineage. As a Muslim, Ozbek was forbidden from marrying his stepmother, but the Khan’s jurists circumvented the issue by claiming that Bayalun’s previous marriages were not valid because her former husnands had not been Muslim. .. She was no passive instrument of legitimation; on the contray, Bayalun had been at the center of power for more than 20 years, and she was keen to maintain her influence.” (reference DeWeese Islamization, 93-4, 120 https://www.jstor.org/stable/164043)

p. 237 By the 1330s continuing economic growth had transformed Sarai into a huge city. It took half a day on horseback to cross from one end to the other. Sarai had open space but also densely populated districts with uninterrupted rows of gardenless houses. They ran along large streets bordered with aryks, deep irrigation ditches, and water pipes most likely serving bathhouses and ceramics workshops … two kinds of pipes ran across the urban settlement: one, made of ceramic, supplied water, while the other, made of wood, carried sewage, which probably discharged into the Akhtuba. The city also had a number of wells that provided water for household use, although not for drinking. Drainage systems were a commonplace in Central Asian cities, likely well before the period of Mongol domination… Central Asian urbanites moved to the Volga region and built there the same infrastructure they were familiar with in their hometowns.”

p. 250 It turned out that the Ilkhanids’ gradual collapse between the 1330s and the 1350s was just a harbringer of the most consequential global political phenomenon of the 14th century, the disintregation of the Mongol Empire. The Horde succumbed to infighting, the ulus of Chagatay split, and the Yuan, the Toluid regime in the far east, was ejected from China. All these changes were hastened by the Black Death, which revealed weaknesses in the larger world system stewarded and relied on by Chingis’s heirs. With the global economy shattered by the pandemic, trade and ciculation – the lifeblood of the Chinggidis regimes, – drained away. By the end of the 14th century there was still a Horde, there was stilla Yuan dynasty, and there was still a people that called themselves the ulus of Chagatay, but all of these looked dramatically different from the sturdy politics of decades earlier.”

Notes from Condemned: The Transported Men, Women and Children who Built Britain’s Empire

p. 16 “The City of London, suffering from a “superfluous multitude of unwanted and troublesome children “appointed” one hundred of them to be taken to Virginia in 1620, “there to be bound apprentices, upon very beneficial conditions”. So anxious was the City to rid itself of this innocent excess that 500 shillings were granted “for their passage and outfit”. It seems tghat some of the children were relucant to go to an unknown land across dangerous seas. The City petitioned the Board of Trades and Plantations for a ruling to overcome what was, even then, a dramatic infringement of personal liberty. The argument made by the London authorities was based on the redemption “of the ill0disposed children” from the sin of existing. They argued that the children “under severe masters in Vriginia may be brough to goodness”. But without official sanction, the City was unable to dlivert the children to the Virginia Company for transportation against their will, desiring a “higher authority to get over the difficulty”. Of course a way was found … and so it was with all aspects of transportation. With or without the support of the law, valuable, preferably young bodies would be procured for the needs of the New World.

p. 17 Throughout the 1740s hundreds of children were said to have been disappeared from the Aberdeen area alone, as traders, authorities and New World planters took advantage of the poor, the orpohaned and the plain unlucky. The ill-favoured included those who did not fit in. As well as children, sturdy beggars, strolling players and their troublesome like, “Egyptians” as Roma people were then known, were transported. With their nomadic lifestyle and distinctive dress, they were always easy targets. They were banished from England as early as 1531, and a few years later, in 1544. These unfortunates were sent to continental Europe, but as the empire established its foundations and banishment evolved into transportation, the Americas provided new destinations. In 1665 an Edinburgh merchant, George Hutcheson, and his business partners were empowered by the Privy Council to transport loose and dissolute persons, including “Egyptians” to Barbados and Jamaica. A similar privilege was granted to an Edinburgh syndicate in 1669. Nearly 50 years later, in 1715, nine male and female Gypsies were sent to Virginia. Waht, if any, crimes, these people had committed, was usually unclear.”

