there, though the historian quaintly adds that the plague was at the same time “ hot round Dunster.” Behind what is still called the Prince’s bedchamber is a secret chamber or hiding-place of small dimensions. Later, the Castle was besieged by Colonel Blake, the Parliamentarian Governor of Taunton, who, after a close siege of 160 days, forced Colonel Francis Wyndham to surrender, but with the honours of war. In 1648 the Castle was the prison of William Prynne, who had been sent there by Oliver Cromwell. During his imprisonment he employed his time in examining and scheduling the many documents connected with the history of the Castle. Perhaps the most interesting of these is a small slip of parchment bearing the original receipt of the Lady Joan de Mohun to the Lady Elizabeth Luttrell for 500 marks, the purchase money paid by the latter lady in 1376 for the right of succession to the Great Barony of Dunster.The Tor on which the Castle stands was the site of the Norman Keep, but all traces have disappeared, the Keep having been destroyed, by order of Parliament, in 1650. The Tor is covered with fine trees and every variety of flowering shrub, among which, growing in the open air on a wall in front of the Castle, is a lemon tree of remarkable luxuriance and beauty, bearing fine fruit. On it may be noticed the unusual sight of bud, blossom and fruit at the same time.
The view from the neighbourhood of the Castle is varied and imposing, including the extensive Deer Park, several miles in circumference, and, nearer, the verdant lawns, 300 acres in extent.On the heights of the Deer Park, on Gallox Hill, are two ancient camps. The prominences silhouetted against the sky mark the site of a roughly rectangular earthwork, known as Bat’s Castle, and often called the “ Roman camp.” It is enclosed by a double vallum of stones and a fosse, except on the southern side, where the steep declivity renders such protection unnecessary. Not far away, to the north-west, on the same hill, is a well-marked circular camp.The High Street.Dunster High Street, once called “ Chepyng-strete, ” is a broad and dignified thoroughfare, flanked by many charming Tudor houses with carved oak doorways and heavy window-frames, and quaint little old-fashioned shops. High above the Castle mounts guard over the lower end, and at the otherMinehead (c)
U.S. wartime billets mystery solved
Nissen huts on Hockey Lane Estate were the home for military personnel
working at various local aircraft establishments. NMLHS archive
A family from Welwyn Garden City has found the site of wartime billets in
Brookmans Park occupied by American forces thanks to the North Mymms Local
History Society.
Family members had made several trips to the area to try to find the location
of the second world war accommodation without success. The father in the family
remembered meeting his brother, who was an American serviceman, at the site
during the war.
He remembered that there was a large building at the end of a long driveway.
But despite lengthy searches he was unable to jog his memory. In the end his
daughter e-mailed this site asking for help.
Now the local history society's secretary and archivist, Marian Benton, has
dug into the archives and found details of a number of locations used by
Americans.
The Nissen huts on Hockey Lane Estate were later used as temporary homes for
families on the waiting list for houses in the new Hatfield Town. NMLHS archive
According to John Harris, the society’s membership secretary, North Mymms
House and Hatfield House were both used as allied military hospitals during WW2.
Approximately 50 Nissen huts were built in the grounds of North Mymms House
which were used for kitting out ATS personnel before they were drafted to the
Middle East and also as local accommodation for military personnel working at
local aircraft establishments.
After the war, what was known as the Hockey Lane Estate was taken over by the
council as temporary accommodation in order that local people could be put on
the permanent housing waiting lists for the new Hatfield Town. The site was sold
off in the late 50’s.
To find the site of the old Hockey Lane Estate head for St Mary's Church,
drive over the bridge but continue straight on when the road turns to the right
and the foundations of the Hockey Lane Estate can be seen in the fields to the
left of that road.
