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Notes from Ladies of the Grand Tour by Brian Dolan

p. 38 Elizabeth Carter’s translation of the Greek Works of Epictetus (published in 1758) who noted that if ‘women had the bemefit of liberal instructions, if they were inured to study, and accustomed to learned conversation .. if they had the same opportunity of improvement as the men, there can be no doubt but that they would be equally capable of reacing any intellectual attainment”.

p. 42 “The Continent provided more inspiring examples of learning for women. Italy was famous for having at least one noted scientifically learned woman in its cultured cities, such as Laura Bassi, professor of Newtonian physics and mathematics in Bologna; Maria Gaetana Agnesi, mathemitician in Milan; and Christina Roccati, tutor in physics to the patricians in the Veneto. Women were featured as interlocutors in popular scientific pedagogical traces from Fontenelle’s Conversations on the Plurality of Worlds (1686) to Francesco Algaraptti’s Newtownianism for Ladies, 1737, to Giuseppe Compagnoni’s Chemistry for Ladies, 1796. They were also respected translators of scientific treatises, including Guiseppa Eleonora Barbapiccola’s 1722 translation of Descartes’ Principles of Philosophy, or Emilie du Chatelet, whose acclaimed translation of Newton’s Principia was published in France in 1759.”

p. 52 Science and politics, national identity, ancient languages, religious toleration – these subjects, which were interwoven into travel narratives – were not ‘feminine’, nor considered appropriate points of contemplation for women. “To read,” warned Edmund Burke, the leading critic of the French Revolution, “is to lay oneself open to … Contagion.” What might look education and innocent enough might in fact be infected with infidel messages. They could lead the inquiring pupil to a world of hlasphemy and unbelief. Who would suspect the potential for ‘destruction which lurks under the harmless or instructive names of General History, Natural History, Travels, Voyages, Lives, Encyclopedias, Criticism and Roman?” asked Hannah More, later dismissing the growing fad for anything foreign by advising that ‘Religion is our Compass’/”

p. 65 “Promoting rational, friendly companions as spouses was the antidote to this. Lord Hillsborough, speaking in the House of Lords about the Marriage Act of 1753 – designed to eradicate reckless, clandestine marriages – opined that mutual love was certainly “a very proper ingredient” for a marriage, but it was a “sedate and fixed love, not a sudden flash of passion which dazzles the understanding”.

p. 87 “Lady Shadwell saw Lady Mary Wortley Montagu at Venice where she now resides, and asked her what made her leave England; she told them the reason was people had grown so stupid she could not endure their company; all of England was infected with dullness’ by the bye, what she means by insupportable dullness is her husband, for it seems she never intends to come back while he lives” Elizabeth Robinson in a letter to a friend, 22 July 1740

p. 122 “Emily, Duchess of Leinster … for the greater part of 25 years she had been steadfastly devoted to her husband … but following his death in 1773, 43-year-old Emily turned squarely towards he son’s tutor, Willian Oglivie, with whom she had begun a covert love affair just two years previously … she determined to take her family abroard. Later that year in Toulouse they were married, and, free from the shackles of social conventionality (and in a less expensive country to boot), they settled in their new lives.”

p. 159 For certain ladies of the Grand Tour, Beddoes’s book seemed to suggest ways in which controlling one’s environment could lead to emancipation. “Have you read Beddowes’ Book, Dear Ladies?” asked Hester Piozzi of the Ladies of Llangollen, Lad Eleanor Butler and Sarah Poronby. “All about Oxygen Air and Gas, and how we have Power over our own Lives, and I know not what strange things. It is a curious Performance.” This statement captures the spirit of how medicine – the controlling theory behind ‘gettting a breath of fresh air’ and therefore travelling for health – could emancipate women from the constrictions of life at home. This starkly contrasted with popular medical opinion that sough to exercise control over women’s bodies – with physiological theories enforcing a view that women were fragile and fit only for domesticity. Women also used the association between travel and health to find other ways to gain power over their own lives.”

