Once I was a clever boy learning the arts of Oxford... is a quotation from the verses written by Bishop Richard Fleming (c.1385-1431) for his tomb in Lincoln Cathedral. Fleming, the founder of Lincoln College in Oxford, is the subject of my research for a D. Phil., and, like me, a son of the West Riding. I have remarked in the past that I have a deeply meaningful on-going relationship with a dead fifteenth century bishop... it was Fleming who, in effect, enabled me to come to Oxford and to learn its arts, and for that I am immensely grateful.


Saturday, 21 March 2026

Reinterpreting the battles of Stamford Bridge and Hastings

 
There are reports online today stemming from the work of Professor Tim Licence from UEA which proposes a radical reappraisal of the military events of October 1066.

I have heard Prof. Licence lecture online about the battle of Hastings and his detailed knowledge both of the sources and of the archaeology and topography of the battlefield was extremely impressive, and presented with elegance and moderation. He is currently working on the Yale biography of King Harold II.

The new interpretation is set out with maps on the website of the Daily Telegraph at We’ve got the Battle of Hastings all wrong, academics find

The argument can also be found on the website of BBC News at Victorians got Battle of Hastings wrong, professor says


Traditional Austrian Passiontide veils in Carinthia


Today, being the eve of Passion Sunday, is the day for veiling statues and images in churches as we move into Passiontide and draw closer to Holy Week and the Triduum.

Since the 1960s veiling is less universal than it once was in both Catholic and Anglo-Catholic parishes. A friend once opined that it tended to follow diocesan liturgical cultures in the Catholic Church in England. When I was churchwarden at St Thomas’ in Oxford I pushed a little at the envelope of Anglican Canon Law
( there’s a joke in there somewhere I think) by reintroducing the practice during the vacancy in the living. This meant a morning of clambering around the church and fixing the purple cloths. My vertigo meant I was unable to veil the reredos, which had to wait for the assistant priest on the Sunday morning. We carried on with the restored practice and I even went back to help the new acting priest, the late, great Fr John Hunwicke, after I had left the C of E, to keep the tradition going.

This came back to my mind when I saw an article yesterday on the Liturgical Arts Journal about the nineteenth century decorated veils which have been rediscovered and brought back into use at the church at Kaning in Carinthia. These are not plain cloth but painted boards that depict the Passion against a sombre background.

The illustrated article can be viewed at Rediscovered and Revived Lenten Veils in Austria

There is a short discussion of the history of such veiling on the Zenit website which can be found at Questions about liturgy: Should the cross be veiled during Lent

I would add to What the author of the article says that practice does very from one country to another and that veiling the altar and processional crosses and their crucifixes appears quite common in England.

I heard the point this week that such veiling was a northern European tradition deriving apparently from the German hungertuch. Such a veil for the whole altar as certainly known in medieval England, and images were veiled for all of Lent. Some statues, of which original examples survive as well as modern versions, occupied wooden housings with doors gat could be closed in Lent. In 1471 one such pair of doors sprang open during Mass to reveal St Anne to King Edward IV on his journey to reclaim the crown, and was seen as an augury.

Medieval Roman practice was different, and it was the publication of the 1570 Missal, officially only for that diocese, which only veiled from Passion Sunday came to be copied across the wider Church. This seems also to have been the way in which rose coloured vestments spread from the specific rite of blessing the Golden Rose to the city and diocese of Rome, and thence though St Pius’ Missal to the Universal Church.




Sumer is icumen in


The British Library has lent for exhibition until May to the Reading Museum the manuscript produced at the great Benedictine abbey which once dominated the town, and which contains the mid-thirteenth century musical round - or canon - Sumer is icumen in.

This appears to be the earliest English song with music to survive. It is also interesting in that the words are in English from a time when it is often claimed that French was the dominant language of culture and music.


Wikipedia has a lengthy and informative article about the piece at Sumer_is_icumen_in. It also includes some modern parodies which make for a little light relief.

Friday, 20 March 2026

Reinterpreting Chess in the Middle Ages


Medievalist.net has an online article drawing upon recent research into how we should understand the role and function of chess as a means of contact between different racial groups during the medieval centuries.   