January 8, 2001
Related Item Mystery of U.S
wartime billets - January 5, 2001
On the Home
Front - Chapter Seven - The North Mymms Auxiliary Hospital
"Your words are fair, but of doubtful meaning; I cannot
forsake what I have so long believed. But as you have come from far we will not
molest you; you may preach, and gain as many as you can to your religion"
Greeting of King Ethelbert, Isle of Thanet, to Augustine in the Summer of 597
Details of Augustine's life are scarce. Believed to have been a pupil of
Felix, bishop of Messana, he became a monk and later Prior of St Andrew's in
Rome. He was sent by Pope Gregory to lead a party of around 30 monks to bring
England (such as it was) under the influence of the Roman world. The journey was
halted at one point, the monks losing their nerve and returning to Rome, before
successfully landing at Ebbsfleet in 597. Received cautiously by the King of
Kent, Ethelbert, Augustine managed to estbalish a community of monks based first
at St Martin's church, later transferring to the site of the present Cathedral.
Augustine struggled to establish his authority within the British Isles and
did not bring to completion Gregory's plan to form an English church based on
two provinces and twelve bishops.
He died on May 26th, now remembered as his feast day, but the year of his
death is uncertain, between 604 and 609. He was buried at what is now called St
Augustine's Abbey.
Research by Jenny Childs and Steve Empson Detailed biography: Augustine (? - c604) St Augustine or Austin, of
Canterbury (Evangelizer of England - as distinct from Roman Britain; feast
day 26 May in England, 27 May in the RC Church since 1969 & outside England
now). 'Bishop [or Archbishop] of the English' (as
consecrated); 'Apostle of the English' (originally a description of
Pope Gregory). Italian by birth.
d. May c604; some reports put it as late as 609. Buried at the Monastery of
St Peter and St Paul (afterwards known as St Augustine's) Canterbury.
Ministry Prior St Andrew's Monastery Rome ? - ?; Leader 1st Mission to England
596-597; chosen by Pope Gregory I to lead between thirty and forty monks to Kent
596, departed 596, landed Summer 597 at Ebbsfleet and received in Thanet by
Kentish K Ethelbert.
Archbishop of Canterbury 597- c604; Consecrated before his 1st arrival in
England, possibly with the title 'Bishop of the English', possibly at Arles,
but also possibly after becoming established in England. The pallium - the
symbol of office - was sent from Rome by Pope Gregory I in 601.
His time as Archbishop coincided with with » Kings and Queens: Kent
» Ethelbert 560? -616 » East Saxons » Sabert ? -616 » West Saxons » (Ceolric
592-97) » Ceolwulf 597-611 » South Saxons » ? » Mercia » Crida or Creoda or
Cearl 593-626 » Northumbria » Ethelfrid 593-617 » East Angles » ? (Redwald ?
-627) » Popes » Gregory I 590-604 » (Sabinianus 604-06) »
Known writings: helped Ethelbert to draft the earliest Anglo-Saxon written laws to survive.
Firsts: 1st Abp of Canterbury.
The Alfred Jewel is among the most famous of Anglo-Saxon objects. It was discovered at North Newton in 1693, not far from the abbey at Athelney, founded by Alfred the Great. Around the edge are the words AELFRED MEC HEHT GEWYRCAN (‘Alfred ordered me to be made’). Over the years the jewel has been the cause of as much speculation as admiration. Precisely what its purpose was has remained a source of much uncertainty. The jewel may have been the head of a pointer used for following words in a book. The original jewel is preserved in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, and was made in about AD 890. This replica, which was made in 1901 to mark the thousandth anniversary of Alfred’s death, can be seen in the ‘Making Somerset’ gallery in the Museum of Somerset.
By Eleanor BradfordBBC Scotland Health Correspondent
29 February 2016
From the section Scotland
Younger people with neurological conditions are being cared for in old people's homes, according to the charity Sue Ryder.
It said there is nowhere else for them to go because of a lack of specialist facilities. The Scottish government said it wants people to be treated in their own homes or as close to home as possible. Minister Jamie Hepburn said it plans to invest £250m a year to "protect and grow" social care services. Romana was placed in a care home for the elderly at the age of just 23, after suffering a severe brain haemorrhage when she was four months pregnant with her second child.