Hester Thrale p. 176

“One encounter with a nun, a Miss Canning, who lived at the English convent Notre Dame de Sion in the Ruse des Fosses Saint Victor, she found especially remarkable. This woman, she noted, was once ‘a Beauty about London’ was well-travelled and well-read, possessed a notable library in her room, desired to learn Latin, played the church organ and ‘went over Handel’s Water Musick with great Dexterity”. She was struck with the candour with which the abbess and other nuns felt able to converse – “abusing the French Customs, wondering at the Hardships suffered by the Claires, tell and hearing in short whatever we had in mind”.

p. 178 Dressing to design identified the wearer with a particularsocial class. The Duchess of Portland noticed that even for those who had not been aboard during a certain season, having friends freshly returned from the Continent connected one to the latest styles. In London, a woman ‘of fashion’ was therefore able to associate herself with diverse continental locales and tastes in order to display that she was cosmopolitan. .. Imitating foreign coiffures, ruffles, tassels, festoons and plumes also engenderfed a thirving trade for French milliners, mantra makers and tailors living in London. “Nothing that is merely English goes down with our modern Ladies,” announced one successful mercer. “From their Shift to their Topknots they must be equipped from Deare PAris.” Similarly , attempts to ape the prevailing modes of dress in PAris put a premium on having a French maid, hired in all the most privileged households, who could suitabily adorn her mistress.”

p. 148 Sarah Scott .. in 1751, inside a year of her abusive marriage to George Lewis Scott, she had left him and joined Lady Barbara Montagu in Batheaston, in which Sarah’s sister joked was their ‘convent’, where she pursued a life of charitable enterprise.
“Sarag also wrote and had published a number of works of fiction and historical biography, including in 1762 her most well-known work, A Description of Millennium Hall – which presented an ideaolised vision of a society created and run by women … in what one of the women propreitors describes as “this heavenly society,” the residents study, paint, tend the garden, and manage their own intellectual and economic affairs.”

p. 261 “However scandalous the public considered the marriage of Lady Elizabeth Webster to Henry Richard Fox, the 3rd Lord Holland, in 1797, a bond was sealed that would withstand all future calumnious onslaughters. Lord HOlland inherited a powerful political legacy from his uncle, the Whig Charles James Fox, and became a prominent debater in the House of Lords in his own right. Elizabeth adapted perfectly to the role of political consort… her maverick manners and flamboyant free spirit that made her partnership with the politically minded Lord HOlland so perfectly complementary. And Lady Holland found herself in her element. As she once told her friend and confidante, Lady Bessborough, “all women of a certain age and in a situation to achieve it should take to Politicks”.

Books Environmental politics History

Notes from The Book of Eels by Tom Fort

p 20 Talking to a fisherman near Hinckley Point

“He told me one day before the war, his father had caught a sturgeon in the nets weighing nearly a hundred pounds. “Seven foot long it were. Amazing. No. I’ve never seen another one.”

p. 24 An American anthropologist, Albert Herre, who worked in the Philippines in the 1920s, found a ‘well-developed’ eel cult among the Lepanti Igorots who lived near Mount Mougoa. They kept sacred eels in pols, which were fed daily on rice and sweet potatoes by devotees who sang songs of praise as they went about their work.”

p. 35 A Roman of Praeneste, Claudius Aelianus, who in the second century AD, complied a collection of contemporary curiosities entitled De Natura Animalium. .. his book also contains reference to fly fishing for trout, as practiced by the Macedonians, which subsequent investigation has shown to be – almost certainly – authentic and reliable.”

p. 40 “The first great English antiquary, John Leland, referred to Lanport market in Segdemoor being full of “peckles, as they call them, because they take them in those waters by pecking an eel speare in them when they lie in their beds”… Eel spears were still being made in the small Danish town of Skyum until 30 years ago, and Dr Christopher Moriarty records how commercial eel spearing contniued on the mudflats at Rosslare, in south-east Ireland, until the 1960s, when tidal changes refulted in the eel grounds being buried in sand.”

p. 56 “the eel is an ancient creature and a primitve one. But its primitiveness does not mean that it is simply made, only that it was perfectly made in the earliest times. In fact its sensory equipment is so complex as to defy analysis, even now. Scientists who have spent lifetimes dissecting eels and studying their habits sill do not have any clear idea how – for example – they find their way across the vast expanses of the ocean to their breeding grounds. The Irish pote, Seamus Heaney, was stirred by the mystery. In “The Return”, he wrote