The article makes some excellent points using evidence from medieval texts on chess, but maybe one feels the emphasis on “diversity” as an end in itself is becoming too overplayed in this and similar academic studies…

The handsomely illustrated article may be seen at Medieval Chess Reveals a More Diverse Middle Ages, Study Finds

The Cardinal of Utrecht celebrates a Traditional High Mass


Life Site News has a report about the High Mass according to the 1962 edition celebrated by Cardinal Eijk of Utrecht this past weekend. This was the first time His Eminence had publicly celebrated the Traditional Rite. 

It was also the first time such a celebration was performed by a Cardinal Archbishop in the Netherlands since 1969. This seems to be a further indication from senior figures in the Sacred College and elsewhere in the Church of support for the Traditional Rite which we have seen in recent months.




Thursday, 19 March 2026

Re-ordering the Catholic Cathedral in Aberdeen


The New Liturgical Movement has a very enthusiastic article about the plan commissioned by the Bishop of Aberdeen to re-order his cathedral in a way that blends a  contemporary layout with a traditional, mystical, aesthetic and theology. 

On the basis of the illustrations in the report this does look to be a scheme using quality materials and designed to lighten what appears to be a rather dull interior at present. This looks to be a re-ordering to watch, and hopefully see.


The Dungeness Wreck


Popular Mechanics has an article about the quite substantial remains of a ship dating from the 1530s to 1540s, the era of the ‘Mary Rose’, which was repaired after 1561, but then wrecked ir abandoned alongside the coastal gravel bank which gradually expanded, and preserved its remains until they were uncovered in 2022. 

As the article argues it was constructed at a time of significant development in English shipbuilding. 
 


Even given the concern about the state of readiness of the present Royal Navy I do not think this particular vessel is quite in a state to be despatched to the Mediterranean…


Prosopography of the Peasants Revolt


The academic website The Conversation has an article which introduces the prosopography that has been created of everyone named in the records of the 1381 uprising, and seeing how their previous, and subsequent ( if they had one) lives reveal them as individuals, and not just “the peasants”, revolting or otherwise.


The state of Medieval Teeth

 
The website of..Medievalists net this week has an article about  dental care in the medieval centuries, and the various powders used to clean and whiten teeth, and also to freshen the breath. The study can be seen at Did Medieval People Have Bad Teeth and Bad Breath?

Looking, by coincidence, at an article in a ‘serious’ newspaper we do not seem anything as far advanced over the past five centuries as we no doubt like to think.

The Coal Exchange


Country Life has an article on a lost part of London’s urban heritage, the Coal Exchange, which was destroyed in 1962, when any Victorian building was liable to be demolished, basically for being Victorian.

The article has fine photographs of this pioneering iron frame building and tells the story of its building and the attempts to save it. The loss of the Euston Arch and of the Coal Exchange were the tragedies that brought to birth the conservation movement that has gone on to both save buildings and to make people appreciate Victorian design and craftsmanship.

I remember something of the efforts to save the Coal Exchange as well as the Euston Arch. Those were bad times to live through as historic city and town centres were ripped apart in the name of ‘progress’ and ‘redevelopment’. I think I still bear the psychological scars.



Wednesday, 18 March 2026

Tying a temporary knot on the Roman thread

  
Having finished threading my collection of links to discoveries from Roman Britain I will now pause the thread for a short while before resuming with discoveries on the continent and Near East. This will enable me to share some other stories whilst they are relatively new, and to return to the normal mix of material.

What is striking is how much survives from Roman Britain, either as foundations and burials just below the surface or random metal objects still being found by agricultural works or by responsible metal detectorists.


A carriage fitting from Roman Britain


A discovery from near Harlow gives an insight into the world of Roman carriages in Britannia. The find is described in an article from ZME Science which can be seen at Rare Roman Panther Figurine with Its Paws on a Severed Head Is a Propaganda Tool Used in Britain

Tuesday, 17 March 2026

A villa or cult site at Grove


The discovery of a Roman villa - or possibly a cult centre - at Grove, north of Wantage in the historic county of Berkshire, has yielded some interesting finds and some tantalising questions for archaeologists and historians of the era.
 
