Category Archives: History

History

The political school meal long before Jamie Oliver

The latest issue of The Historian, the magazine of The Historical Association, has a fascinating article on “child health and school meals: Nottingham 1906-1945”. It is not that the meals themselves are fascinating – “meat, potatoes and pudding” for “dinner” (what I’d call lunch – but then that’s a whole other social history) features with extraordinary prominence (presumably no vegetables).

But the origins of the meal, in the 1906 Education (Provision of Meals) Act are fascinating – despite lots of reports of children being too ill-fed to learn, the state was extremely reluctant to intervene because “this would be interpreted as extending provisions to the poor and would intimate that the state would provide for all their material needs”. So when meals were provided there was much effort to stress that this was purely to aid the children’s education.

The school medical service (founded 1908) found in Nottingham in 1913 (when the town was suffering a particularly bad trade period, conditions that sounds like what we might expect in Africa today “septic condition of the mouth, chronic gastric disturbance, bilious attacks, constipation, everted costal margins [?] and protrubent abdomen”.

And when you look at the typical home diet — breakfast: tea/coffee, bread and lard; dinner bread and lard, sometimes jam pudding; supper bread and lard or jam. On Sunday bacon and tomatoes added at breakfast and meat and potatoes to the midday meal — it isn’t hard to see why.

Issue No 92, Winter 2006, pp. 12-19.

Women's history

Rebecca Clarke – a female composer

My recent short piece on the the Byzantine composer Kassia has drawn some info on a female composer much closer to our own time, Rebecca Clarke, who still encountered many of the same obstacles of discrimination.

And attempts to recover her story have been hampered – although apparently no longer – by the modern laws of copyright – so crazy that this should persist after a person’s death.

Women's history

Do you recognise these Victorians?

According to a comment piece in the Telegraph, they were gentle caring people who just wanted to rescue “fallen women” from the gutter, and who blamed the men who used their services…

It isn’t my period of historical study, but I’d hazard a guess that for a Victorianist it would make a great foundation for a Carnival of Bad History post.

Blogging/IT Early modern history

Carnivalesque – what’s your tipple?

Over on Scribbling Woman (one of the first blogs ever on my blogroll) is Carnivalesque No 22, being, of course, a collection of early modern history posts. It is a feast of Christmas reading.

Among many other things I learnt from Raminagrobis that
‘vin de porceau’ in early modern France was ‘[wine] which makes the drunkard to sleepe, vomit, and tumble him in his vomit.’

So binge drinking hasn’t always been just a British thing then…

Women's history

Has this changed?

Well maybe a little: you do get the odd article about “Men” these days.
In a 1921 essay Rose Macaulay “hones in on the gendered politics of knowledge. By treating women as a topic (which men are not)… newspapers of the period assumed the more powerful subvject position of observer and disseminator of knowledge about women, who ware placed in the passive position of object-of-scrutiny. Macaulay’s essay invites this reading with a metaphor that signals the objectivification, even dehumanization, of women when treated as an object of commentary: “Women are regarded in some quarters rather as a curious and interesting kind of bettle, whose habits repay investigation.”
(From Patrick Collier, Modernism on Fleet Street, Ashgate, 2006, p.140)

Early modern history Women's history

The Cooke sisters

Mildred, Anne, Elizabeth, Katherine and Margaret – these were the highly educated, celebrated daughters of Anthony Booke, the tutor to Edward IV and active parliamentarian under Elizabeth. There are all interesting in different ways, but I confess that I struggle to keep them all separate – as they acquire husbands and new names, it all seems a bit of a tangle. So since I’ve been re-reading Silent But for the Word, one of the early classics of Renaissance women’s studies, thought I’d set out a primer:

Mildred, the eldest, married William Cecil, the first Baron Burghley and Queen Elizabeth’s principal secretary. She was celebrated by Roger Ascham as one of the most learned women in England, doing translations from Greek of early church fathers, being said to particularly like reading Basil the Great, Cyril, Chrysostom and Gregory Nazianzen. (Important at the time because this was the “pure” church, uncorrupted by Catholicism.) She was described by the Spanish ambassador as a “furious heretic” who had greaty influence over her husband.

Anne, who married Nicholas Bacon, Lord Keeper of the Great Seal, translated Latin sermons and the Apologia Ecclesiae Anglicanae, which was an official document of the English Church, ordered to be widely distributed by the Convecation of 1563. She was a strong supporter of Reformist preachers.

Elizabeth first married Sir Thomas Hoby (who had translated the influential Castiglione’s Courtier, and then Lord John Russell. She also translated from religious material from Latin, and was acclaimed for her skills in writing epitaphs, in Latin, Greek and English. Her letters also show a mind well attuned to legal niceties.

Katharine married the diplomat Sir Henry Killigrew. Her Latin verse to Mildred asking for one of his missions to be withdrawn, has survived, and is less than subtle. In George Ballard’s translation: “His staye let Cornwall’s shore engage; / and peace with Mildred dwell./ Else war with Cecil’s name I wage/ Perpetual war. – farewell.”

Little is known of Margaret, who died young.

From: Mary Ellen Lamb, “The Cooke Sisters: Attitudes towards Learned Women in the Renaissance, pp. 107-125, in Silent.