Who knows if she knows

her depth and direction;

She’s passed Malin and

Tory, silent, wakeless,

A wisp, a wick, that is

Its own taper and light

Through the weltering dark.”

p. 111 “The quiet life they have pursued this past 10 or 15 years is coming to an end. THey are preparing for a journey, to fulfil their destiny. Their backs and flanks darken from greenish to near black, while their bellies turn from yellow to silver. They become firmer to the touch, as fat is stored in their body muscle. Their nostrils dilate and their eyes expand. They cease to eat, and their digestive tracts degenerate. The salt content in the blood diminishes. The sex organs, which run like ribbons through the bodies of males and females, swell.” The order to move is generally sensed at night, and the external circumstances that stimulate have been known for thousands of years and exploited to mankind’s dietary advantage. The night is dark and stormy, and the barometric pressure is low. The moon is in its last squarter, small and growing smaller. The river is high, swollen by rain, and the current is strong. The wind blows from the lake into the mouth of the river leading to the sea, the stronger the better. Although there will be a trickle of migrating eels at any time, in any conditions, between August and the end of the year, it is this concert of effects which triggers the sudden and overwhelming collective impulse to depart, the mass exodus…. The records of the Comacchio fishery relate that on the night of 4 October 1697, the fishermen took 322,520kg of eel – around 300 tons, perhaps three quarters of a million fish, in one night’s work… these mighty harvests belong to the distant past.”

p. 114 Its skin is able, when moist, to absorb up to 90% of its oxygen requirement. The skin also plays a vital part in permitting the fish to pass without distress from freshwater to saltwater. … the thickness of the skin and the mucus with which it is so lavishly coated make it unusually resistant to the process known as osmosis”.

p. 127 “On the Thames the elver run was known as the eel fare. It usually began towards the end of April and was the occasion for Londoners to arm themselves with sieves and nets, take off their shoes, roll up their trousers, and help themselves. In 1832 Dr William Roots of Kingston upon Thames kept watch on a column close to the bank. It proceeded continuuously for five days, and he calculated that up to 1800 elvers were passing each minute.”

p. 132 “there is no evidence to support the charge – endlessly repeated by ignorant proprietors of trout and salmon fisheries, their keepers and some anglers – that they are destructive predators of salmon and trout eggs. These fish generally spawn during the winter and early spring, when eels are buried in mud, motionless and fasting, their metabolism merely yicking over… eels eat when they need to, and they are frequently caught with entirely empty stomachs, which – considering it takes them up to three days to digest a meal – suggests an abstemious attitude to the pleasures of the table.”

p. 157 In 1908 a delegation of fishmongers and fishery owners from Hamburg arrived in Gloucester. They had heard of the extraordinary scale of the Severn elver run, and wished to obtain supplies with which to supplement the stocks in German rivers and lakes which were insufficient to meet demand for eel. They were given permission to establish a depot at Epney, behind the Anchor Inn, from where the babies were shipped live back to Hamburg. It was an unusual trading link, but evidently a profitable one, for the depot was still flourishing in 1939, when the Ministry of Agriculture took possession of it and sent the Germans back home”

p. 170 a splendid print datying back from around 1800, called Eel Bobbing at Battersea. An old woman is sitting in a boat held in position a yard or two from the bank of the Thames by a pole driven into the mud. Beyond her, on the far side, standing out againsy a pale coral sky, rise the spire of a church and a windmill. She has a pipe jammed into her mouth, a round hat on her head, a blanket over her knees, a barrel in the sterm. She is grasping a sturdy piece of tumber in her honry hands, from the end of which, descending into the calm, oily water is a line. Somewhere beneath is the ball of worsted and worms, and once she feels teeth in it, up it will come, and there will be pie for supper, or perhaps eel in jelly”