ZME Science reported on the site almost two years ago in Ancient 'curse scrolls' unearthed in luxurious 1,800-year-old Roman villa in the UK

The Oxborough Hoard


Norfolk is the county that is the most productive of archaeological finds under the Portable Antiquities Scheme. The Oxborough Hoard recently found in south-west Norfolk is not especially small but it does appear to be unique - at least for the moment. These domestic utensils are without parallel in Britain and give further insight into life in Britannia.

The discovery is reported by the Eastern Daily Press

A Roman soldier’s pay packet from Norfolk


Fox News reported last summer in another Roman coin hoard from Norfolk. This was discovered m in 2023 at 
Great Ellingham in southern central Norfolk.

It was also analysed by Dr Marsden, and he thinks it represents the contents of a soldier’s monthly pay packet of twenty five silver denarii. The coins are well preserved and had been issued by several Emperors. Their loss was dated to the period of the 160s to 170s
  

A Roman coin hoard from Norfolk


A year ago the BBC News reported on a hoard of Roman silver coins found in west Norfolk. They were identified by my old friend from Oxford, Dr Adrian Marsden, who is the numismatist with the Norfolk Museums service.

As Adrian explains the coins point to a time of  economic stability, and the presence of coins minted generations before they were deposited. The earliest is datable to 57BC and the latest to the reign of Marcus Aurelius in 175-6 AD.


Wikipedia has a quite detailed account of the extended village and its history, including reference to the Roman era at Barton_Bendish


The return of pieces of a mosaic to Cirencester


Several websites have recently reported upon the return to Cirencester - Corinium to the Romans - of a piece of mosaic removed from a Roman site at Withington there in 1812 and given to the British Museum. It has now been reunited with the majority of the mosaic on a long term loan from the BM. This seems to be an excellent outcome. 
 
The story is set out in a BBC News report at 'incredible' Roman mosaic returns home after 200 years

The story is also set out in an article from the Oxford Mail here

The Corinium Museum has a relevant video about another mosaic which can be watched at Orpheus Mosaic Cirencester and a history of its 1825 discovery at Stories across the centuries found buried in a mosaic - Corinium Museum
  
The Withington project came about as a consequence of the celebration of the bicentenary of the discovery of the Orphaeus mosaic nearby at Barton in 1825 

In 1971 a mosaic which included a hare was uncovered in Beeches Road in the town. The hare motif was copied for a new development in the town, and this has now been renovated, as described in a BBC News article at Roman hare mosaic restored in Cirencester's Brewery Court

Cirencester has some significant and striking Roman remains in the town centre. The Roman town was the seat of the financial administration of Britannia and a focus for the road system. Today significant Roman remains are tucked away alongside its handsome Cotswold townscape and, of course, one of the great late medieval urban parish churches of the country.
There are also important villa sites in the nearby Cotswolds - a pleasant place to live in Roman times or now.

Monday, 16 March 2026

Roman lead ingots from Wales

 
The discovery in Ceredigion of lead ingots that can be dated precisely to 87AD and the reign of the Emperor Domitian has been reported by BBC News at Rare Roman lead ingots found by metal detectorists in Ceredigion and by Artnet at Rare Roman Ingots Discovered by Metal Detectorists Declared Treasure

The ingots may appear prosaic alongside other archaeological finds but they are an indicator of an important industry in Roman Britain.


The Hallaton Helmet


I have posted before about the spectacular Hallaton helmet that was discovered in 2000 in south-east Leicestershire. A truly splendid example of first century parade armour it has now been conserved and can be seen in the Museum in Market Harborough. Alongside it are two skilled modern reconstructions of how it may have looked originally.

The helmet is described by Wikipedia in their article 


It can also be seen in an illustrated online feature from Leicestershire County Council at Harborough Museum celebrates return of Hallaton Helmet

There is full length lecture about the excavation of the l helmet and other items in the hoard from Leicester University Archaeology at 🔎 hallaton helmet
 

Repairing the Newport Arch in Lincoln


The Newport Arch in Lincoln is a unique survival. A Roman archway that still spans a working road. It was the norther gate of the Colonia on the top of Lindum Hill. The west gate lies buried in the earthworks of the castle, and the east gate, having served as a temporary headquarters for the Norman bishops survives as foundations by a modern hotel. The south gate at the top of the well-named Steep Hill was only destroyed in the 1770s. The Newport arch, named after a twelfth century laid out along Ermine Street as a New Port ( ie market), is a treasure the city is rightly proud of.