p. 26 Marcellus Rivers and Oxenbridge Foyle, gentlemen, were two of more than 70 Royalist rebels from the Penddrock Rising transported to Barbados in 1656. They had fought with the wrong army and simply been sold into forced labour by Cromwell’s main financier. Plantation slavery was well established by this time and the planters were not particular about the exact legal status of their workers, slave, indentured labourer or convitc. They were all treated in much the same way, especially when it came to tending the fields. Ten to 12-hour days were standard with overseers using harsh punishments to enforce obedience and productivity. Sunday was the only day of rest. Observers at the time likened the working conditions to those of galley slaves, an unremitting regime of backbreaking work conducted a rate determined by the overseer. After being imprisoned at Exeter, eben though “many of them never saw Salisbury, nor bore arms in their lives” and underwent no legal process, let alone a trial, the men languished for a year. Then without warning, they were “snatched out of their prisons” and driven unger guard in carts through the city. After further movements, they sailed from Plymouth and arrived in Barbados nearly six weeks later”.. never till thy came to the island knew whither they were going”… These men became the “goods and chattels” of a couple of London aldermen and a captain of Plymouth… The petitioners asked the court “to question by what authority so great a breach is made upon the free people of England”… caused uproar among the public and in Parliament. . contributed to the view that colonial transportation was a system that enslaved English people, an affront to the popular notion of the “freeborn Englishman”. Widespread popular opposition to transportation stems largely from this period. Oxenbridge Foyle seems to be lost to history but we know that Marcellus Rivers reyurned to England. He took the opportunity of the restoartion of the monarchy in 1660 to bring a case against the previously well-connected planters and slavers who had trafficked hime and his companions, reducing them to “Barbados merchandize”. 
p. 34 Mary Moders, better known as Mary Carleton, specialised in relationships with middle- and upper-class men of substance, young and old, all ending with her disappearance, along with their wealth, whatever was left of it… in prison became such a celebrity that she was visited by the diarist Samuel Pepys, who also seems to have fallen under her spell… cleverly exploited her notoriety as far as she could, pursuing her serial relationships and frauds for some years, until arrested for stealing. The ‘princess’ was found guilty and transported to Jamaice in 1671. .. the service she provided in betraying her companions won Mary no favours for breaking the law against returning from banishment before serving the full sentence. . The playwright Aphra Behn procided a more sympathetic epitaph in the epilogue to her play The Dutch Lover, published shortly after Mary’s execution… Mary remained a celebrity, with street ballads and accounts of her adventures still being published and republished half a century after her execution. Her raffish life, brief transportation and ill-judged reuyrn highlight the haphazard nature of the system and the often random fates of those caught within it.”
p. 118 Japan – January 1830. “the men were escaped convicts. They had mutinied aboard the brig Cyprus in Recherche Bay, Van Diemen’s Land, five months earlier.. The 18 convicts aboard sailed bolding into the Pacific Ocean for a life of piuracy and plunder. Their only experienced sailor was a man who named himself after a free-flying bird, William Swallow. His real name was William Walker, though he had a long list of other crijminal aliases and a colourful record. Born in 1792, Walker was transported for stealing, arriving in Van Diemen’s Land in 1829… He escaped back to England, where he was eventially recaptured and tried under an alias, escaping a likely death sentence for returning from transportation… the Japanese decided to help them out with some advice about the weather and winds, allowing them to set sail and drift away to sea. … They managed to reach China, losing only one man overboard. Three more departed the crew and in February 1830 the remaining mutineers scuttled the Cyprus and took to the ship’s boat with the aim of pretending they were shipwrecked sailors. The authories in Canton believed their lies and the convicts scattered. Some headed for America never to be heard from again, but Swallow and three others sailed for England. While they were in transity, news of the mutiny on the Cyprus reached Canton and one of the convicts who had remained there confessed to the crime. A fast ship carried the news to England and when Swallow and his accompliced arrived there six days later the authorities were waiting. Swallow managed to escape but was recaptured… Two of Swallow’s accomplices were hanged but he escaped the noose by convincing the court that he had acted under intimidation and navigated the ship to save himself. He was found not guilty of piracy and sentenced to serve out the remainder of his sentence. For the third time he sailed to Van Diemen’s Land and arrived at the destination of his original voyage. He died in 1834 at another notorious prison a few years after returning to penal servitude. .. laid to rest in an unmarked grave on the Isle of the Dead, the Port Arthur cemetery.”