p. 175 “the supply of live eels to the one great central fish market – at Billingsgate in London – was already largely controlled by the Dutch well before 1412, when the Lord Mayor decreed they should be sold by weight only. The vessels used for transporting and storing them were known as schuyts. Bulging with their perforated eel prisons, they became a familiar sight in London, as the companies owning them had been granted the right to anchor off Billingsgate for ease of access. In the late 17th century the official concession to supply eels to the market was bestowed by royal decree, partly in acknowledgement of the part played by the masters and crew of the schuyts in fighting the Great Fire of 1666 and providing food and shelter for the homeless victims. The main condition of the concession was that there should be at least one shop filled with eels in position at all times”

p. 268 “almost all the figures point to steep and continuing reductions in stock levels, and the eel watchers are of pretty much one mind. Some judge the decline to be critical, others prefer ‘significant’ or #dramatic#…no one knows what impact eel fishing is having, because no one knows how many eele there are and how many are being caught. Anyway, the effect of fishing is but one of the factors determining population dynamics. Others include the creeping advance on both sides of the Atlantic of the parasitic nematode Anguillicola crassus, which destroys the fish’s swimbladder, the spread of a herpes virus which attacks blood-forming tiss,e contaminations by PCBs and other pollutants, and the loss of habitat due to the draining of wetlands and the construction of dams… the Sargossa Sea itself has been given a generally clean bill of health .. but there is deep concern about a transport system that delivers the baby eels to the shores of Europe and North America, and the deepending suspicioun that the great alliance between the Gulf Stream and the North Atlantic Current may be faltering… the warming of the Arctic Ocean might be eroding the vigour”

Books Early modern history History Women's history

Notes from The Northumbrians: North-East England and Its People

p 70 What is perhaps most remarkable in this period are the erudite Northumbrian women who emerged to take a prominent place in Enlightenment discourse. we should begin here with Mary astell (1666-1731), the daughter of a Tyneside coal merchant and possibly Britain’s earliest similar thinker. she was educated by her uncle on the Newcastle Quayside in Latin French logic and natural philosophy before Mary Wollstonecraft wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Woman. she been took the bold step of moving to London to try to make a living as a writer. In 1694 she wrote a book entitled A serious proposal to the Ladies arguing for greatest female agency and the right to what we might now think of as a career instead of the stultification of early marriage. This appealed to her friend, Elizabeth Elstob, another Newcastle woman who was a serious scholar of Anglo-Saxon history. … this independence of mind was emulated by yet another Tyneside woman Jane Gomeldon, nee Middleton (1720 79), who after travelling in Europe disguised as a man ( and attempting to elope with a French nun) return to Newcastle where she wrote Maxims- a sort of English haiku – and in 1766, to raise money for the city’s lying-in hospital, a book of 31 essays entitled the The Medley, which Jane assumes a male persona to discuss, inter alia, Milton and Homer, … it was a Newcastle schoolmistress, Ann Fisher ( 1719-78) whose A New Grammar: being the most easy guide to speaking and writing the English language properly and correctly of 1745 made her the earliest female author on the subject and that her book ran to 33 editions.”

p. 143 Well-heeled women felt the pressure to conform to traditional gender roles too, as in the case of Rachel Parsons, daughter of the famous Tyneside industrialist Sir Charles Parsons. she was a mechanical Sciences graduate from Cambridge and president of the women’s Engineering Society, and during the war had been a director of her father’s Tyneside engineering company, at Wars end to Charles insisted that Rachel stand down, causing a rift between them that was never healed. after female suffrage was introduced partially in 1918, been fully from 1928, we do see women’s participation in politics increase ( Rachel Parsons stood for the conservatives in Newcastle.) it is telling however that the private lives of women elected in the northeast between the wars gave them atypical levels of Independence. after the former “gAIETY gIRL” Mabel Philipson was returned for the Conservatives in 1923 at Berwick as the north east’s first female MP, there came a succession of formidable women who were all either widows and unmarried or childless. Margaret Bondfield in Wallsend ( who became in 1929 Britain’s first female cabinet minister), Dr Marianne Phillips ( Sunderland), Susan Lawrence ( Stockton), Irene Ward ( Wallsend), and ‘Red Ellen’ Wilkinson (Middlesborough and then Jarrow).

