Category Archives: History

Women's history

Two great women’s history blogs

I haven’t previously felt there were enough specifically women’s history blogs around to make that a category in my blogroll, but I’m starting to think that it is time for a re-arrangement, having just found two new must-reads, both by women well known as writers.

Mary Beard, the Cambridge classicist and author of many books on Ancient Rome is blogging at The Times. Unlike so many people coming to blogging when already well known for other things, she really gets the medium and the message – there’s some great stuff there, everything from an assertion, based on some actual evidence (unlike so much written on this subject), that students a century go were not in fact any more skilled than those of today, to a very honest account of her “take”, not very large, from the public lending right.

Staying on the ancient side, the great queen Zenobia now has a blog, through the hand of Judith Weingarten, author of The Chronical of Zenobia, which I’ve reviewed. In progress now, a series of profiles of the “four Julias”, some of Rome’s most powerful women, and contemporaries of Zenobia.

History

5,000 years of the nuclear bomb…

… that was one of the posts I particularly enjoyed from the latest History Carnival, now up on Investigations of a Dog. Just imagine the campfire scene…

I also found through it a great new (to me) biography-blog, Civil War Women.

And the always excellent Laura James explains the history of that oft-used parental phrase reading the riot act.

Feminism History

Medea was not a child-killer

During last week’s flu slump I was reading a couple of Kerry Greenwood’s “Delphic Women” series, imaginative retellings of Ancient Greek myths, Medea and Cassandra. The latter of course is about the fall of Troy, told through the view of the female seer and Diomenes, a healer with the attacking barbarian Achaeans, among whom is the clearly psychopathic Achilles. (Yes, it does turn things around rather, not just from point of view.)

But it was Medea that particularly struck me, not so much for the retelling in the first person, but for the author’s afterword:

This seems to have been the story, according to such diverse authorities as the travel writer Pausanius, Apollodorus, Kreophylas, Parmeniskos and an anonymouse but learned commentator on Pindar. Medea, grand-daughter of Helios (the Sun) held Corinth in her own right. Jason was her consort. He decided to marry Glauke and Medea arranged her murder. Recklessly, she also managed to start a fire which killed Creon, king of Corinth and father of Sisyphos, and possibly a number of other people – but not Jason, regretably. Medea fled with her children to the temple of Hera on the hill, and either the kin of Creon or the Corinthian women flocked to the temple and stoned her children to death – in the temple.
They either would not or could not touch Medea, and she left Corinth and went to stay with Herakles, thence to Delphi and after that to various other places before she went home to Colchis to put her father on the throne.

Looking around, I found that the Jason in these accounts is far from the myth that has proved so popular in the West in recent centuries:

Jason does not want to go; in fact, the voyage terribly depresses him. He dislikes everything about it. He is “utterly un-heroic” (often described as amêchanos, “helpless”). Once he is lurching on his way, though, he does want to succeed, and chooses nonheroic means to do so, exploiting love and preferring circumvention to the more usual heroic confrontation (136). Opportunistic when he is not depressed, Jason will be pious, if success requires piety, or treacherous, if piety fails.*

Greenwood says that the turn-around in the story is entirely due to Euripides, who was paid five talents to write his play this way by the city of Corinth in an early piece of what turned out to be hugely effective propaganda.

Of course we are in the realm of myth here, not history, although there are probably scraps of it hidden in there somewhere. Still, it is interesting that one of the great tales of our culture started out so differently. Greenwood attributes the triumph of the child-killer version to Euripides’ brilliance, which is undoubtedly part of the story. But it is also not hard to see how a tale that demonises a goddess worshipper, a strong, powerful “action woman”, while playing up the male hero won out over one with a female hero and a weak and venal male villain.

Interestingly, however, in other places the older legend has survived in strength to the current day. Wikipedia notes that: “Medea is considered a great hero in today’s Georgia. She is revered and emulated by both Georgian men and women.” (Colchis, her home city, was in the west of the modern state.)

What about the Greenwood books? Well these are very much “popular” retellings – great fun, as her books usually are, but a little too close to the romance genre for my taste. She writes a much better detective novel with her Phyrne Fisher series. (The heroine named of course for the famous Greek courtesan.)

*Gods and Heroes of the Greeks: The Library of Apollodorus, Leonard Baskin, Michael Simpson, Apollodorus; University of Massachusetts Press, 1976, pp. 63-64.

History Science

Science snippets

A fascinating example of evolution in action: the world’s largest (and smelliest) flower, which can weigh 15lb (7kg) started out at one-eightieth that size.

Rafflesia is unusual in several ways: It has a carcass-like appearance, reeks of decaying flesh, and in some cases emits heat, much like a recently killed animal. These traits help the flower attract the carrion flies which pollinate it. Because rafflesia lacks the genes most commonly used to trace plant ancestry, the scientists had to delve deeper into its genome, looking at some 11,500 ”letters” of DNA.
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This determined that the giant flower’s closest relatives are in the Euphorbiaceae family, many of which have blossoms just a few millimetres in diameter.

Tis a wonderful world. And modern humans proved remarkably adept at exploring it, as a discovery of our direct ancestors in southern Russia about 45,000 years ago, before we were supposed to have been there, and much further north than expected, suggests. There’s also a piece being claimed as the oldest (known – the vital word The Times misses out) piece of figurative art. (Although reading between the lines it sounds like you need quite a lot of imagination to see the “figure”.)

“The big surprise here is the very early presence of modern humans in one of the coldest, driest places in Europe,” said John Hoffecker, of the University of Colorado at Boulder in the United States.
“It is one of the last places we would have expected people from Africa to occupy first.”
Animal bones uncovered show that the inhabitants were expanding their diet to include small mammals, fish and other aquatic creatures. This, the researchers said, suggests that the people were “remaking themselves technologically” and may have used snares to trap hares and Arctic foxes, and nets for fish….
Evidence of early trading networks was thrown up by the realisation that the shells the inhabitants used for jewellery had come from the Black Sea, more than 300 miles away.

Early modern history

The language of William Tyndale

A passage you’ll recognise from William Tyndale’s English Bible, but it does some interesting things with gender:

“In the begynnynge was the worde, and the worde was with God: and the word was God. The same was in the begynnynge wyth God. All things were made by it and with out it was made nothinge that was made.”

By the time of King James, however, God had suddenly become male.

The disputes between Tyndale and Sir Thomas More yielded even more colourful language. Among their lost words:

“A gorbelly was a fat man, often to be found in a sottys hoffe, a drinking den, where he became sowe-drunke, and a nodypoll was a blockhead who was often apyssche, or fantastically foolish. A prym was a pretty girl, and a galyarde a high spirited young man, with an eye for caterwaywynge, lechery.”

From B. Moynahan, William Tyndale: If God Spare My Life. A Story of Martyrdom, Betrayal and the English Bible, p. 390, p. 192

I do like nodypoll – wonder if it could be resurrected?

Early modern history

Henry wasn’t just hard on wives

… but also on wildlife:

The Preservation of Grain Act, passed in 1532 by Henry VIII and strengthened by Elizabeth I in 1566, made it compulsory for every man, woman and child to kill as many creatures as possible that appeared on an official list of ‘vermin’. ‘Paradoxically, many of these creatures are today highly valued and given the full protection of the law,’ said Lovegrove.
The act was drawn up to counter food shortages and spread of disease caused by a series of bad harvests and a sharp rise in population. Henry VIII put a bounty on each creature, ranging from a penny for the head of a kite or a raven to 12 pence for a badger or a fox. These were considerable sums when the average agricultural wage was around four pence a day.