Fascinating new article by Nick Karn, focusing on the material aspects of charters to identify forgeriesβ including upside-down seals! Open access here: www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
@andrewayton
Historian (retβd Univ of Hull, UK) working on late medieval military, maritime, soc & economic; & Napoleonic. MSS, prosopography, networks. Classical music, wildlife, cinema, coins, postal history, Dorset, France, Hungary. π¦& #Shugborough Staffs pictures.
Fascinating new article by Nick Karn, focusing on the material aspects of charters to identify forgeriesβ including upside-down seals! Open access here: www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
I guess I didnβt wake up thinking I needed to know the names of the 279 named triremes β΅οΈin the 4th century BCE Athenian navy, but it appears we all do. link.springer.com/article/10.1... I do like that 3.58% had animal names like ΞΡονΟαΏ (lion skin) and ΞΞΞ±ΞΉΞ½Ξ± (lioness). Greek epigraphy is fun! πͺ¦
Call for papers for the Centre for Port and Maritime History's 30th Anniversary Conference, Liverpool, 10-11 September 2026
CALL FOR PAPERS: Share your research at the Centre for Port and Maritime History's 30th Anniversary Conference, Liverpool, 10-11 September 2026. CPMH includes @ljmuofficial.bsky.social , @liverpooluni.bsky.social & Liverpool's Maritime Museum. Submit abstract to n.j.white@ljmu.ac.uk by 15 May.
Screen grab of a call for papers at Leeds IMC. The text reads: TIME FOR CHANGE: TEMPORALITIES & CASTLES Call for Papers - Leeds IMC 6-9 July 2026 - 'Temporalities' What is a castle in time? Is there a time of castles, for castles? Can castles be atemporal? What does a castle studies engaging with questions of temporality look like? Whose castle temporalities matter? Can we call time on the castle studies of yesterday, yesteryear? Can the lens of temporality challenge castle knowledges and interpretations? This panel welcomes proposals which examine temporalities and temporalities in castle studies as a field of inquiry at the intersection of (among others) medieval studies, architecture, archaeology, history, heritage and medievalism. Papers of between 15-20 minutes, by researchers at all career stages, discussing any aspects of castle studies research including but not limited to the following, are welcome: β’ Temporality in castle studies; β’ Remembering and memorializing in castle Obscured history, identities and heritages in spaces, communities, themes: past and castles past and present present; β’ Medieval temporalities and the heritage β’ Temporally situated antiquity, novelty and innovation in castles; β’ Planning, timing, scheduling, recording in β’ castle communities, lives, societies; β’ Ruined, lost and fictional castles in time Parallel and contradictory times; β’ Time and temporality in the reception of castles; Please send proposals (a title and abstract of no more than 200 words; short biography of 50 words or less), or any questions, to Dr William Wyeth (william.wyeth@english-heritage.org.uk) by 15 September 2025. This session is organised by Emma Fearon (Nottingham Trent University) and William Wyeth (English Heritage)
Please share: due to withdrawal I have a space on my castles panel for #LeedsIMC.
If youβve an idea needs airing on time and temporalities in castles, give me a shout/submit via link! imc-leeds.confex.com/imc/2026/pre... @imc-leeds.bsky.social @castlestudies.bsky.social
Original CfP below β¬οΈ
Coincidentally, rather good βIn Our Timeβ today on Margaret Beaufort
www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/...
Great good news: Sean Cunningham has joined BlueSky. Follow him @seanc1509.bsky.social and read his books.
Publication of my short #PenguinMonarchs book on Henry VII on #WorldBookDay is wonderful. Enjoy the early #Tudor conspiracies, tragedies & @jodyhewgill.bsky.socialβs amazing cover painting. Thanks to the team @penguinrandomhouse.bsky.social
A little snatch of Chiffchaff from garden today. The bird is just visible, moving slightly, on the right margin of the video.
Here in Blighty, we seem to be reporting our first Chiffchaff song of the year, so let me add Shugborough, Staffs to the list. A bit earlier than usual for this area.
In other news β¦ more news like this, important in its way (but letβs face it, worthy of a chuckle) would be a welcome relief.
Your apt description reminds me, of course, of Compans, who never rose above divisional level (thank goodness, so avoided the Hundred Days); but superb at that level and an excellent chief of staff, incl in 1805 under Lannes. He was associated with Moreau, so that forever blighted his prospects.