Books History

Notes from Kindred: Neanderthal Life, Love, Death and Art

In the Neumark-Nord sediments, just as Neanderthal lithics become visible, there’s a sharp spike in charcoal particles: 10 times background levels. The pollen shows more sun-loving species too, like blackthorn and hazel; something was opening up the forest. What’s difficult to tell is whether this was natural burning creating a landscape attractive to Neanderthals, or if they were the fire starters. It’s clear, however, that there’s a connection, since the pattern lasts for 2 to 3 millennia, then as their archaeology disappears, so the forest begins closing in again.

the full analysis from Abric del Pastor provides an answer to the conundrum of whether multiple hearths mean one or more visits. When studied in detail using RMUs and 3D mapping, every level at Abric de Pastor with multiple fires turned out to consist of individual phases, each with one hearth. This strongly suggests that it was only ever visited by very small groups of Neanderthals.

One has far more artefacts, RMUs and refitting sequences than the others, which in theory might be due to an unusually long occupation. However, the numerous lithics aren’t matched by more animal bones or butchery. This makes it especially likely that there were instead more Neanderthals sitting round the fire, even if it was just for a night or so.

Micro-morphology has also provided proof that, far from being slovenly, Neanderthals were regularly disposing of their rubbish. At Abric Romaní some samples taken away from hearths nonetheless showed a mélange of tiny bone and lithic fragments burned at different temperatures. They were most likely scraped up from inside and around fires, then dumped some distance away. Other rubbish samples were quite distinctive: masses of mostly unburned, crushed bone and animal fats, plus coprolite (fossilised dung) fragments (species unclear). These matched deposits surrounding particular hearths, and likely reflect Neanderthals tidying up especially messy butchery waste and other waste. Most interesting, this cleaning was systematic: some dump areas were multi-layered, clearly having been used repeatedly.

It looks like Neanderthals had first made a fire when arriving, then swept the floor and burned the waste, which included old faeces mixed with animal dung and plant material. This feels like a ‘deep clean’ on moving into a home, but there’s also evidence from Abric Romaní that bodily waste was routinely incinerated along with grass and potentially moss: most likely old bedding.

La Folie contained something even more astonishing. Surrounding all of the archaeological features was a roughly circular series of small, slanted pits, each ringed by limestone blocks. They contained traces of organic material and had compacted walls, and were the first clear case of Neanderthal constructions. By piecing all the evidence together, it seems that large wooden poles had been rammed into the ground, then secured with stone blocks. It’s even possible to see how the stones collapsed inwards slightly when the poles were removed (or rotted). This was clearly a built living space, providing both shelter – probably using hides lashed to the poles – and an enclosed ‘home from home’. The area is so large that it wasn’t likely to be roofed, but there was probably one main entrance marked by a gap in the circle, with a hearth adjacent. Most interestingly, refitting shows that artefacts moved between different zones inside the structure: even during a relatively short stay, Neanderthals were dividing up space. Knapping was happening outside and around the inner edges, while the central area seems to have been for processing wood, vegetable matter and skins. And just like in a cave, the bedding was directly opposite the entrance, up against whatever barrier was used: the farthest point from danger. The La Folie discovery wasn’t the first claim for Neanderthal-built structures, but without modern excavation and analysis, there were many sceptics of things like the stacked mammoth bones at La Cotte de St Brelade. Other recent finds are, however, tipping the trend towards Neanderthal ‘furniture’, of a sort. Around 70km (40mi.) south of Paris is a field called Les Bossats, near the village of Ormesson. In the 1930s, Upper Palaeolithic artefacts made by H. sapiens were tugged loose by ploughing, though not reported until 70 years later, which kicked off excavations. Beneath that layer, archaeologists found that Neanderthals had been there too, somewhere between 53 and 41.5 ka. A fine covering of sediment meant that knapping debris lay virtually where it had fallen, and in the richest area four sizeable sandstone blocks were found. They must have been hauled in from nearby deposits, and were most likely useful surfaces; in other words, camp tables or chairs.

Le Rozel, on today’s north-west French coast, contains many sandy layers backed up against a cliff and dunes. Astonishingly, a series of levels from around 80 ka preserve hundreds of footprints. In the richest phase, careful size comparisons show that at least 4 and probably over 10 individuals were here. Most fascinating, they’re largely adolescents and children as young as 2 years old. With so few adults it’s hard to imagine this was a full group, and instead it looks like a pack of youngsters foraging at the beach.