BBC News recently reported on its restoration in Work to start on repairing 'tired' historic Lincoln Roman arch

Alas not everyone appears to appreciate its significance as in this report, Man denies causing criminal damage to Lincoln Roman wall


In 1964 I was on a visit to Lincoln and in the city there was palpable anger at a bright-spark of a lorry driver who thought he could drive under the arch. He couldn’t. The upper part of the arch had to be removed to get the lorry out. Me - I’d have dismantled the lorry. His firm had to send a delegation to make a grovelling apology to the Lord Mayor.




Sunday, 15 March 2026

Analysing gypsum burials from Roman Yorkshire


In my previous thread on Roman life I shared several pieces.about the gypsum burials that are to be found in underground York.

I have now come across a recent article which concentrates on the examination of child burials in this distinctive form, and what it may reveal about Roman attitudes towards their children.


Two early Greek visitors to Britain


I have posted in previous years about the subjects of this post but a recent article on the Greek Reporter website is I think worth sharing about these two Greek men, Demetrios of Tarsus in the first century AD and, before him, in the early third century BC, Pytheas of Massalia, who were the first Greeks to visit Britain - and in the case of Pytheas, to record and codify its name.
 
In the case of Demetrios a chance archaeological find in 1840 - appropriately enough for a traveller on the site of York’s first railway station - links him to the wider structure of Roman governance and to the wider world. Growing up when he must have done in Tarsus, I am always tempted to wonder if he ever met a Jewish contemporary called Saul?


Saturday, 14 March 2026

A Roman cemetery at Brougham


At the beginning of this year Archaeology News reported on the excavation of a sizeable Roman cemetery at Brougham. Situated some miles south of Carlisle in the historic county of Westmoreland Brougham has both the site of a Roman camp, and a splendid, if ruined, medieval castle. It is well worth a visit.  
 
There is a detailed account of the history of the site from Roman times onwards on Wikipedia at Brougham_Castle


Life in Luguvalium


The continuing excavations at the very productive Cricket club site in Carlisle - Luguvalium to the Romans - continues to yield a rich haul of Roman artefacts. The most recent - including a military diploma or discharge plaque -  are indicated in a report from BBC News at Finding personal Roman items in Carlisle a 'real connection'

Wikipedia gives a useful introduction to the Roman city - the furthermost in the Empire in the north-west, and almost at the end of Hadrian’s Wall  - at Luguvalium

Making ink on Hadrian’s Wall


Archaeonews recently reported on a study of the ink used in the letters and notes written on slivers of wood at Vindolanda, just behind Hadrian’s Wall. 


Sculpture from the barracks at Vindolanda


Almost a year ago The Independent reported the discovery at the site of Vindolanda of a portion of a Roman panel from the gateway to the barracks building. Dated to 213, after the end of the Severan Wars, it depicts the goddess Victoria ( Victory ). From the photograph it appears to have the rather chubby characteristics of Roman provincial culture rather than the high art of Rome in its Classical metropolitan heyday, but it has a rugged charm and is a link to the cultural life of its time and location.
 

A terracotta female head from the fort at Magna


A recent story from BBC News reported the discovery of a striking Roman terracotta female head which was found during the excavation of the site of the Roman fort at Magna, near Haltwhistle.

Excavations at Bremenium Fort


The ongoing excavations at the site of the Roman fort of  Brenenium on the northern extension of Dere Street, linking Eboracum ( York ) to Hadrian’s Wall and then northwards to what is now southern Scotland were reported upon last autumn by Heritage Daily in Major discoveries at Bremenium Roman Fort

One find in particular was featured by Archaeology Magazine in Carved Jewel Uncovered at Roman Fort in Northern England

Friday, 13 March 2026

A gold coin linking East and West from Antonine Scotland


Another archaeological discovery from the Antonine era at Newstead in southern Scotland which links the area to the wider Roman world is a gold aureus of Trajan m, minted to commemorate his victory over the Parthians in the war of 114-117. Once again the reach of Roman military might can be seen linking Scotland to the Near East through the image and power of a the Emperor.