p. 148 Convictism was the inevitable obverse of a global imperial institution. At the top of the social order were the government, officials, penal authorities, the military, merchant traders and armies of administrators necessary to run such an extensive enterprise and its attendant bureaucracy. At the bottom were the poor, indigent, ciminal, rebellious and otherwise troublesome indviduals. The upper and lower spheres depended on each other for their continued existence in a twisted chain of mutual dependency.”

p. 158 Dudhnath Tewari was a sepot in the Bengal Native Infantry in Punjab when, along with many others, he deserted and joined the mutiny against British colonial rule. He was transported with others to Port Blair in the Andamans in 1858. A little more than six months later he was part of a mass escape… the fugitives met a harsh landscape and an enraged and dispossessed indigenous people, ,, Andamese … nursed him back to health and allowed him to effectively join their community. He hunted with them, took part in their religious ceremonies and married two Andamese women, one of whom, in due course, gave birth to a son. … a little over a year. One day he heard excited talk among his hosts about plans to rid their homeland of the British. He quickly discovered that this involved a massacre of everyone in the islands, not only the British but his own countrymen and other convicts… he returned to Port Blair with news of the attack. It came on 17 May at a place the British had named Aberdeen. Forewarned, British firepower easily repelled the determined attack by the poorly armed Andamanese, slaughering them in their thousands and perpetuating what was effectively a genocide. It was the end of indigenous resistsance and incited the British to consoludate their power throughout the Andaman and neighbouring Nicobar Islands. For his treachery – or was it bravery? – Tewari was later given a full pardon and reportedly returned to his home in northern India.”

p. 203 In July 1840 eight-year-old William Beale was sentenced at Lewes Assizes in Sussex to seven years transportation for larceny. He was described as a ‘laborer’. He landed in Fremantle from the Isle of Wight in October 1843. Presumably 11 years old by now, he was thought to be too small and weak to work as an apprentice and one of his employers said he had barely been able to carry half a bucket of water. William was quickly in trouble for neglecting his work, sleeping rough in the bush, absconding and “working on his own account”. He was also described by two of his “masters” as a good worker. Eventually, the boy was “paid off”, as the record described it, and was lasted reported to be earning good wages of two pounds a month as a shepher. Hopefully, his entrepreneurial character led him to prosper, although a “William Beale” received three months’ hard labour for perjury in 1876 and it is not impoosible that this was the Parkhurst boy, by then aged in his mid-40s.”

p. 224 “It is estimated that Britain transported over 376,000 convicts between 1615 and 1940. These included the vagrant poor; professional and other criminals; rebellious Irish, Scots and English; religious recalcitrants, sundry unrulies, including Gypsies, border reivers (raiders), pirates, military deserters and ‘superfuous multitudes’ of unwanted children. To this figure can be added the unknown numbers of adbucted as well as internally transported and re-transported peoples of the far-flung empire… one of history’s most prolonged and brutal forms of oppression and punishment… these human beings were seen as sources of colonial labour, markets and procreation. Over four centuries the various public and private interests involved in this trade evolved into an extensive and large-scale ‘system’ of global labour transfer built on human misery, of individuals being enmeshed in economic, ploitical, strategic and commercial forces beyond their control. Many died. A few escaped. Some prospered. Most did their time and then got on with life. BUt almost all suffered.

