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Tag: history

Frost Marks

Gary Wagner.

Last night, the robust flowers — yellow, orange, red, and violet — succumbed to an overnight frost. In the morning the shriveled flowers hung crestfallen and lifeless. Should we have anticipated this event and turned “modern” in our attitude? Have brought out the technologies: the plastic wrap, the warm covers? Who would encourage it?

Not the transcendentalists, who visited their flowers in visits to open nature, not by maintaining contrived and entrapped closures. Thoreau delighted in venturing to the woods, not in sitting stultified in a captured zoo-like presentation of nature. Emily Dickinson teaches us that the processes of the universe must necessarily take their course, just as nature intended. To militate against them, regret them and curse them, is to deny them and ourselves, of insight into what is true and wise and necessary. The cycle will go on with us or without us, and we are better to choose to be with it.

The Ice Age camp site of Gönnersdorf on the banks of the Rhine has revealed a groundbreaking discovery that sheds new light on early fishing practices. New imaging methods have allowed researchers to see intricate engravings of fish on ancient schist plaquettes, accompanied by grid-like patterns that are interpreted as depictions of fishing nets or traps.
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Drugs And Skulls

Marius van Boordt, “The Consecration”

A team of cognitive neuroscientists at the University of Zurich, has found that ancient Aztec “skull whistles” found in gravesites are able to instill fear in modern people. In their study, published in the journal Communications Psychology, the group recorded the neural and psychological responses of volunteers as they listened to the screams produced by the whistles.

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In digging up ancient Aztec graves dating from the years 1250 to 1521 AD, archaeologists have found many examples of small whistles made of clay and formed into the shape of a skull. These whistles still work today as they did when they were buried next to a person in a grave. They produce sounds most often described as a scream of sorts.

An international group of researchers led by the University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria have uncovered the earliest evidence of Ephedra use from the charred remains of the plant in a 15,000-year-old human burial site in northeastern Morocco.

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Ephedra is a genus of shrubs native to arid regions that produces alkaloids like ephedrine and pseudoephedrine, substances utilized in traditional medicine across many cultures. Archaeological evidence of its use during the Paleolithic era is rare due to the fragile nature of plant remains.

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The Well Man And The Bent Black Hole

Owen Gent.

A research team led by Assistant Professor Makoto Miyoshi of the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) has independently re-analyzed observation data of the supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way galaxy obtained and published by the international joint observation project Event Horizon Telescope (EHT). They found that the structure is slightly elongated in the east-west direction.

A passage in the Norse “Sverris Saga,” the 800-year-old story of King Sverre Sigurdsson, describes a military raid that occurred in AD 1197, during which a body was thrown into a well at Sverresborg Castle, outside Trondheim in central Norway, likely as an attempt to poison the main water source for the local inhabitants.

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A new study published in iScience on October 25 describes how researchers used ancient DNA to corroborate the events of the saga and discover details about the “Well-man,” blending history and archaeology with science and setting a precedent for future research on historical figures.

“This is the first time that a person described in these historical texts has actually been found,” says Professor Michael D. Martin of the Norwegian University of Science and Technology’s University Museum in Trondheim, Norway.

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RUBICON, Tom Holland

Roman history, rich in event and drama as it is, will always possess something of the quality of the very best science fiction: the narrative of a world that can seem, on occasion, as unsettlingly familiar as it is strange.

For reasons unknown, I bought a bunch of Roman history books a while back. I seem to revisit the period every ten years or so. Tom Holland is a noted author of popular histories, and I believe I have a few of his books. I sometimes hit speed bumps in his work, as he is profoundly Christian and that, on a couple of occasions, has led to statements in his books that I remember having been stalled by. Not here. Although I suspect that the alienness of Roman culture he alludes to here is part of his own perspective in having previously identified his own ethical structures as Greek or Roman before deciding they were in fact Christian.

That said, a successful general painting his face red before a triumph is something that didn’t make it to most modern filmed versions of Roman history, I think. That’s a wonderful fact, and, like the best popular histories, Holland makes the most of those curiosities of lost societies.

Indulgence threatened potency. Gladiators, in the week before a fight, might need to have their foreskins fitted with metal bolts to infibulate them, but citizens were supposed to rely on self-control.