Something was changing in the way Neanderthals lived in the landscape after 150 ka, but working out what caused it is one of the hardest remaining problems.

Dramatic changes after 150 ka – from full interglacial to deep glacial and everything in-between – were very likely part of the reason for Neanderthals’ growing flexibility, as well as specialisation. Everyday experiences began to look quite different depending on where, and when they lived.

f we recall the impression that many Quina sites, even places one stage beyond hunting camps, don’t look particularly like ‘homes’ with hearths, then perhaps these Neanderthals were using tents or shelters. We know from La Folie that open-air constructions of some sort were used later, but truly mobile shelters formed from hides would have allowed Quina-making Neanderthals to move flexibly across the tundra and stay warm while ranging over long distances. Even if they obviously returned time and again to particular caves or cliffs for the hunting and initial butchery, the lack of hearths despite there being some burned materials suggests we’re missing these parts of sites.

The oldest known Neanderthal prints were left more than 250,000 years before those at Le Rozel. On the slopes of the extinct Roccamonfina volcano, southern Italy, they were believed to be the Devil’s tracks after being revealed by eighteenth-century landslides. left around 350 ka by three early Neanderthals whose feet sank into cooled and rain-softened pyroclastic ash and mudflows. More than 50 prints show how all moved differently: one zig-zagged down, another took a cautious curving path, slipping and sometimes dropping down a hand for balance, while the third ploughed in a straight line. All three walkers were under 1.35m (4.4ft) tall, exactly the calculated height of Le Moustier 1, making them young teenagers.Tracing the three trails upslope, all led from a flat ledge speckled for about 50m (55yd) by yet more hominin footprints, as well as those of animals: a Neanderthal routeway.

Chimpanzees and bonobos, who are both physically and socially quite different, have only been separated since around 850 ka; roughly the same time that our own ancestors separated from the lineage that would lead to Neanderthals and Denisovans. Modern zoology’s concept of allotaxa may be more appropriate for what Neanderthals were to us: closely related species that vary in bodies and behaviours, yet can also reproduce. Yaks and cattle are an example, and it was certainly happening in Pleistocene fauna too: different types of mammoths sometimes hybridised, while living brown bears were recently found to preserve a small percentage of cave bear DNA.

Climatic impact is a possibility, with the rapid temperature rise towards the hothouse’n’hippos Eemian peak, followed by a world in flux, experiencing massive temperature jumps of 11 to 16°C. The population changes are mirrored in the archaeology too, with a proliferation of techno-complexes and regional traditions between 125 and 45 ka. Another theme that needs far more unpicking.

We are prone to paint ourselves as victors, but outside Africa we nearly went extinct at least once, and suffered a major population crash around 70 ka, just before the majority of interbreeding with Neanderthals.

dispersing populations obviously spreading all the way into Australia by 65 ka – adapting to arid deserts and wet mountain forests, even an ocean crossing to Indonesia – there’s no clear sign of H. sapiens in Central or Western Europe until more than 20,000 years later. Perhaps that land was already taken, and Neanderthals were successful enough, at least for a while, to prevent others coming in. Yet there is the Néronian ‘joker in the pack’, reminding us that what we can make out archaeologically is far from the whole story.

Furthermore, during the 25,000 years after Oase, it appears that successive Upper Palaeolithic populations totally replaced each other, and were then replaced in their turn by later prehistoric cultures. Parisians, Londoners or Berliners today with ostensibly European heritage have very little connection even to Mesolithic people just 10,000 years ago. The vast majority of their DNA comes from a massive influx of Western Asian peoples during the Neolithic.8 This means that many of the first H. sapiens populations are more extinct than the Neanderthals; not a great sign of evolutionary dominance.

A recent project modelled the collaborative possibilities, inviting expert Ju/’hoan San trackers from Namibia to examine physical traces within European Upper Palaeolithic caves. Their knowledge identified new tracks, and gave fresh interpretations of what was happening in these places….Neanderthals potentially also shared broader perspectives with Indigenous hunter-gatherers, whose cosmologies are often based around relational ideas. This isn’t about clumsy cut’n’paste analogies, but questioning the objectivity of assumptions most researchers already use.