Notes from Women Artists in the Early Modern Courts of Europe c. 1450-1700

P. 39 As a woman’s respectability was inevitably dependent upon her status as a wife, it is little wonder that at least 70% of the female artists in the list were married, the real percentage was probably even higher since the material status of some remains unknown. Many of the women examined in this study were married to artists or members of a court… In the case of Anelika Kauffmann, it was reported that her husband cared for her interests like a manager. By contrast, the busbands of Roman-born Artemisia Gentileschi and the French Elisabeth Vigee Le Brun squandered their wives carefully managed gains, an abuse which led in both cases to separation. Unmarried female artists appear to have been generally accepted as is demonstrated by the notable example of the 18th-century Venetian artist Rosalba Carriera, who remained single throughout her life. (A further example is Madeleine Francoise Basseport). Remarkably, only half the married female court artists researched here appear to have had children. Whether this statistic is a result of gaps in the available documentation or a conscious decision to forego having children remain a subject of speculation.

P. 43 Lavinia Fontana, a native of Bologna, may be taken as an example of a female artist who followed in Sofonisba Anguissola’s footsteps. Unlike Anguissola, Fontana did not come from a noble family but rather an artistic one. Nonetheless, she sought to style herself upon an aristocratic model in order to demonstrate her suitability for a court appointment. Fonatan who, according to a 17th-century source, acquired a doctorate from the University of Nologna, presented herself as a highly refined and well-educated lady. She appears in elegant attire, seated at her desk and surrounded by a collection of antiques. She is not engaged in the potentially messy act of painting, but is rather just beginning to sketch her ideas on paper.

P. 45 Another career strategy was to capitalise upon the perceived novelty of the female artist…. Some female artists reinforced their exotic status by developing unusual artistic techniques. The Italian artist Giocanna Garzoni, who was famed for her still-life paintings, originated an innovative painting technique using a multitude of single-coloured dots, which resulted in an aesthetically pleasing pointillist effect. Rosalba Carriera had great success in adopting the medium of pastels, innovative in the early 18th century. The Dutch 17th-century artist Johanna Koerten made court protraits in the form of extremely fine, filagreed paper silhouettes. Her unique mastery of this unusual and difficult technique earned her high honour in the courts of Europe. Luisa Roldan, appointed court sculptor by the Spanish King Carlos II in 1692, mastered the physically demanding art of woodcarving, rarely practiced by women, and innovated in creating terracotta sculpture at court. .. Rachel ruysch, court painter to Prince Johann Wilhelm von der Pfalz, delighted the court in Dusseldorf with her minutely detailed and realistic still-life compositions. She also remained active until a very advanced age, a marvel that Ruysch emphasized by both signing and dating her works. 

P. 52 Misogynist criticism was certainly not lacking. Many female artists were accused of succeeding only on the basis of their femininity. The English painter Nathaniel Hone, for example, insinuated this in his painting The Conjuror, which created a major scandal following its public display in 1775. The magician after whom the work is titled alludes to the British Academy’s president, Sir Joshua Reynolds, and is depicted with a young girl nestled up against his leg. The girl’s pose recalled a painting by Angelika Kauffmann, who was rumoured to have a relationship with Renolds… a highly compromising scene could be observed in the background. Before the silhouette of St Paul’s Cathedral  there appeared to be a bacchanalian dance in progress, with an attractive young woman at its centre, naked but for her boots. This scene referred to a 1773 commission to numerous Academy members who had been given the task of decorating the great London cathedral. Hone had not been among those chosen by Reynolds, though Kauffmann was.”

P.62 The highest genre of art, history painting, reamined the sole purview of male artists at court,.. The relatively high number of court appointments declined by women artists show that it was more attractive for them to strive for a balance between court and civil commissions. 