Holland loves an ancient writer. I once had a brief Twitter conversation with him after I got his translation of Herodotus for Xmas one year. And this period he’s writing about gives him Cicero (whom, in my head, I can now only see as David Bamber from the tv series ROME):

Cicero, who admired Cato deeply, could nevertheless bitch that ‘he addresses the Senate as though he were living in Plato’s Republic rather than the shit-hole of Romulus’.

And, perhaps most amusingly to me:

‘It’s now definite that there isn’t an ounce of silver in the whole of Britain,’ Cicero reported a few months later, ‘nor any prospect of loot apart from slaves. And even then,’ he added sniffily, ‘it’s hardly as though you’d expect a slave with a decent knowledge of music or literature to emerge from Britain, is it?’

A hundred and twenty years ago, Europeans were still calling us “The Land Without Music.”

It fairly rips along, this book, and there were periods where I would have liked it to slow down and get into some more detail. But it is a work of popular history, so it needs pace and broad strokes and details that charm or amuse rather then get into the crunchy minutiae:

Caesar’s libido had long been a source of hilarity to his men: ‘Lock up your wives,’ they would sing, ‘our commander is bad news/He may be bald, but he fucks anything that moves.’

Not that Holland doesn’t stop and think. It is a deeply considered book, and its thoughts and conclusions are complex, distilled rather than diluted for the popular-history form.

The unique achievement of Augustus, however, was the brilliance with which he colonised both. His claim to be restoring their lost moral greatness to them stirred in the Romans deep sensibilities and imaginings that at their profoundest could inspire a Virgil, and make their landscape once again a sacred and myth-haunted place.

I can’t imagine a more readable or charming account of this particular period of Roman history.

“A sacred and myth-haunted place.” I love that.

RUBICON, Tom Holland (UK) (US+)

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DISCOVERING HILL FIGURES

Found this in a bag the other day. When my daughter was growing up, we spent a lot of time driving around the country, and not infrequently stopped for hill figures and other landscape art. (Hetty Pegler’s Tump comes to mind.) This surprisingly well preserved book was a companion for some of that, picked up at some random museum shop no doubt. Couldn’t rely on internet coverage in those days, and data wasn’t fast.

I remember we did the White Horse in Uffington, and stopped at a pub for lunch, where 14 year old her swiped a pint of Arkell’s Summer Ale out of my hand at the bar, sank half of it and declared that she would like one of those. I think we had three each over lunch while my partner, who was driving, viewed us with disgust.

It was my daughter’s birthday this month, and she’s sending photos from a cafe she found that does Movenpick ice cream, which she discovered in Hamburg when she was something like three years old. She’s in her late twenties now.

This cool little book is still available in the UK. And holy shit in the US and elsewhere too.

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Death Artists

I was watching STATE FUNERAL on Mubi:

Moscow, March 1953: in the days following the death of Joseph Stalin, countless citizens flooded the Red Square to mourn their leader’s loss and witness his burial. Though the procession was captured in detail by hundreds of cameramen, their footage has remained largely unseen until now.

And this part caught my eye. The artists of Stalin’s funeral:

Even a sculptor.

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THE ORIGIN OF EMPIRE: ROME FROM THE REPUBLIC TO HADRIAN (264 BC – AD 138), David Potter

An entertaining whistlestop tour of a few hundred years of Roman history.

As a coda to the destruction of Macedon, a Roman embassy was sent to Alexandria where the new Seleucid king, Antiochus IV, was taking advantage of the political chaos that had enveloped the kingdom, in order to try to conquer Egypt. They met at Eleusis, not far from Alexandria. As Antiochus approached, the chief Roman ambassador, Gaius Popillius Laenas (himself a former consul and brother of the man who had been so abominable to the Ligurians), is said to have drawn a circle around him with his cane, telling Antiochus that before he stepped out of it he would have to decide whether or not to leave Egypt and accept peace with Rome.

This is the same Eleusis that was home to the Eleusinian Mysteries, which have long fascinated me.

Cassius’ early history include the view that Faunus – often considered a native Italian divinity with prophetic powers – was actually a man whom Evander, the oldest Greek settler in Latium, had met when he arrived there and called a god. Similarly, Hercules was really a robust farmer of Greek extraction, who had likewise lived in Latium but before the arrival of Evander; while the Greeks who allowed Aeneas to pass freely through their ranks because they so respected him created the concept of sacrosanctity – the inviolability of a person.