She couldn't see her children apart from short visits. "It felt very strange because everyone around me was so much older; I was a very young girl at the time, and I felt I had lost my family," she said. After two years, the Sue Ryder charity heard of her case and offered her a place at their neurological centre in Aberdeen. With specialised rehabilitation, Romana learned to walk and live independently. She is now looking forward to having her own flat, and sleeping under the same roof as her children for the first time in seven years. Sue Ryder asked every local authority and health board in Scotland how many people with neurological conditions are being cared for in old people's care homes. Neurological conditions include Parkinson's, multiple sclerosis, motor neurone disease, Huntington's disease and brain injuries. Only a third of local authorities provided figures. They said 63 people under the age of 65 were being cared for in such an environment. If those figures were replicated across the remaining health boards it would mean about 250 people are in an inappropriate environment. They said a further 182 people aged over 65 with neurological conditions were in a care home for older people. The charity said this meant a total of nearly 1,000 people could be missing out on specialist treatment, support and rehabilitation. Sue Ryder's assistant director Scotland, Pamela Mackenzie, said: "Romana was quite a different lady when she first came. She was withdrawn and depressed and she really had been written off. "Older people's care homes do a great job for people in their 80s and 90s, but people like Romana need a different environment. Their conditions are quite different. "It is clear from our research that the needs of people with neurological conditions have largely been overlooked in recent years. "We urge the Scottish government to take immediate action to address these inequalities so people with neurological conditions get the chance of a better quality of life."
'Vital role'
The minister for health improvement, Jamie Hepburn, said: "Our 2016/17 budget sets out plans to invest a further £250m per year through health and social care partnerships, to protect and grow social care services, and invest £11.6m to implement self-directed support. "We also recognise the vital role specialist nurses play in patient care. This is why we committed £2.5m of recurring funding for specialist nursing and care, including up to £700,000 to specifically target MND care. "The health boards involved are currently recruiting additional nurses, or increasing the hours of existing nurses in order to fulfil our pledge to double the number of MND nurses in Scotland. "Some posts have already been filled and the remaining posts are expected to be filled by spring 2016."
Archaeologists have uncovered Britain's "Pompeii" after discovering the "best-preserved Bronze Age dwellings ever found" in the country.
The circular wooden houses, built on stilts, form part of a settlement at Must Farm quarry, in Cambridgeshire, and date to about 1000-800 BC. A fire destroyed the posts, causing the houses to fall into a river where silt helped preserve the contents. Pots with meals still inside have been found at the site. Live updates about the dig and more stories from Cambridgeshire
An earlier test trench at the site, near Whittlesey, revealed small cups, bowls and jars. In addition, archaeologists said "exotic" glass beads that formed part of a necklace "hinted at a sophistication not usually associated with the Bronze Age". Textiles made from plant fibres such as lime tree bark have also been unearthed. What did Bronze Age Britons eat and other things the site tells us However, the roundhouses themselves are now being excavated. Archaeologists think they have found about five houses but are not yet certain.
Bronze Age Europe and Britain
The Bronze Age in Britain lasted from between 2500 and 2000BC until the use of iron became common, between 800-650BC
It came after metalworkers discovered that adding tin to copper produced bronze, used for tools and weaponry which were much more hard-wearing
The Greek poems of Homer - though composed later - look back to a time when bronze weapons were used
In Britain, the Bronze Age lasted until about 800BC. Use of bronze seems to have coincided with fresh migration of people from the continent.