Archaeology News reported on the discovery last year. and the coin was about to go on display at the Trimontium Museum in the Scottish Borders. Tha article can be accessed at Rare Roman gold coin found in Scottish Borders to be displayed

Mithraism in second century Scotland


Excavations in 2010 at Inveresk, close to the northern coast of East Lothian uncovered two very handsome altars intended for the worship of Mithras. The Eastern mystery cult of Mithras was, of course, particularly popular with the Roman military. They date from the second century occupation of this part of Scotland, and are evidence for the most northerly Mithraiam known in Britain. 

The two altars have been acquired by the National Museum of Scotland and will feature in a forthcoming exhibition at the NMS in Edinburgh.

This is reported upon by BBC News in Ancient Roman altars to go on display in Edinburgh

There is a little more information in the Wikipedia entry for Inveresk


The Antonine Wall at Bearsden


Having constructed Hadrian’s Wall the Romans then moved north into what we now know as Northumberland and souther Scotland with a new frontier along the Antonine Wall. This second century acquisition was relatively soon abandoned, but still left a number of archaeological remains. This includes the evidence of stone buildings at Bearsden, north west of Glasgow.

This site is described on Wikipedia at Bearsden

There is now also an article on Live Science which describes the site and places it in context. It can be accessed at Roman military fort discovered in Scotland far north of Hadrian's Wall 


Footprints from the past


We begin on the coast of Angus in Scotland where human and animal footprints dating from the late Iron Age or early Roman period were discovered and recorded at Lunan Bay which lies between Montrose at the north and Arbroath at the south.



More on a High Imperial Theme


A couple of months ago, I posted a thread on recent discoveries on Roman Imperial history. Since then, I have come across more online material about discoveries and new interpretations of archaeological material relating to the period. I am therefore going to post another slightly longer thread. By doing, so, it means it each particular topic gets a post of its own, but they are linked in a sequence which hopefully illuminates something of the history of the period. 

As with the previous postings I will start on the northern frontier of Roman Britannia with the tribes to the north, and what is now Scotland, and then move southwards across the country before moving to discoveries in western and central Europe, and ending up once again on the cultural frontier between Rome and both Egypt and Persia in the Levant.

 I hope the journey proves interesting to my readers.

Thursday, 12 March 2026

Arguably the earliest surviving European handgun?


Live Science has a report about the discovery in Brandenburg of fragments of what may be the earliest known European gunpowder propelled handgun. The suggested date is that it was used during the siege of a nearby in 1390, almost a decade before what was thought to be the earliest evidence for such a weapon.These early hand guns or hand cannons had an inconsiderate habit of exploding, as evidenced by the fragments found on the battlefield of Towton from 1461.

The bronze fragments that have been recovered are illustrated in the article which can be seen at Europe's oldest handgun may date to 14th-century siege at German castle


The future for monastic life in France

 
The National Catholic Reporter has an article about the current state of enclosed monastic communities in France. The story begins with rumours and discussions about the future of the renowned Cistercian house of La Trappe, and documents a depressing story of decline and closure or relocation in other houses. 

However it also reports on the evidence in some cases of revival and new foundations in monasteries abandoned by their original communities. It is perhaps noteworthy, if not altogether surprising, that some of these new foundations are being established by Traditional  Latin Mass communities.

The article does not make for especially optimistic reading given the age of so many monks and nuns, but nevertheless does record some signs of hope. It is perhaps a parable for Lent, and something we should pray about.

   
My only real experience of contemporary French monasticism was when I stayed at Bec in 2004. This sizeable community is relatively new, established somewhat surprisingly at the behest of the French state which still  owns the handsome seventeenth and eighteenth century claustral buildings and the late-medieval detached bell tower - the earlier medieval church was blown up in the years after the very regrettable events of 1789. The secular republic offered it to monks from another community who established a very successful abbey. At the time I visited it had a lot of young men who gave the impression of stability and seriousness. I hope that continues to be the case.