There’s probably a story there. Sacrosanctity was extended from there to Roman tribunes, the administrators elected by the people for the people.

Rome’s last king, Tarquinius Superbus, invent(ed) crucifixion.

I’ve got a hundred Kindle notes from this book. The benefit of the whistlestop tour is that Potter can strew the book with many many wonderful little facts.

Vespasian arrived in Rome in the autumn of AD 70 and would not leave Italy again. Concentrating his energies on restoring the state finances, ruined by Nero and the subsequent wars, he would also oversee some massive construction projects in Rome and the restructuring of the imperial defences. He would be long remembered for his creative approach to revenue enhancement (including a urinal tax),

The drawback is that very few people are around for more than a couple of pages, and in some sections it becomes a welter of Roman names that appear once or twice and are never seen again, so it can be difficult to keep things straight. That said, it’s a lovely primer for this crucial period, a period I’d largely forgotten about in the decades since I last read Roman history seriously, and I’m definitely better set to finally attack Tom Holland’s RUBICON.

THE ORIGIN OF EMPIRE, David Potter (UK) (US+)

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Murder Is A Quality Of Life Issue

Whenever I think about murderers, I think about Mogo. Mogo was a peasant farmer in Kenya, a little under a hundred years ago. Peasant farmers worked for a landowner, but were allowed to build huts and graze whatever livestock they owned on the landowner’s grounds. And what I think about is Mogo’s very bad day. This was the day he was summoned to the landowner’s residence and told that he was fired. Because he was a wizard.

This was the rumour that had become the bane of Mogo’s life on the farm. People thought he was a wizard. People wouldn’t talk to him, because he was a wizard. They wouldn’t give him food, because he was a wizard. And, finally, his very presence was causing such ructions on the farm that he was fired for being a wizard.

So Mogo went back to the huts, gathered his few possessions, picked up a spear, went to the hut of the first person who’d accused him of being a wizard, and killed him. He killed his wife, who wouldn’t sleep with him because he was a wizard, and he killed his daughter, who withheld food from him because he was a fucking wizard, and he killed nine other people who wouldn’t bloody shut up about his being a wizard.

The massacre was noticed, of course, and the landowner sent for the police, accompanying them to the huts. There, they found Mogo readying his livestock for travel away from the farm. On being asked whether he might possibly have killed some people, Mogo cheerfully lead the little troupe to each of the bodies, and then turned to the landowner and demanded the wages he was owed before being on his way.

What Mogo did was to take ultimate action to improve his quality of life. This is at the root of murder. We kill people to make our own lives better. We kill them because they are obstacles to our desires, because they make us unhappy, because they burden us, or because they keep calling us fucking wizards. Murder increases happiness.

Notes for a talk at Studio-X, NYC, November 2013

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12sep24

🌐

OPERATIONS: Yesterday I had to write a thing about John for someone, and then write about John again in the newsletter, and that took me out for the rest of the day. No pages.
STATUS: Inbox 100, frustrating morning, that thing where eight and a half hours sleep clearly wasn’t enough
READING: THE ORIGIN OF EMPIRE: ROME FROM THE REPUBLIC TO HADRIAN, David Potter (link)
LISTENING:

THINKING ABOUT:

the Board of Ten for Making Sacrifices, the priestly college that was in charge of the oracular books.

from that Potter book listed above

MISSION CONTROL: I can be contacted via the Cheng Caplan Company. Link in masthead to join my free newsletter. Now: THE DEPARTMENT OF MIDNIGHT audio drama podcast. Forthcoming 2024: DESOLATION JONES: THE BIOHZARD EDITION, FELL: FERAL CITY new printing. 2025: THE STORMWATCH COMPENDIUM, THE AUTHORITY Compact Edition

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IN OUR TIME: The Orkneyinga Saga

This was very good.

The Orkneyinga Saga

In Our Time

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the myth and history in the Saga of the Earls of Orkney as they fought to control some of the most strategically important islands around Britain.

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Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the Saga of the Earls of Orkney, as told in the 13th Century by an unknown Icelander. This was the story of arguably the most important, strategically, of all the islands in the British Viking world, when the Earls controlled Shetland, Orkney and Caithness from which they could raid the Irish and British coasts, from Dublin round to Lindisfarne. The Saga combines myth with history, bringing to life the places on those islands where Vikings met, drank, made treaties, told stories, became saints, plotted and fought.

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