P. 105 “Sofonisba seems to have had a strong personality and force of will. And even though she did not serve Anne of Austria officially, the two seem to have forged a close relationship. This is suggested by Queen’s intercession in 1571 on Sofonisba’s behalf with Phillip II when the artists, along with a group of damas, was involved in an act of Household rebellion. On that occasion a group of ladies in waiting gathered trunks and pulled them against windows that had been closed with padlocks, by order of the King, to keep the ladies from contact with suitors or others… Philip II became very upset and threatened to send the ladies in waiting back to their families without dowry or wedding … It was the queen’s responsibility to decide what happened to them… While the offenders were briefly confined, Queen Anne allowed them out after a day and a half, despite the fact that the King considered the punishment insufficient. … another episode involving Sofonisba in which the damas, taking advantage of the absence of the king, snuck into his chambers and, using spearheads or metal, wrote on the windows.”

P. 139 Grand Duchess Vittoria della Rovere (1622-94) was an important patron of women artists and artisans at the Medici court whose impact on humanist culture has only recently begun to be explored in depth. .. training and education she provided for two embroiderers and lacemakers, Caterian Angiola Pieroncini and another woman known only to us by the moniker “La Trottolina” in the 1660s. Both ladies in waiting, the young women were sent to Paris to perfect their needlework skills in the new French styles. Having gained proficiency in France, both were repatriated to Florence. There they continued in service to the Grand Duchess, alongside other dame, among themMaria Maddalena Caligari, who were trained by nuns at the city’s convents.”

Related to a big digital project on women makers.

Notes from The Gun, The Ship and The Pen

P. 46 “What happened on Saint-Domingue/Haiti also confirms the political impact and disruptiveness of expanding levels of warfare in the 1700s. It underlines, too, the degree to which this was not just a Western phenomenon. In much of west Africa, the middle decades of the 18th century also witnessed a plurality of conflicts. Take Dahomey, a formidable kingdom in present-day Benin, with its own standing army and gunpowder weaponry. In 1724, it soldiers invaded the once powerful coastal kingdom of Allada, sezing over 8,000 captives. Dahomey itself was invaded seven times between the 1720s and 1740s by the armies of the Yoruba Oyo empire. This was based in what is now Nigeria, and sometimes deployed armies of over 50,000 men, There were other conflicts in this huge region. In the declining kingdom of Kongo, a polity which extended into parts of what is now Angola, Gabon and the two republics of Congo, a longrunning civil war reached even sharper levels of violence between the 1760s and the 1780s…. Some Africanist have contended “a great many of the slaves” who were shipped by French slavers into Saint-Somingue in the later 1700s may in effect have been military veterans, men who had ‘served in African armies prior to their enslavement … may have been … speculates the historian John Thornton,… “the key element of the early success” of its revellion in the 1790s against slavery, and that enabled the Black insurgents here to endure and fight back when they were “threatened by reinforced armies from Europe”.”

P. 67 “Celebration of Moses, along with other real and legendary legislators such as Lycurgus, the quasi-mythical lawgiver of ancient Sparta, Charlemagne, Muhammad, Confucius and the Anglo-Saxon King Alfred found enhanced expression from the mid-18th century not only in political, philosophical and scholarly writing, but also in art and in architectural design and sculpture. The growing cult of messianic lawmkers even surfaces in nobels – in Louis-Sebastien Mercier’s utopian bestseller L’An 2440 (1770) for instance… Mercier imagined a 25th century Mesico that has been cleansed of colonial violence by a Black “avenger of the New World”. This hero fights successfully against European predators, but Mercier goes on to describe how “this great man, this renowned legislator, this negro in whom nature had exerted all her force subsequently lays down the dword and instead resolves to display to the nation the sacred code of the laws, devising a federal constitution and becoming in the process a model for his fellow rulers.”

