Author Archives: dgm

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About dgm

Former IT professional, previously a digital archiving and repository person, ex research psychologist, blogger, twitterer, and amateur classical medieval and nineteenth century historian ...

Henry V

Last night J and I went to the Canberra Theatre to see Bell Shakespeare’s production of Henry V, and damn good it was too. Henry V is a huge sprawling play, with changes of scene, comedic interludes and the rest, … Continue reading

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Cooma cottage and Yass

Last Sunday was cold, windy and brilliantly clear, so we took ourselves off to look at Cooma cottage, the onetime home of the explorer Hamilton Hume, who, along with Hovell found the route south to Victoria, broadly taking the route … Continue reading

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An English Lady in Chinese Turkestan …

Well, that’s certainly a title. Long term readers of this blog will know that I’ve been doing a lot reading about the British colonial experience in Asia, including the literature of the time. Inevitably this segues into reading about the … Continue reading

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A C16 Portuguese Cannon in Darwin?

I’ve written previously about the possible Portuguese landing on the coast of Northern Australia during the age of European discovery. The initial evidence was fairly circumstantial, but at the same time there were reports that a cannon of possibly Portuguese … Continue reading

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Viking Mice on Madeira

A group of scientists have recently analysed some mouse remains on Madeira and shown them to come from (a) some time in the tenth century and (b) the mitochondrial DNA of the mice suggests a Scandanavian origin rather than a … Continue reading

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Monpazier happenstance

Back in 2009 we spent the best part of six weeks in Europe. Of course we tried to cram too much in but in the middle of the trip we did spend a relaxing few days in Monpazier doing not … Continue reading

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Stuff you never knew you needed …

It’s been cold in Canberra this week, and to cap it all the heating at work has decided to malfunction. Fortunately my office gets the morning sun so it does warm up fairly quickly, but the heating is currently blowing … Continue reading

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Digging up Butch and Sundance …

I’me about halfway through a book about an attempt to prove what happened to Butch Cassidy and his sidekick after the shootout in Bolivia. If you’ve seen the classic 1969 movie, you’ll know how it ends with the two desperados … Continue reading

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Roman Wall Blues …

I’ve recently been reading Charlotte Higgins Under another sky1 – an account of her journey around the sites of Roman Britain. I will admit to also being fascinated by the Romans – when we lived in Europe I spent way … Continue reading

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Francis Kilvert and the Franco Prussian war

Having finished with Bruce Chatwin’s correspondence I’ve now moved on to rereading Kilvert’s Diary, a book I last read in the seventies, long before I lived in mid-Wales, not far from Kilvert’s Hay and Clyro. I read it so long … Continue reading

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