Tuesday, 10 March 2026

The Restoration of the South Tower at Wentworth Woodhouse

 I have posted several times about the ongoing program of conservation and restoration at Wentworth Woodhouse in Yorkshire. This is a huge task given the size of the house, and also the condition into which much of it has fallen. It is also very inspiring, to see the rescue of a building of such importance that came perilously close to being lost forever, and also, that it engages craftsman and craftswomen in restoring a building, using the techniques, with which it was built.

One of the current projects Is the restoration of the Siuth Tower of the East Front - famous for being the longest frontage of any house in the country.

The project is partially funded by the Landmark Trust, And upon completion, it will be possible to book via the Truat to stay in what once the self-contained drawing room of the second Marchioness of Rockingham. 

The Wentworth Woodhouse Preservation Trust
has a video about the history of the Tower, which can be seen at The Story of the South Tower at Wentworth Woodhouse

BBC News also has a report about the project which can be seen at Tower is new focus of historic Wentworth Woodhouse restoration

There is another feature about the plans which can be seen at Layers of history peeled back to reveal past of hidden gem


Monday, 9 March 2026

Biodiversity, pollen and the Black Deatg


The Conversation has an interesting article which links modern concerns with historic events by looking at the vidence of the impact of the Black Death on biodiversity in the rural environment. The results are perhaps surprising, and maybe cautionary. 


Linked to it is an article from 2022 which I think I have shared before on this blog, but which is worth sharing again. This also looks at plant based evidence from lakes and wetlands in the form of pollen to attempt to identify regional variations across Europe in the impact of the Black Death, and suggests some significant localising features.


In addition to these two scientific studies using microscopic evidence there is new archaeological evidence about the pandemic with the identification of one of twelve plague burial pits recorded as being dug around the German city of Erfurt. This discovery is reported by the Daily Galaxy in Discovered After 700 Years, Archaeologists Found a Massive Pit in Germany Full of Human Remains



Saturday, 7 March 2026

Medieval Norwegian life


Writing my post the other day about medieval Norwegian stave churches has prompted me to put together into one post a number of links to recent discoveries from the medieval era in Norway.

First of all there was was the publication of evidence gleaned from a skeleton discovered in 1938 beneath stones and boulders in a well at Sverresborg castle near Trondheim. This has been shown to date from the later twelfth century and to confirm an account of the siege of the castle in  1197. One army threw a dead body into the well to poison the water supply by a form of germ warfare.


Sverresborg is close to Trondheim and the Nidaros cathedral, the historic ecclesiastical centre and coronation church of Norway. Recent research on the octagon built over and around the shrine of the national patron St Olav is outlined in an article from Medievalists.net which can be seen at The Strange Medieval Sculptures of Nidaros Cathedral

There is a report from last year about significant discovery of leather goods from the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries in the harbour at Oslo during redevelopment work. These include shoes, bags and scabbards, which have been preserved in the mud. The article from Live Science can be viewed at Thousands of leather shoes, bags and sword scabbards discovered during dig in medieval harbor in Norway

Another discovery of great and wider significance is what is thought to be the oldest surviving book in Norway. It is a small hymn book dated to about 1200 which had survived at a farm near Bergen. It is now held by the National Library and designated the Haganes Codex.

It is discussed on the History Blog at Rare furry sealskin manuscript may be Norway’s oldest book

There are also two videos about the book, which can be seen at Extraordinary sealskin manuscript may be Norway's oldest book and at Norway's Oldest Book

The book would clearly have been in the hands of medieval Norwegians, which links neatly to a ring from the era which has been discovered in recent excavations in Tønsberg, the oldest city in the country.

The ring, which, from its size, appears to have been made for a woman, was discovered at Tønsberg. The layer below which it was found is dated to 1167-1269. The ring may actually date from the tenth or eleventh centuries. This argument is based on stylistic similarities to examples from an England and Denmark. The ring is illustrated and discussed by Heritage Daily at Pristine medieval gold ring discovered in Tønsberg.