P. 75 Catherine the Great “those at the time and since who dismiss the Nakaz as nothing more than a vain autocrat’s parade of her pretensions to enlightenment have also misread and misunderstood its significance. It was innovative and influential not least in terms of the techniques that Catherine devised in order to advance and promote it. The Legislative Commission that met in Moscow in August 1767 … brought together delegates froman entire, rapidly expanding overland empire… far less power and initiative than America’s Founding Fathers; and, in the end, they accomplished much less… markedly more diverse in terms of social, economic, religious and ethnic background than the men of Philadelphia. About 30% were nobles, but some came from much lower down the social hierarchy… a man needed only to own a house or possess a trade. Women too received some recognition in this Moscow commission, something that did not happen in revolutionary America, or revolutionary France, or in revolutionary Haiti or revolutionary Spanish America. Among those selecting the commission’s members in 1767 were female landowners who were able to vote by proxy … did nothing for Russia’s own slave population, the roughly 50% of its peasant class who were serfs. Catherine had initially planned to use the Nakaz to ease the condition of these people and provide for their gradual emancipation… but these emancipatory projects fell victims to objections from the landowning class, and to her own nervousness about alienating her nobility.. Not all of the Moscow deputies were white, and not all of them were Christian. The empire’s non-Russian peoples, many of whom were Muslims, had been dran on extensively for military service during the Seven Years’ War. They reaped some reward in the Legislative Commission where they were allotted 54 deputies. “Orthodox sits next to heretic and Muslim,” wrote Catherine complacently in December 1767 of the commission’s meetings, “and all three listen calmly to a heathen; and all four often put their heads together to make their opinions mutually acceptable.”

P. 116 The Federalist Papers, these essays are probably best known now for Hamilton’s initial euphoric boast: “It seems to have been reserved to the people of this country… to decide the important question, whether societies of men are really capable or not of establishing good government from reflection and choice, or whether they are forever destined to depend for their political constitutions on accident and force.”

P. 127 The new American political texts also confirmed and accelerated those changes in understandings of the term ‘constitution’ that were already emerging before 1776. It became more common now to argue that political constitutions might – perhaps even should – be set down in a single, easy-to-print document. One sign of this shift is the response of opponents. From the 1780s, conservatives in some of the disparate German lands and in Brityain began to refer derisively to ‘paper constitutions’. 

P. 135 Men and women who were interested in this form of political technology were increasingly presented with a choice. Not only could they study and plunder the United States’ own much reproduced and translated texts. Progressively, they were also in a position to secure information about, and read, and rifle the constitutions of other places. Already by the 1790s, savvy publishers had recognised and were beginning to capitalise on this trend.. Began to issue omnibus collections of constitutions… by the early 20th century, indeed, some newly emerging states and regimes were themselves sponsoring and publishing these kinds of collections… what happened in 1922 in the new Irish Free State, precariously established after six years of civil warfare against the British. The Free State government in Dublin commissioned and issued a hefty volume entitled Select Constitutions of the World. With the text of its own new Irish constitution printed prominently in fist place, the book also contained the texts of 18 other countries’ current constitutions.”

P. 138 The 1814 text crafted at Eidsvoll was painstakingly investigated by a Victorian scholar, the Swedish jurist Nils Hojer.. He was able to uncover and identify influences… “and in some cases verbatim translations – from the French revolutionary constitutions of 1791, 1793 and 1795, the American Federal Constitution and several state constitutions, the Polish Constitution of 1791, the Batavian [Dutch] constution of 1798, the Swedish of 1809 and the Spanish of 1812… what these men stoically hammered out as they waited for Swedish armed forces to arrive in their country was emphatically not a pure domestic invention… nor from any single foreign source… printed copies of the new constitution were put on sale in 1814 in Norway’s 25 major post offices and close to 100 sub-post offices… Norwegians were also encouraged to paste pages from these print version of the constitution on the inside walls of their houses thereby – quite literally – domesticating the country’s new politics and making it part of their everyday lives.”