Current interpretations are structured around themes of dominance, exploitation and conflict; life as struggle against nature, and animals as unthinking, unfeeling commodities. In stark contrast, relational frameworks emphasise the similarities between human and non-human. Hierarchies exist, blood is still spilled, but a relational world is filled with communities based on recognition of common personhood, of which humans are members, not masters. Human survival is not in conflict with creatures, but entwined in relationships with them.

Across multiple levels of river deposits, many thousands of bones show that Neanderthals hunted and thoroughly butchered at least 107 Deninger’s and brown bears. Though flatness is the overwhelming feature of northern France, Biache-Saint-Vaast is right at the point where the Scarpe River flows north from hills to the Flanders plains. Since bears will den in slopes with reasonably soft ground, hunting during hibernation may have been possible even without caves. But most are adult males, which doesn’t really fit the pattern seen in denning caves like Rio Secco. The river itself might have provided an ambush locale, especially if adult males were distracted by fishing. But however they were obtained, bears aren’t that easy to find, and while they represent a lot of meat and fat, hunting them is more dangerous than other more abundant prey like horses or giant deer.

Heavy bear fur may well have been a motivation, and cut marks do support this. But bear hunting is least common during the colder phases here. In the absence of clear economics a socially motivated explanation for the Biache-Saint-Vaast bears was proposed, but it was very Western: Neanderthals were intentionally selecting dangerous prey to gain prestige. However, it’s equally possible that this was about something relational between hominins and bears. Intriguingly, even if many Indigenous cultures consume bears – some like the Natashquan Innu even naming their land as ‘the place where we hunt bear’ – conceptions of these creatures as strongly linked to personhood and humans also exist, including in Naskapi, Tlingit, Iroquoian and Algonquian peoples.10 During the Palaeolithic, bears shared Neanderthals’ habits of moving into the earth to live, leaving their bones and claw marks in the same caves. With this in mind, there’s another weird thing about Biache-Saint-Vaast: high numbers of butchered skulls. Bears weren’t arriving here as entire carcasses, but if furs and fat were the main interest, why carry extremely heavy heads? Eyes, tongue and brain could easily have been removed elsewhere.

Books Early modern history History Women's history

Notes from Elizabeth I and Her Circle by Susan Doran

p. 41 Elizabeth also took more positive lessons from the reigns of her siblings. From both monarchs she learned much about the art of self-representation. Like Edward, she presented herself as a learned, godly protestant monarch, who was well versed in the classics and the scriptures. From Mary, she learned how to project authority and power while ‘circumcenting masculine stance and military symbols’. So for example, Elizabeth appropriated the images of the biblical women Deborah, Judith and Esther, who had previously been associated with her immediate predecessor. Furthermore, Elizabeth carried out royal rituals that had fallen into abeyance under the protestant Edward but had been restored by the Catholic Mary: the exchange of gifts on New Year’s Day; the touching for the king’s evil to cure scrofula; the royal washing of paupers’ feet on Maundy Thursday; and the celebration of the Feast of St George. Even though some protestants criticized these rituals as superstituous, Elizabeth continued them because they added to the charism of the monarchy. Protestant propagandists, however, would not admit to any borrowings from Mary. Instead, they worked hard to distance and disassociate the new queen from her half-sister.”

Books Early modern history History Women's history

Notes from Women and Politics in Early Modern England, 1450-1700, James Daybell (ed)

p. 42 “Extended networks of collateral relatives, neigbbours and friends also functioned as additional resources for ariscratic widows and wives in trouble. Lady Margaret Beaufort opened her great household at Collyweston to numberous women of this kind. Lady Anne Clifford, her half-brother’s daughter, and her two dughters found refuce with her when she separated from her husband, Henry, Lord Clifford. Elizabeth, Lady Scrope, lived at Collyweston after the death of her second husband, Sir Henry Westworth, in 1501. When her steopson, Sir Richard, disputed the terms of her marriage contract with his father, Lady Margaret intervened and forced him to sign heavy bonds in which he promised to accept the findings of an arbitration panel headed by her chamberlain. … Another of Margaret’s widowed friends, Cecily, Viscountess Welles, visited Collyweston frequently. When she died in 1506 Lady Margaret arranged for prayers to be said for her in her private chapel. Three years later, she bequeathed “a heart of hold with a fair sapphire” to Lady Powis’s daugher in her own will.”