Cold War (Pawlikowski, 2018)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_Wa....
I have sampled Dorset (real social history here) & Norfolk - Dan Cruickshank on tremendous form: by challenging & correcting Pevsner at times he really underscores Pβs remarkable achievement. Susie Harriesβs bio of Pevsner was one of the books that I read last year that has really stayed with me.
Thanks for posting this Mathew. I donβt recall it from the time of broadcast, but what a delight: the episodes sampled so far were most enjoyable: my beloved Dorset, and - very different - Dan Cruickshank on Norfolk. Having read Susie Harriesβs biography of Pevsner last year, I felt well-prepared.
Hautala, Roman. Masters of the Earth: A History of the Golden Horde, 1219β1502. London: Reaktion Books, 2026.
reaktionbooks.co.uk/work/masters...
#mongolsky
#tengri
#medievalsky
Thatβs wonderful, Richard. And somewhere in the deep recesses I think I now recall reading that somewhere. Yes, weβre working our way through the box set again; my wife read Conan Doyle in Hungarian as a child.
Yes, I think you are right.
Oh, and arithmetic in Β£ s d. Though, as I became a medieval historian that was not such a disadvantage. Only today I did a bit of Β£ s d multiplication. Forget the calculator!
Cover image of the DVD of the 1980s UK Granada TV series βThe Adventures of Sherlock Holmesβ and βThe Return of Sherlock Holmesβ: Jeremy Brett, as Holmes, in top hat; in the background the Reichenbach Falls with Holmes and Moriarty falling - except that Holmes didnβt.
Rewatching Jeremy Brett as Sherlock Holmes. Definitive, of course, and hugely enjoyable. We reach βThe Musgrave Ritualβ, and β¦ trigonometry. Prompted to ask how many of my followers, after school, have ever employed this knowledge? I havenβt. And donβt get me started on log tables and slide rules.
This sounds excellent! J'espΓ¨re que je trouve le temps d'assister Γ l'une ou l'autre des sΓ©ances... π
My Biographical Memoir of Jinty Nelson for the British Academy is now available on their website, open access on this link www.thebritishacademy.ac.uk/publishing/m...
Cover of book with text in yellow reading: The Firearm Revolution: From Renaissance Italy to the European Empires, overlaid on an image of an angel in seventeenth-century dress with wings and a long gun.
Hello Bluesky! My new book, THE FIREARM REVOLUTION, is out on 14 April. Itβs about how a new technology changed society, and how hard it was to control. Hereβs a little thread of whatβs inside:
Let me repeat my affection for Hungary and the Hungarians: I dearly hope they can (are allowed to) rid themselves of this pernicious blot on their recent history. If so, itβll be quite a revolution.
Jupiter and its four large Gallilean Moons tonight. Have a great week all!
#astronomy #astrophotography @stormhour.com @photohour.bsky.social
Resurrect?
A screengrab from:https://spectator.com/article/why-a-set-of-gold-coins-have-divided-british-archeologists/ Saying, "The fact that detectorists can keep their finds can also lead to strange, but legal, outcomes, such as ancient coins being perforated to make earrings. Ian Richardson, who leads the treasure team at the British Museum, told me about a hoard of Bronze Age ingots found on the Isle of Wight. The finder planned to melt them down to create jewellery."
I wonder which of these 25 ingots @findsorguk.bsky.social (all were returned to finder...) ended up being melted down?
There's very few truly undiagnostic finds - most are awaiting a person or technique to decode their secrets...
#Treasure #Detecting #Archaeology πΊ
finds.org.uk/database/ima...
Just caught up with this - superbly written, as well as informative, as you would expect from Michael Burleigh
So much in βEleanor the Greatβ that resonates with those of us with a mid-nineties mother (plus all the other themes). Has any other film involved an actor of that age engaging with the consequences of their actions in this way? Brilliant stuff from June Squibb.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eleanor...
I have great fondness for Hungary, owing to family ties, friends there & academic interests, but I detest OrbΓ‘n for what he has done to the country. Itβs important to distinguish the regime and the people; but the latter - as we all know - are so easily influenced by populist rhetoric.
Iβve sent something via DM.