Showing posts with label Archaeology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Archaeology. Show all posts

Tuesday, 18 September 2018

‘Austen Age’ Time ‘Tec Taster Brings Antiquarian Academy Open Events to a Close for 2018


Thanks to those who supported Sunday's Heritage Open Days event - ‘Antiquarian Academy’ ‘Austen Age’ Time ‘Tec Taster Tournament! - particularly those who kindly helped with the preparation of displays.


Though still concentrating on the Regency era, this year's HOD was different to that of 2017 in presenting a smaller exhibition, in order to provide more hands-on activities.There were various opportunities for visitors to try their hand at archaeological investigation & interpretation (with lots of 'finds' to handle & examine closely); & small displays on the theme of travel in Regency Derbyshire, and the changing regional landscape at this time.


Both the displays & activities related to the 'Seeking Sophie' history mystery / 'Austen Age' story & 'e-quest' (a series of challenges that can be undertaken using digital material; and for those able to follow a local trail, gathering evidence 'in the field' - providing opportunities to enhance understanding of & actively engage with the historic environment).


By participating in some of the activities, visitors could (with Mrs. Leach's help) to reveal vital clues for the Seeking Sophie Case Files - and learn some of the methods of archaeological & historical investigations in the process. The 'Seeking Sophie' challenge concludes this week (for more information on this 'e-quest', enter 'Seeking Sophie' in the search bar at the top of the page).


More photos of the displays & activities can be viewed in the Flickr album.

This is likely to be the last open / public Antiquarian Academy event for a while. As mentioned on the Antiquarian Academy Events Page, for the remainder of 2018 & early 2019 I intend to principally provide digital learning experiences ('armchair antiquarian adventures', self-guided tours in the local landscape, & challenges); although I may if approached by small groups (or public groups, if enough people express an interest in attending) also provide talks on the subjects they cover at the 'Academy'.


Thursday, 13 September 2018

#Seeking Sophie Letter 9: Destination Derby - Final Instalment of Mary's Travels Through Regency Derbyshire

In this letter, the 3rd & final instalment of Mary's recollections of her journey - entering Derby.







The Time 'Tec brief will follow tomorrow, ready for Sunday's meeting, when the Regency detective team will have opportunities to examine some of the evidence for this case.

Wednesday, 27 June 2018

Regency Era Love & Marriage - Follow-on Session & Digital 'Course'

'Love & Marriage in the Age of Austen' Digital 'Course'

As I mentioned at Sunday's talk, I have amassed quite a lot of material on the topic, so intend to develop a digital 'course' on the subject, to allow anyone interested to consider the subject at their leisure.

This will provide more in-depth information, sources (& opportunities to take a closer look at these), & discussion - including

  • the 'course' book that I've nearly finished on the topic; 
  • probably a series of audio talks - and possibly a short audio tour;
  • a selection of relevant sources (copies of texts & illustrations) 
  • maybe a quiz or two. 
As I've lots of other work in progress, at this point I'm unsure when this will be available, but I'll try to release it in time for Valentine's Day, if not before.


'Romantic Relics & Amorous Artefacts in the Age of Austen'

To celebrate Valentine's Day, I'm planning to provide another session (in early / mid February 2019) on Love in the 'Age of Austen'  (working title: 'Relics & Amorous Artefacts in the Age of Austen'), to complement the Love & Marriage talk I gave on Sunday. 

There will be some cross-over with the last session, so that I may provide a stand-alone talk; but I'll also provide additional material. As the lovely ladies that came along the other day belonged to a book group, I focused more on Jane Austen's novels than on material culture. For the next love & marriage session I intend to take a closer look at material remains (and provide prints, newspaper articles, ballads, etc. again - with more time to explore these vibrant sources). 

Participants will have opportunities to handle and consider a wider range of artefacts, and examine other material traces of love in the past (integrating studies of burials, landscapes, housing, etc.). This will include more data from my on-going research on local love, marriage, and married life.

I shall provide more information closer to the time.








Tuesday, 3 October 2017

'True Tales from the Grave in the Age of Austen' - Mrs. Leach in limbo

Antiquarian Administration & Bureaucracy Behind the Scenes

More than three weeks has passed since the 'Material Worlds of Jane Austen' exhibition, and I had hoped that, by now, I would have been able to provide more information on, advertise, and offer tickets, for my next proposed event - 'True Tales from the Grave in the Age of Austen' (working title), which I intend to hold around Halloween.

The prospective format of this event was / is a guided tour around some of Derby's urban burial sites (specifically in the 'Cathedral Quarter), to explore death and burial in the Regency era, to be held 5-6 pm, Sat. 28th October.

