Breakfast Links are served! Our weekly round-up of fav links to other web sites, articles, blogs, and images via Twitter.
• The art and mystery of 18thc mantua-makers.
• The poet John Keats, and cats.
• Whitewashing ancient statues.
• The fast and the feminine: women, cars, and advertising.
• Eighteenth century ships unearthed in Alexandria, VA offer glimpse of colonial era.
• Image: A rare and possibly unique 17thc document stating that a Dorset woman, Joan Guppy, is not a witch.
• Isaac Henry Robert Mott, piano-forte maker in Victorian London.
• When literary classics are packaged as pulp fiction.
• The Bohemian heiress who shattered 19thc taboos.
• A trove of "letter locking," or vintage strategies to deter snoops.
• The curious history of mommy-and-me fashion.
• "The scourge of evil": the persecution of witches at Edinburgh Castle.
• The rare, surviving sento, or bathhouse inside Seattle's Panama Hotel, an important relic of Japanese-American history.
• Ann Roberts, foster mother to a king - at a terrible sacrifice, 1910.
• National Geographic's digital archive has every map ever published in the magazine since 1888.
• The legend of Pope Joan, who reputedly gave birth during a papal procession.
• When King George VI broke the lock to the New Bodleian library.
• This trunk filled with unread letters from the 17thc is an historian's dream.
Hungry for more? Follow us on Twitter @2nerdyhistgirls for fresh updates daily.
Above: At Breakfast by Laurits Andersen Ring. Private collection.
Laws Concerning Women in 1th-Century Georgia
2 weeks ago
2 comments:
Thank you Edinburgh Castle... which was indeed a key location for the witch-hunts. Yes the Scottish Witchcraft Act had been introduced in 1563 for Mary Queen of Scots. But it was her son, King James VI, who enforced it with brutality and notoriety. The Witches Well at the castle came way too late, it would seem.
Your Breakfast Links post is the cream in my coffee every Sunday morning. Thank you!
Post a Comment