I just got notification that the fifth Felicia and Robin book has gone live on Kindle, and that means the paperback version will be out very soon too. Link here: Kindle version
A rummage through random aspects of the past that interest me and may be of use or interest to other readers and writers of period fiction. Please note that the stories featured and my artwork for the covers are copyright; and have the courtesy to ask permission if you wish to use anything that is mine, and duly acknowledge it if you do.
Saturday, 20 July 2013
Sunday, 14 July 2013
The Frampton Mosaics, a 'long Regency' love affair with archaeology
Mosaics at Frampton
The humanist movement had started
an interest in things classical, which led to the initial acquisitive nature of
the antiquarian, nicking everything that wasn’t nailed down – and a few things
that were – from Greece
and Italy. Interest in the Roman world was much fuelled
by the discovery of Pompeii in 1748
and Herculaneum, where excavations
had begun ten years previously. By 1768
much had been brought to light. It was
possibly the discovery of towns preserved in this way that led to a more
scholarly and less larcenous approach to the study of the hidden past, an
approach founded by Johann Joachim
Winckelmann. However, the interest
in the Romans remained a deep and abiding one for the British, who have always
been proud to have been conquered by these successful Imperialists so like the
British proto-empire of the 18th Century. Roman finds in Britain
were always therefore of great interest to the public.
The mosaics at Frampton, in
Nunnery Meadows, were discovered by
labourers in 1794 and were subsequently presented to the Society of Antiquities
in London in 1795 by James
Engelheart. Samuel Lysons FRS
[17631819] carried out a fresh excavation in 1796-7 and produced a lithographic
reproduction. Unfortunately the mosaics
were destroyed in 1850 due to troop movements [my comments here are
unprintable]. There are mythical scenes
and arguably some suggestion of early British Christianity [see PL Tite]
The stir created by this, which
must have been viewed almost as an English Pompei, and Samuel Lysons’
Lithograph of labourers digging was obviously a popular enough subject to be
printed. He was a noteworthy engraver
and antiquarian, and one of the first archaeologists to study Roman sites in Britain,
specialising in Mosaics.
Villas in Dorset
appear to date from the late 3rd Century, with a [now] recognised school
of Durnovarian mosacists based in Dorchester
and Ilchester [now in Somerset] but
originally part of the territory of the Durotriges, the people of Wessex.
So, intrepid writers, will your
hero or heroine uncover a Roman mosaic in Dorset? Will there be buried treasure and will that
lead to skulduggery? Will they dug some
actual skulls and will they be Roman, or something more sinister and
recent?
Bibliography: Philip L
Tite “’Reading’
and ‘rereading’ the Frampton mosaics: etc” [available online]
Dorset
Ancestors.com
Friday, 12 July 2013
I managed to set up an author's page!
Yes I did, this luddite now has an author page on FB HERE where I can post news of up and coming books and albums of pics for each series, and, er, stuff.