Here's a (draft) summary, that (subject to editing) will accompany some of the promotional material:
To mark the bicentenary of Jane Austen’s death, join Georgian lady antiquarian Mrs. Leach on her tour of the Derby’s Cathedral Quarter, to find out how people dealt with death in the Regency era.
While visiting the sites of several ‘lost’ burial grounds, and ancient churchyards still in existence today, she will explore death, disposal, and remembrance in the late 1700s and early 1800s, through local and wider archaeological evidence, and other historical sources.
Discover how industrialisation and urbanisation; limited medical knowledge – and attempts to improve understanding; and even political circumstances, gave rise to grisly graveyards, and gruesome treatment of human remains – far removed from the elegant environs and sentimental society now commonly associated with the time. But we will also consider the care and affection shown by previous generations to the dying and deceased, in such trying conditions.
Generally, on publicly accessible land, permission is not required for the sort educational events that I (& other educators) lead, and the activities that groups might undertake (i.e. taking a few people to look at features on historical sites), though the leader of such expeditions might, by way of courtesy, notify the landowner of their intentions. So I contacted the administrator of the only site I intend to visit that I know not to be public land, and they very kindly, warmly, and quickly granted permission.

Regarding public land - with regard to my event, pavements, verges, and another piece of open urban land administered by local authorities: over the years that I've taught in Adult Education (since 2000), I've never heard of educators seeking permission from governing bodies, nor of other tour-leaders that I have known taking the trouble to do so.

But I have vague recollections - when previously looking into the prospect of holding a Christmas walk & talk on a local park (last year? a few years ago?) - of encountering online information provided by DCC that those wishing to carry out community activities on a council-managed park should first contact the council, suggesting they do so 4 weeks before the event (though the links I bookmarked are broken, and I can no longer find this information).

In searching for this information while recently preparing the Halloween event, I came across information provided by community groups, mentioning that some LA's required notification by organisers intending to conduct group / community activities on public land (though this was principally with regard to 'licensable' activities, such as selling alcohol).

Conducting tours as a freelance educator for the first time (& so without the weight of the WEA or a University employer behind me), I though I'd better err on the side of caution, & contacted the Local Authority a few days after the exhibition, to enquire whether permission is required for me to take (a) small group(s) on Council-owned land (initially in the town centre).

I await a response (though I have since made further contact by phone, to be assured that my enquiry is being, or will soon be, considered). The delay is understandable for what I expect are understaffed & overworked offices - and I am informed that 'Derby Fest' kept everyone pretty busy over the last few weeks.
In the meantime, I'm holding off advertisement & ticket sales, just in case, for some reason, I'm not granted permission; if conditions are imposed that further delay permission; or if administrative or other charges are imposed - which would make tours untenable, due to the small number of 'tourists' I might most safely and effectively guide, and the low ticket prices. So I feel a little in limbo at present (a topical state that I'll briefly discuss when considering ritual and belief during the talk / tour!).

Due to the potential for such an outcome, and bearing in mind that time is pressing on, I'm looking into putting on an alternative (but similar) event at the 'Academy', either as an 'armchair' tour of the sites I intended to cover, or a more general talk on Regency death and burial in Derby (and beyond) that incorporates at least some of the material I would have included on the guided tour.

Those attending events at the 'Academy' have opportunities to handle original and reproduction 18th and 19th century artefacts, and see fabulous caricatures and illustrations from the period, as well as hearing about some of the, at times, grisly, at others, tender, experiences, surrounding death and burial in the late Georgian period. Costume can be more interesting, and I may be able to get together some suitably spectacular material culture!

While most of the Cathedral Quarter tour requires daylight (albeit, I plan, to conclude at dusk) - and so must be held at the weekend (and consequently not coinciding with a day in the Halloween season), the alternative can be held 'after dark' (making atmospheric use of candle-light!)- 7-8 pm seeming most suitable, and on a day in the Halloween festival. 'All Soul's Day' (November 2nd) seems appropriate.

If I do run an 'Academy' event instead of a tour, unfortunately numbers will be further limited (as those who attended the exhibition might anticipate) - so the soiree would be particularly select! And I shall hopefully be able to offer a guided tour next year (probably considering a slightly wider time-frame), when the bureaucracy has been surmounted.

I shall provide more information ASAP (via the mailing list; on this blog, & the Academy website; via Twitter & the Facebook Page, and posters etc.; those on the mailing list will be first to receive the news, and have first refusal on tickets - to join, email antiquarianacademy [at] gmail [dot] com), and I hope to see readers at the event, whether housebound, or on Derby's streets!  