P. 163 The common soldiery of Ancien Regime Europe (and elsewhere) were rarely the downtrodden automata of legend… Nonetheless, it is clear that some French Revolutionary troops were politicised to a quite different level, in part because widely distributed written and printed constitutions now existed to serve as instructional and inspiring scripts. Take Joseph-Louis-Gabriel Noel, a yeoman farmer and quiet family man from the still quieter village of Ubexy in north-eastern France. When he signed up as an infantryman in a local battalion of volunteers in August 1791, he quickly came to represent himself, even in the privacy of his letters home, as a “solider of the constitution”, a child of destiny. .. What he read, saw, heard and was told by his officers convinced him, however, that triumph was assured and not just for France. “It is we,” he rejoiced, “who must attack to send shivers down the tyrants’ spines and free enslaved people.”

P. 164 “The army that Hapoleon let loose on Russia in the summer of 1812 consisted of about 680,000 men, over half of whom were not French by birth. .. one Abdel-Talut. Originally captured in Ethiopia and sold as a slave in Cairo, he was pluched from captivity there by Napoleon’s invading soldiery, and subsequenly exposed to different forms of hardship and duress, taking part in several French military campaigns before dying in frozen agony on the retreat from Moscow.”

P. 193 “By the mid 1820s, Spain’s Atlantic empire had shrunk to just Cuba and Puerto Rico. The new independence constitutions crafted in Argentina in 1826, in Chile and Peru in 1828, and in New Granada, Urguay and Venezuela in 1830 still retained, however, strong traces of the original Cadez model. … because of his invasion of the Iberian peninsula, and because of the complex repercussions of his Bayonee Statute, Napoleon helped to foster the spread of written constitutions into the length and breadth of South America and the spread of knowledge of them into parts of south-east Asia.

P. 207 Pentham “also made contact with Islamic north Africa, especially by way of his ‘adopted son’, Hassuna D’Ghies. Madrasa-educated, multilingual and a devout Muslim, D’Ghies came from a wealthy family in Tripoli. Visiting London in the early 1820s, he quickly made himself known to Bentham and for over a year the two men worked on plans for an Arabic language constitution for Tripoli and for a wider political revolution that might range across north Africa. One result was Bentham’s 1822 essay “Securities Against Misrule”, the first full-length discussion by a Western author of how the new constitutional ideas and apparatus might be adapted to an Islamic polity.”

P. 208 Betham “back in 1789, when drafting a proposal for a constitution for Revolutionary France, he had argued for the extension of its franchise to all citizens ‘ male or female’ so long as the recipients were ‘of full age, of cound mind, and able to read’. Aware that even most of his fellow reformers would likely question ‘Wht admit women to the right of suffrage?’ Bentham pushed the counter-question: ‘Why exclude them? By the 1820s, however… this cause dropped out of his major public statements and writings. Time was short for him now, and there seemed so much that he could do.”

P. 415 (1820s to 1920s) “Unable or unwilling to design and deploy a formal written constitution, British jurists, polemicists and politicians resorted instead and deliberately to another form of print: patriotic and widely distributed and exported histories of their real and imagined political constitution.”

P. 342 James Africanus Beale Horton – surgeon-major and constituionalist 

P. 422 “In a deeply uncertain, shifting, unequal and violent world, therse kinds of imperfect but sometimes stirring, diversely useful and easily available texts may be the best we can hope for. As Thomas Jefferson put it in 1802: “tho’ written constitutions may be violated in moments of passion or delusion, yet they furhish a text to which those who are watchful may again rally and recall to the people.” Over 200 years later, much the same point was being acted out by a.. Young woman named Olga Misik who was protecting in the streets of Moscow…A pro-democracy activist, Misik found herself early in AUgust 2019 encircled by riot police, formidable men in body armour, brandishing shields and batons. Her response was to sit down in the street and read aloud passages from the pages of a paperback copy of the Russian constituion. Misik was 17 at this point and still at school… they did not move in and attack.”