Category Archives: History

Blogging/IT History

1,000 years of blog history

Starting with the Bayeux tapestry – well in being a chronicle it is sort of like a blog, and now it has been animated – really, rather fun, I promise, even though it sounds a bit weird.

And nice to look back, since we’re all 10 years old today – this marking the date when the “first blog posting” was made. Of course no one had invented the title then…

Elsewhere in weekend history, “relics” of Joan of Arc are actually the remains of a mummy – please, no one tell Dan Brown; hate to think of what he’d manage to make of that.

And a brief history of chocolate records that it was a woman who helped to spread it around Europe. “It was reputedly a Spanish maid, La Molinilla, who took the secret from Spain to France with her mistress, Anne of Austria, when she married Louis XIII in 1651.”

History

The history carnival goes MSM

Over on the always excellent The Don’s Life, which just happens to be part of the website of The Times The History Carnival is going mainstream … or so you might say.

And it is a fine collection with a distinctly Times tinge (old, traditional, Thunderer Times, I add hastily, not new…)

Do check it out.

Feminism History Women's history

Why do we need feminist archaeology?

Because it is not what you find, but the questions you ask about the determine the conclusions you’ll reach.

I’ve been reading, in my odd spare minute, the fascinating Findings: The Material Culture of Needlework and Sewing, by Mary C Beaudhry. She’s interested in the physical evidence of the craft that is found on archaeological sites, and has some fascinating conclusions, and an awful lot of confusion from (frequently) male archaeologists who lacked basic knowledge of the craft that might have set them straight.

So there’s a whole chapter on “the lowly pin”, going back to what have been identified as “dress pins” from a royal tomb in Bronze Age Turkey (Alaca Hoyuk). But, Beaudhry says: “These have flat ends and hence are far more likely to have been spindles than pins.” (p. 11)

The most common for millennia were probably wooden pins, although they are only rare survivals in boggy ground – among the oldest from a Neolithic site at the Sweet Track on the Somerset Down, but by the 15th and 16th century, in London at least, metal pins become common.

In April 1440, two galleys outfitted on behalf of seven Venetians merchants docked at Southampton on their return voyage from Flanders carring 83,000 pins as part of their cargo.”

These were mostly straight, made from fine wire and with small heads – an artefact of fashion since they were used to fasten women’s veils; “the trousseau of Edward II’s daughter, Prince Joan, whose wedding took place in 1348, included 12,000 pins for fastening her veils” (p. 13)

And they continued to be the fastener of the poor – cheaper than buttons – into the 17th century. And they were used to fasten the clothing of infants! From the 18th century: “As to the head, it is covered with two or three biggins [bonnets], the first of which is of linen, and the others woollen, and these are tied beneath the neck. In many places they add a stayband or a kind of headdress with two ends which hang down the side of the head and are fastened on the breast with pins in order to meet the infant hold its head straight.” (p.14)

Yet it seems many archaeologists tend to interpret the presence of pins as evidence of sewing, and women. Which must have meant some confusion when 1,575 pins were recovered from the 16th-century Free Grammar School in Coventry (all male pupils – the pins would have been used to hold their ruffs in place. (p. 22)

History

Pip-pip

The 18th-century email list has been going apples over the weekend – or rather pippins – such a lovely name for a fruit.

It seems, at least on one claim that these originate from seeds germinated by growers, as opposed to the fruit of apple trees those brought into cultivation by grafting.

But somehow when you read the history, “pippins” sound so much more fun than apples. I haven’t been able to lay my hands on the quote, but I recall reading that they were sold as snacks in theatres, and if you were an actor, to be “pippined” meant you weren’t having a good day – in fact you probably had the bruises to show for it.

But a quick Google desktop search (that is a useful thing – really couldn’t live without it these days) came up with an account of the burial of Dame Mary Gardner of Avingdon in 1641. “The beverages consisted of literally gallons of sack, white wine and claret. To eat, there were 60 pounds of cumfits, 15 pounds of biscuits, and 40 dozen cakes. This was supplemented with dried fruits, pears, pippins, quinces, plums, gooseberries an almonds and other delicacies, including macaroons, marzipan, violet cakes and ‘green dry lettuce’. The wine cost over £5, and the food, more than £11.”

(From Gittings, C. Death, Burial and the Individual in Early Modern England, Croom Helm, London, 1984, p. 154.)

But if words are not enough, try this site, for pictures of 1867 apple varities, among which are scores of pippins, including the unattractive moniker of the “greasy pippin”. The link is to the “National Fruit Collection”, obviously a treasure.

Arts Feminism History Women's history

Giving the women a place at the museum

It might have a slightly dismissive title “decorative arts”, it might be focused on the domestic and small scale, but at least a new museum in Paris introduces a great range of female characters, and gives them what should be a permanent place on the tourist trail. I’ve provided what is probably an overly detailed account on My Paris Your Paris.

And my favourite single woman, well a Parisien courtesan, of course, Valtesse de La Bigne. This was her bed, tailor-made, of course:

bed

Well, you do want to make your workplace just so…

Feminism History

My International Women’s Day celebration

Over on Comment is Free I’ve celebrated a few of my favourite women from history.

(I’ve also discovered that you shouldn’t use unnumbered lists on CiF – sorry about the formatting!