Thursday, 24 August 2017

Material Worlds of Jane Austen Exhibition: 10 Sept., 6.30-8.30 pm, Derby



Just a quick post to announce another upcoming exhibition by Mrs. Leach that explores material culture of the late 18th and early 19th centuries as part of her Jane Austen bicentenary celebrations: The Material Worlds of Jane Austen.

This free-entry 'pop-up' exhibition will take place as part of this year's Heritage Open Day events, on Saturday 10th September, 6.30-8.30 pm.


In addition to the material presented in the previous Archaeology of the 'Austen Age' exhibition (held as part of the 2017 CBA Festival of Archaeology) - which included a wide range of household objects, illustrations, and written sources of the period (in particular considering Derby and Derbyshire in the late Georgian era), the Material Worlds exhibition will display information on Jane Austen's homes, family domestic artefacts, and her burial.

As before, visitors will be able to handle artefacts dating to the late 1700s - early 1800s, and there will be activities that provide opportunities for archaeological analysis.

The exhibition will feature some of the materials, and examine various topics, that Mrs. Leach intends to incorporate within talks, tours, and workshops focusing on everyday life in and around Derby during this period, to be held over the following year (October 2017 - July 2018). 

The topics that will be considered in events that are currently under development are: for Halloween, Death and Burial; on the run-up to Christmas, Yuletide Customs; Love and Marriage, for Valentine's Dayfor Mother's Day, Motherhood and Family Life; at Whitsun, a Summer Picnic, on Tourism and Antiquarianism; and in July, for the 2018 Festival of Archaeology (TBC), an Archaeological Detective Adventure

Participation in the above events will be by pre-booked ticket only (on a first-come-first-serve basis). Depending on venues (TBC), maximum numbers will be 8 - 15 persons, and minimum numbers 3-8 participants.  To be sure of a place, and to ensure that these events will go ahead, please contact Mrs. Leach ASAP to express interest; to book at ticket (it is anticipated that tickets will cost between £5-25 each, again depending on venue, and on whether the event includes a meal, refreshments, and / or souvenir booklets etc.); or for more information.

Mrs. Leach looks forward to seeing readers at these events.

Tuesday, 27 June 2017

Academy Opening: Archaeology of the 'Austen Age' Exhibition - CBA Festival of Archaeology Free Event

Well, it has been a while since my last communication!

I have been extremely busy preparing for the Academy opening next month (I hope to post illustrations regarding this event soon). Although preparations continue a pace, I feel a great need for a brief respite from my labours, to revive my body and gather my thoughts – and I might as well chat as sit in silence!   

I shall put an advertisement in the local press (which, in my time, is the Derby Mercury), alerting prospective patrons to the commencement of Academy services. What do you think – shall this suffice?
The Academy will open with a small public exhibition, held between the hours of two and four o’clock, in the afternoon of Saturday 15 July (I shall elucidate a little further below; in the meantime, here is a copy of the handbill that publicises the event, for your appraisal). 

Unfortunately, I shall have to request that patrons leave their carriages a short walk’s distance from the Academy, as resident’s vehicles congest the narrow roads. Restrictions are already in place (due to the propensity of students at a nearby higher educational establishment to avoid paying the parking fee imposed by their institution), and carriages not displaying permits might feel the force of the local constable. I shall provide a plan of the location of nearby road-side standing for vehicles (no charge at the weekends) anon.

I must also note that there are no public sanitary facilities; and that hand-vehicles, such as perambulator, may find it difficult to circumnavigate the confined rooms of my abode, or be daunted by the shallow step into the property. But I shall endeavour to aid those with mobility difficulties, for whom (by prior arrangement) I may be able to locate standing for one small carriage closer to my establishment.

The exhibition not only launches the Academy, but takes place as part of the annual Council for British Archaeology Festival of Archaeology (as described in the pages of their virtual book – known as a ‘website’, I believe; I can only imagine that some kind of alchemy – or witchcraft – has brought about this baffling medium).

I shall now say a little more on the exhibition. This July we mark a notable anniversary of the passing of that talented authoress, Jane Austen, and over the following year, I shall commemorate her life with talks, walks, and workshops that explore the material culture and other attributes of her time. The exhibition introduces some of the material I will discuss during these events, using extracts from her novels and letters, and from early biographies, to consider a number of topics to illuminate everyday experiences in the late 1700s and early 1800s, from a Derbyshire perspective. For your perusal, I have prepared manuscripts containing further information:
But  I  must  now  return  to  my  labours,  and  ask  that  you  might  call  another time to see how the Academy progresses.
                                             Yours, &c., &c., Mrs. Leach