h1

Apollo reappears

August 2, 2011

How wonderful to see a wall mosaic of Apollo and his muses reappearing from beneath (ancient) Roman building work.

Apollo was the son of the Greek god Zeus, and his ‘numerous and diverse functions’  included healing, purification, prophecy, care for young citizens, poetry and music*.

Although the Romans could be sniffy about Greek doctors (Pliny the Elder declared  that there was ‘no greater reason for the decay in morals than medicine’) they don’t seem to have felt the same way about Greek gods. While Aesculapius is the famous ‘healing’ god, Rome also had a temple to Apollo Medicus – built in an attempt to avert a plague.

The video is here on the BBC website.

 

* all this and more is in the Oxford Classical Dictionary.

h1

Victory!

July 22, 2011

Congratulations to Roman Tours in Chester (remember them? They popped up earlier under the heading  This Was Deva.) I mentioned that they were trying to raise money to build a full-size Roman marching camp. At the time they were finalists in the Barclays ‘One Small Step’ competition, appealing for votes to help them win £50,000 – and now they have!

You can see them in action and find out more about the project  here.

Thanks to everyone who took the time to vote for them!

h1

Bodies in the Bookshop

July 20, 2011

…is the annual attempt by the staff of Heffers in Cambridge to see how many crime readers and writers can be crammed into one shop before everyone passes out for lack of oxygen.

Tuesday was the 21st anniversary of this delightful event, so naturally there was cake.  The chap wielding the knife here is Heffers’ criminal mastermind, Richard Reynolds.

Richard Reynolds cutting cake with Crime Scene tape icing

h1

Where else but Kelmarsh…

July 18, 2011

…could you hear someone telling his colleagues over the radio, ‘I’m just behind World War Two!’ ?

… could you learn in the morning that the mother of the great Doctor Galen used to punish her slaves by biting them, discover at midday what Geisha girls wore, and in the afternoon hear a newly-written Viking Saga?

…could you see sights like this…?

Victorian lady in mauve velvet jacket fancy hat

Okay, I concede that seeing a woman in Victorian costume isn’t all that unusual. She was there with a friend in a rather fine hat:


Lady wearing ribboned purple hat over long curly hair

Here’s a  Knight Hospitaller from about 1170 AD  (many thanks to Neil for clarifying my hazy description of ‘Norman knight’  - the full details are in Neil’s comment below.)

Man in chainmail and silver helmet with nose protector

I wasn’t fast enough with the camera to catch the Spitfire and Messerschmidt in flight, but this vintage war machine was easier to photograph – and this is where things start to get a little weird. Who’s that visible through the windscreen?

Picture of jeep with soldier in red uniform seen through windscreen

Here’s the whole photo.

All characters gathered beside a jeep

What a great way to spend a weekend – made even better by all the people who stopped by in the Writing Festival tent to say hello.  Thank you!

http://www.thehwa.co.uk/content/festivals

http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/daysout/events/foh-2011/

h1

Festival of History

July 5, 2011

No blogs for a fortnight, then two in two days – but this one’s just a quick reminder.

All over the country, re-enactors are brushing their uniforms, polishing their armour and praying for fine weather  for the English Heritage Festival of History on 16/17 July. Here’s a link to the on-site Festival of Historical Literature , where a great selection of  well-known historical writers and their books will be safely under the cover of a marquee.

The whole thing’s happening at Kelmarsh Hall, which is between Northampton and Market Harborough. I’m told there can be queues for the car park, so if you have a specific event in mind, it’s best to turn up early.

Meanwhile there’s a rather fine introductory video that springs into life when you click on the English Heritage Festival web page. Well it does on my computer, anyway.

 

h1

Down in the mud

July 4, 2011

Apologies for the recent silence on the blog. I’ve spent much of the last fortnight on my knees, scraping at a Northamptonshire hillside with an archaeological trowel. The team were – indeed, still are – uncovering  the remains of a Romano-British bath house. When I say ‘remains,’  please do not picture anything on the scale of the Baths of Constantine in Arles:

Baths of Constantine in Arles, with walls still at full height

British archaeologists have to content themselves with more humble fare. While the other bath house on the site (you can see it on the right here) had walls that still looked like walls, this one was probably demolished in Roman times, and they did a pretty thorough job of it.

Remains of walls and underfloor heating for bath house

It may not look much to you, dear reader, but believe me, every inch of that site has been lovingly and painstakingly trowelled out from beneath a field of grass. It’s not as chaotic as it appears in this unofficial end-of-the-working-day snap – in Jeremy Cooper’s excellent high-level photos*,  it’s possible to see the shapes of the rooms.

However, when your nose is close to the ground, it’s hard to see the site as a whole. Instead you concentrate on your own little patch, poking and prodding and scraping. From time to time you stand back and squint at it from different angles, desperately searching for some sort of pattern to reassure you that you aren’t just a sad obsessive who likes playing with mud. There really is – or  was – something there.

*Later  - I’ve just updated this link because the latest (2011) photos are even better.

h1

Slave, anyone?

June 19, 2011

Currently in the very lovely and lively York, and by a stroke of luck it’s their Roman Weekend.  By a further bizarre coincidence the only person I know in the whole city was walking out of my Bed and Breakfast just as I left to go exploring this afternoon. Hello Sandra!

This evening’s drinks in the Black Lion were being served by slaves, following an auction in which the reluctant and chilly bunch below were sold to the highest bidders. The auctioneer was careful to check that they all had their own teeth: it was clear that even at the rock-bottom prices he offered, nobody wanted a sickly slave.

Slaves waiting to be auctioned

h1

It’s that time of year again

June 14, 2011

The Whitehall Villa dig is under way in Northamptonshire, where the erudite and entertaining Jeremy Cooper will be recording events in his now-traditional blog. I’m looking forward to joining the usual suspects in the mud.

Meanwhile if you’re near the Lakes, this is the time to drop in on the Senhouse Museum at Maryport, where they’re at last digging up more of the Roman fort. Maryport is where Victorian farm workers found several altars so perfect that they looked as though they had been buried yesterday.  Details of how to see the latest finds are here.

And finally, a solution to the common problem of not being able to get the staff these days. Pop up to York this Saturday for the slave auction – part of their Roman Weekend.

h1

This was Deva

June 6, 2011

Photos of the fabulous Roman Weekend in Chester are over on the Facebook page, but here’s one to give you the idea…

Gladiatrix defeating condemned prisoner

HOW YOU CAN GET INVOLVED (safely):

Roman Tours, who organised the event, would love to build a Roman marching fort – and they may be one step nearer to it very soon. They’ve been chosen by Barclays as finalists in the ‘Take one small step’ competition for grant money. You can see their entry – and vote for it - here:   Or just text ‘ROMAN’ to 62555. Even better, do both.

h1

This is Deva

June 4, 2011

Currently at the fabulous Chester Roman Festival. Glorious sunshine, massed troop movements, death and destruction and a bear in the Amphitheatre. Photos – I hope – will follow.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.