Monthly Archives: May 2006

History

A day of history

“British Day” to commemorate the Magna Carta? Not surprising to find the Telegraph is the paper most prominently reporting a History Today finding that June 15 is the preferred date for a new national day. How prescient of the barons to pick mid-summer.

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More seriously, a letter has been uncovered that appears to prove that in 1950 the US approved the killing of Korean refugees from the North, for fear that they might be a vehicle for communist agents to enter the South.

The letter, dated the day of the army’s mass killing of South Korean refugees at No Gun Ri in 1950, is the strongest indication yet that such a policy existed for all US forces in Korea, and the first evidence that that policy was known to upper ranks of the US government.

“If refugees do appear from north of US lines they will receive warning shots, and if they then persist in advancing they will be shot,” wrote the ambassador, John J Muccio, in his message to the Assistant Secretary of State, Dean Rusk.

The letter reported on decisions made at a high-level meeting in South Korea on 25 July 1950, the night before the 7th US Cavalry Regiment shot the refugees at No Gun Ri.

Estimates vary on the number of dead at No Gun Ri. American soldiers’ estimates ranged from under 100 to “hundreds” dead; Korean survivors say about 400, mostly women and children, were killed at the village 100 miles (160km) south-east of Seoul, the South Korean capital. Hundreds more refugees were killed in later, similar episodes, survivors say.

The report provokes the question as to why it is that, among the broadly “democratic” nations, the US military’s seems to be the worst on human rights. (Of course it is still nothing like as bad as non-democratic state – no argument there.) Is it some problem with the US system that reduces civilian oversight and control, or is it something about lack of education and knowledge of the rest of the world that produces, as in this case, a panicky, hysterical, reaction to the challenge of “the Other”?

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In the “you couldn’t make it up” class, a perfectly cast “mild-mannered American accountant” is the first man outside Asia to trace his ancestry directly to Genghis Khan. In a neat piece of proof that race has absolutely no biological meaning at all (as opposed to cultural meaning, of which it has all too much), the accountant can trace his ancestry by documents to the Windermere area of northern Britain – so of course he’s “white”, in so far as that means anything at all…
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A Turkish museum director has been arrested after it was found that some of the “Lydian” artefacts on display in his museum were fakes. The report says they “belonged to Creosus” … hmmm. But still, you have to wonder how often this goes on. Suspect this can’t be the only case ever.

Early modern history Women's history

An astonishing receipt (recipe)

I’ve been reading With Faith and Physic: The Life of a Tudor Gentlewoman Lady Grace Mildmay 1552-1620. She was a highly religious woman, with plenty of things in her life – a thoroughly unpleasant husband, a father who left her almost penniless at the behest of her mother and sister – to encourage her to trust in God, for want of other alternatives.

But it seems the real passion of her life was medicine, and she must have spent a huge percentage of her meagre income on the medications to treat her neighbours and callers, and read everything she could get her hands on medical matters.

One of her favourite treatments was a balm that she made herself containing “24 types of roots, 68 kinds of herbs, 14 types of seeds, 12 sorts of flowers, 10 kinds of spices, 20 types of gum, 6 different purgatives, 5 different cordials”. That’s what you call a recipe.

I’ve pasted it below the fold – read it and think of the labour involved…
(I think the “standing in horse dung” was probably a method of heating – the temperature in a good-size compost heap, such as her household would surely have boasted, was probably pretty constant.)
read more »

Arts Politics

Disgraceful inaction over religious extremism

I’ve just put up over on Blogcritics an article about the closure of an art exhibition in London after attacks on paintings by Maqbool Fida Hussain, a 90-year-old, the “Picasso of India”, who has been targetered in recent years by Hindu extremists.

A major exhibition, by an important international artist, has been forced to close by probably a handful of people. And hardly anyone seems to have noticed. This simply isn’t good enough, from the media, from Asia House, from the artistic community, from London itself.

Very sad.

Politics

Those dreadful asylum-seekers

What they risk to get here

The boat’s phantom crew was made up of the desiccated corpses of 11 young men, huddled in two separate piles in the small cabin. Dressed in shorts and colourful jerseys, they had been partially petrified by the salt water, sun and sea breezes of the Atlantic Ocean. …
The story of the 11 dead and some 40 other would-be immigrants from Guinea Bissau, Senegal and Gambia starts on Christmas Day last year at Praia, a port in the former Portuguese colony of Cape Verde. There, for €1,300 (£890) each, they were promised a trip to the Canary Islands by a mysterious Spaniard.

The other 40 were the “lucky” ones – they seem to have been swept to their death off the boat in Atlantic storms. They died quicker. The death of these men is thought to have taken about a month.

This route, from the west African coast to Cape Verde, opened up late last year. By March Spanish authorities claimed more than 1,000 had drowned.
That has not stopped the flow. Three vessels carrying 188 African migrants reached Tenerife yesterday. The number of immigrants to have reached the Canaries this year is close to 7,000.

Doesn’t such desperation, such courage, such ambition, deserve respect?

Early modern history

Curiously pagan gentlemen

Erasmus in Moriae Encomium of 1509 mocked the English hunting tradition. This a translation by Sir Thomas Chaloner from 1549:

For as touchyng the death of a deare, or other wilde deast, ye know your selves, what ceremonies they use about the same. Every poore man maie cutte out an oxe, or a shepe, whereas suche venaison maie not be dismembered but of a gentilman; who beareheadded, and set on knees, with a knife prepared proprely to that use … also with certainte jestures, cuttes a sunder certaine partes of the wildbeast, in certaine order verie circumstantly. Which durying, the standers by, not speakyng a worde, behold it solemnly, as if it were some holy Misterie, havyng seen the like yet more than a hundred tymes before.

This strikes me as an oddly pagan ceremony; but would this be something that survived through the Middle Ages, in a continuous tradition back to Saxons, or even earlier, or something revived through exposure to classical texts?

(Quoted in Wilson, E. “The Testament of the Buck and the Sociology of the Text,” The Review of English Studies, New Series, Vol XLV, 1994, pp. 176) I’ve changed “u”s to “v”s and “i”s to “j”s for readability.

Blogging/IT

You’ve got to love the internet …

… or you might go mad.

I’ve been trying to change the WordPress installation to get rid of the horrible 2.0 text editor – following Alun’s instructions (in the comments of this post), but the dreaded WordPress “enable sending referrers” block has been stopping me.

Then for unrelated reasons I had cause to reinstall ZoneAlarm (anti-virus etc). It kept the same settings, but viola … I could change the text editor.

I was going to write a triumphant post, then thought: “I’ll just change the number of posts on the front page as well.” You’ve guess it, I got “enable sending referrers”.

What I find really amusing are claims that computers are logical beasts.