The ring is also discussed in a report from Popular Mechanics but illustrated by a bought-in generic image. The article can be read at Archaeologists Uncovered a Rare Medieval Ring—With Mystical Implications



Thursday, 5 March 2026

Conserving Norwegian Stave Churches


Medievalists.net has a report about a substantial government grant in Norway to conserve a number of the country’s distinctive medieval stave churches. As the article points out these churches are unique survivals in the country, without parallel elsewhere.


I believe I am correct in saying that where the account refers to tar it does not mean the sticky black gloop we refer to as bitumen and associate with road building, but rather to Baltic or pine tar. This is made from pine trees and used as a sealant and preservative on ships an and timber buildings for centuries. It is brushed on and provides a varnish-like coating that protects the wood from decay. It also emits a distinctive pine aroma.

With regard to stave churches I recall attending one of Martin Biddle’s archaeological seminars in Oxford where we were shown the very simple stone foundation footprint of a stave church that had been destroyed in the nineteenth century alongside an architectural drawing of the lost church. The point was that such a simple foundation could support so wonderfully elaborate a structure as the church had been, and that the ability of craftsmen in wood needs to be borne in mind when interpreting surviving archeological remains. A simple footprint does not necessarily mean a simple superstructure.


Wednesday, 4 March 2026

Reassessing Fr Fortescue


Dr Peter Kwasniewski has an excellent article on the website of the New Liturgical Movement In it re gives a charitable but incisive assessment of the work of Fr Adrian Fortescue on the history of the Roman Mass. Arguing that more recent scholarship has done much to revise significant errors in Fr Fortescue’s work, errors which have had regrettable consequences amongst modern liturgists.*

Dr Kwasniewski also provides an indicator of which books one should read so as to understand the origins and development, or otherwise, of the Roman Rite.

He also commends other works by Fortescue which have not ceased to be of use to students and scholars.



* “What’s the difference between a terrorist and a liturgist? You can negotiate with a terrorist”

Wuthering Heights Revisited

 
Even before, let alone since, the release of Ms Emerald Fennell's film “Wuthering Heights” there has been a flurry of activity on the Internet with posts about the film alongside mainstream articles in the press. Most of these have ranged between the scathing and the excoriating. They almost read as if we had been presented with “Carry On Wuthering Heights”. 

An attempt at a balanced overview can be seen from the excellent History Calling at Why you shouldn’t watch Wuthering Heights and why you should | Cathy and Heathcliff movie revie, but that is still far from glowing in its assessment.

The film is, of course, Ms Fennell’s adaptation ( and that word is important in the context of the film ) of the late Miss Emily Brontë’s everyday story of farming folk set in the Yorkshire Dales in the years 1770 to 1801. Often described, as it is by Ms Fennell, as a great, or even the greatest love story, it is, in fact no such thing, as is made clear in a good video about the family which can be viewed at Wuthering Heights Was Never a Love Story | The Brilliant Bronte Sisters

It is a bleak story of revenge and retribution. One does rather begin to wonder what was going on in the mind of the author as the daughter of a clergyman of the established Church. Amongst the comments on the online videos about the new film one contributor quoted a tutor who described it as a story of some mentally ill people sexing their way through a property dispute. Very romantic.

Now I must confess that I have never read the novel, but the raised interest online has led me to do some wider research on the Brontës and their lives and literary output. 

I have visited Haworth once and would recommend anyone interested to do so. The family home at the parsonage is very well worth visiting and to experience this relatively cramped house which in the 1840s was gone to so much literary talent. The village is picturesque in a dour Pennine way. The literary pilgrim can walk west from the village to the remains of Top Withins, which is widely believed to be the location for the imagined Wuthering Heights. There is a helpful video about the walk and the ruins at The Problem With The 'Wuthering Heights' Ruin

Top Withins may be an only a ruin but nothing, alas, remains of High Sunderland Hall, which lay just outside Halifax, some miles to the south of Haworth but known to the Brontës. This architecturally important building with its likely literary connections to their novels, was demolished in 1951. One would hope that such a loss would not occur today. Wikipedia has an illustrated account of the house at High_Sunderland_Hall