p. 43 “A similar circle gathered around Elizabeth Mowbray, duchess of Norfolk, who retired to the Minories in London in 1488. … the group included her sister in law, Dame Jane Talbot, widow of Sir Humphrey, Elizabeth Brackenbury, coheir of Sir Robert, a follower of Richard III who had died at Bosworth, and Mary Tyrell, Anne Montgomery’s niece. Anne Montgomery died and was buried at the Minories in 1498. Subsequently both the duchess and Dame Talbot asked to be bured near her, a final tribute to the strength of their mutual ties.”

“Decades later, two high-ranking noblewomen, Elenaor, countess of Rutland, and Catherine, countess of Westmorland, who were connected by the marriage of their children, retired together to Haliwell, the London home of the Rutland heir, Hentry, the second earl. When they died in the early 1550s, they were both buried in the nearby church of St Leonard Shoreditch. Margaret, the second earl’s wife and the countess of Westmorland’s daughter, was also buried there in 1559. The internment of three countesses at St Leonard’s turned it into a mausoleum for members of the earl of Rutland’s family. Eventially two of Eleanor, countess of Rutland’s sons, Oliver and Sir Thomas, her daughter, Anne, and her granddaughter, Catherine Nevill, wife of Sir John Constable, were also duried there. Lady Constable’s sister, Lady Adeline Neville, built a monument in the church marking their tombs.”

p. 53 “both rhetoric and pragmatics encourage us to attend to context. They offer concepts of decorum of appropriateness, the fit of the words to the audience and the occasiona, as a critical measure for the value of the verbal performance as social activity. How strongly aware Elizabethan writers were of the adequacy of that fit is suggested when a copy of Lady Catherine Grey’s petition for the Queen’s forgiveness regarding her illicit marriage to the earl of Hertford is sent by her uncle in advance of her advice to Sir William Cecil to guard against there being “onni faute foud with onni word theerin wrytten”. Politeness analysis, as developed within pragmatics, can help to show that how a gentlewoman frames a request depends to a very large extend on the power relations obtaining in the situation. For example, consider the verbal complexity of Elizabeth Cavendish’s request to her mother, the countess of Shrewsbury, that her mother should neither believe nor spread lies about her – “I myght be so bould as to crave at your Ladyships hands that it wold please you to exteme (esteem) shuch falce bruts [rumours]… as lightly as you have don when others were in the like cas”. The complicated redundancy in the framing of the request reflects the power difference between them and the daughter’s corresponding estimation of the repair work required to counter the risk implicit in making the difficult request… Pragmatics is not wholly responsive to the discourse conditions of the Elizabethan political scene, in which a noblewoman’s social rank, marital status, property holdings, relationship to a patron or favoured faction, accompanying gratuity, previous expense laid out for a New Year’s gift for the Queen, all may affect the reception and efficiacy of a supplicatory letter as much as the virtuosity or decorum of its style. In this essay I will eventually draw upon Pierre Bourdieu’s economic model of linguistic exchange, which regards linguistic skill as only one among other forms of symbolic capital affecting how an utterance is received in any field or market.”

p. 212 “one of the manuscripts I am going to discuss describes a kind of sub-university for women in the 1630s made up of women who were sent to be educated by the wife of the Principal of New Inn Hall, Dr Rogers. Another mentions a kind of Nonconformist academy for the daughters of Dissenting families, run by a Mr Hill in Godmersham in Kent in 1671.”

p. 212 “Attitudes to female publication are shown in Robery Boyle’s dedication of his book, Occasional Reflections, to Katherine Ranelagh. Although she was ‘so great a Mistress of Wit, and Eloquence’, and encouraged him to publish his writing, she refused herself to publish anything at all: “her Modesty did … confine her pen to Excellent Letters.”… Katherine Ranelagh joins the list of early modern literary figures who thought Margaret Cavendish seriously deranged – “I am resolved she scapes Bedlam onely by being too rich to {be} sent thereto” she wrote in 1657.”