Like I suspect quite a number of people my view of the Brontës and their works is somewhat coloured by reading Stella Gibbons’ marvellous Cold Comfort 
Farm with Mr Mybug and his theories about the Brontë family, as well as the late, great Michael Wharton’s ‘Peter Simple’ column in the Daily Telegraph with its character Julian Birdbath living in a disused lead mine in Derbyshire whilst he researches his life of the tweed suited and pope-smoking lost Brontë sister Doreen….
More recently the Radio 4 comedy series about literary  Before they were Famous ‘unearthed’the fact that Wuthering Heights originated with a gardening column contributed by Emily Brontë to a local Keighley newspaper ….

In other words I am not in awe of the tropes and themes, the sweep and scope of such fiction - sometimes described as ‘loan and love-child’ stories.
 
I come from the lowland, not the Pennine part, of the West Riding, but my paternal ancestors lived from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries in an area very similar to Haworth, but about thirty five miles to the south and on the Yorkshire-Lancashire county boundary, so I have perhaps some genetic awareness of the power of such a landscape and social setting.

With that in mind and as an historian approaching what I know about the adaptation that has created this film there is quite a lot to criticise.

First of all I do not like adaptations that diverge unnecessarily from the text. Constraints of time and cost will often require some consolidation - not everything can be like the television version of Brideshead Revisited- but fidelity to the text should always be a principle, and a dominating one.

Secondly there should be authenticity to the era presented in matters such as location and costume. This film appears to pay scant regard with dresses from a later period and even, apparently, made of plastic(!). In some images Margot Robbie looks like Disney’s Snow White. Ms Fennell did not manage to include the Seven Dwarfs apparently.

Thirdly, and even more grating, is colour-blind casting, which simply looks like heavy handed DEI pressure. Ironically the casting of Jacob Elordi as Heathcliff has been stigmatised as ‘white washing’. Heathcliff is meant to be an outsider, distinctively so, but Emily Brontë appears to have been unclear in what way he is meant to be “other”.  Is he to be seen as of part Mediterranean, Arab, Sephardic, Gypsy, Indian or Black heritage? Given the textual evidence and the stamp Olivier put on the part Mr Elordi with his own Iberian heritage seems quite credible. Miss Brontë was not writing about twenty-first century ‘multiculturalism’.

In conclusion reading about the film reminds me of a conversation I had some years ago with a fellow son of the West Riding in Oxford. My friend opined that people in southern England thought that the long-running television series Last of the Summer Wine was a comedy programme but that we knew it was in fact a fly-on-the-wall documentary….. That principle might, I suggest, be applied to Ms Fennell’s film somewhat along the following lines when conversing with the unwary or uninitiated….

“Well ya maight think yer like it but don’t you go nah think in’ it’s sum fancy made-up tail. That’s ‘ow it is oop heer, wi’ driving rain and storms all’t time, and nowt but sheep and people tha’ ates, an that’s on a gud day. Don’t you be coming wi them fancy la-di-da southern notions. It’s tuff oop here, always was, always will be. Nowt but drudgery. But ‘appen it’s gud for them’s as can bear it”

*This post has not been sponsored by any Yorkshire Tourist Board but is written by One Who Knows


Sunday, 1 March 2026

The wall paintings at Sutton Bingham


A few days ago I wrote about the conservation of the little known medieval wall paintings at Ickleton in Cambridgeshire in Conserving the twelfth century wall paintings at Ickleton church

I have now come across a video about another little known series - well to me at least - dating from the beginning of the fourteenth century. They are in the church of All Saints at Sutton Bingham on the boundary of Somerset and Dorset. They were rediscovered in the 1860s.

The church itself is just a nave and chancel dating to the twelfth and thirteenth century, but with a fine Norman chancel arch. This was clearly not a wealthy parish but one which did commission a fine set of paintings in the years around or after 1300. One, which the presenter of the video pays particular attention to, is of the Dormition of the Virgin. This rarely survives as an image in this country, and may indeed have been unusual before the defacing and obliteration of such worths by mid-sixteenth century fanatics. The apparent rarity of the subject suggests that a small and remote village could still be connected to a much wider spiritual and cultural milieu.