Classic Bronze Age remains include sophisticated axes, precious gold objects, and round burial mounds or "barrows" of which many can still be seen in Britain
BBC History - Bronze Age Britain BBC Bitesize - What was Bronze Age life like? The work to uncover the settlement is necessary because there are concerns the water level at the site could fall some time in the future, meaning the remains of the houses cannot be preserved in situ. Duncan Wilson, chief executive of Historic England, which is jointly funding the excavation with land owner Forterra, described the settlement and contents as "an extraordinary time capsule". He added: "A dramatic fire 3,000 years ago, combined with subsequent waterlogged preservation, has left to us a frozen moment in time, which gives us a graphic picture of life in the Bronze Age. "This site is of international significance and its excavation really will transform our understanding of the period."
'Unsurpassed finds'
David Gibson, from Cambridge Archaeological Unit, which is leading the excavation, said: "So much has been preserved, we can actually see everyday life during the Bronze Age in the round. "It's prehistoric archaeology in 3D, with an unsurpassed finds assemblage both in terms of range and quantity." Well-preserved charred roof timbers of one of the roundhouses are clearly visible, together with timbers showing tool marks and a perimeter of wooden posts known as a palisade, which once enclosed the site. While a number of Bronze Age settlements have been found in the UK, Mr Gibson said none had been as well-preserved as the Must Farm site. "Most don't have any timber remaining, just post-holes and marks where posts would have been," he said. "So far this is unique as we have the roof structure as well." He said there were some well-preserved similar dwellings at Loch Tay in Perthshire, but these were about 500 years later than those in Cambridgeshire, dating from the early Iron Age. Archaeologists digging two metres (6ft) below the modern surface at the quarry also found preserved footprints, believed to be from people who once lived there. Once all the retrieved items have been cleaned and documented they are expected to be put on public display.
The roundhouse would have looked something like this Celtic Crannog (Credit: Christine Westerback/CC BY SA 2.0)
But the fire and the roundhouse’s subsequent collapse into the river contributed to its extraordinary preservation. Like the intact structures found at Pompeii, the flames helped to carbonize and maintain the wooden beams. Silt at the bottom of the river prevented air and bacteria from chewing away at the wood. And because the inhabitants were forced to leave everything behind, virtually everything remains where they left it. Archaeologists are describing it as a time capsule.
“Everything suggests the site is not a one-off but in fact presents a template of an undiscovered community that thrived 3,000 years ago ‘beneath’ Britain’s largest wetland” — Mark Knight
Posts and rafters stick up from the ground, while footprints of the inhabitants can still be seen in the sediment. A charred roof of a roundhouse remains visible, as are tool marks and a perimeter of wooden posts that once enclosed the site. Experts say the excavations are revealing “the best-preserved Bronze Age dwellings ever found” in the country.
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“A dramatic fire 3,000 years ago combined with subsequent waterlogged preservation has left to us a frozen moment in time, which gives us a graphic picture of life in the Bronze Age,” noted Duncan Wilson, Chief Executive of heritage organization Historic England. He says the site is of “international significance,” and that it’s poised to “transform our understanding of the period.” The site, located at Must Farm near Peterborough, England, has already produced a treasure-trove of artifacts. Though the excavations are only half complete, the archaeologists have uncovered elaborate textiles made from plant fibers, along with small cups, bowls, and jars that still have their meals inside. The researchers also found glass beads that were attached to a necklace—a sophisticated item of jewelry not typically associated with the Bronze Age. This could mean that the inhabitants were at the upper levels of society.
These glass beads were once part of an elaborate necklace. “Must Farm is the first large-scale investigation of the deeply buried sediments of the fens and we uncover the perfectly preserved remains of prehistoric settlement,” said Cambridge Archaeological Unit (CAU) Site Director Mark Knight. “Everything suggests the site is not a one-off but in fact presents a template of an undiscovered community that thrived 3,000 years ago ‘beneath’ Britain’s largest wetland.”
It’s prehistoric archaeology in 3D with an unsurpassed finds assemblage both in terms of range and quantity.” — David Gibson
A human skull was also found at the site, but further excavations are required to determine if it belongs to a person who died in the fire. The team also plans to bring in a fire expert to determine if the fire was deliberate (e.g. the result of a hostile tribe) or accidental.
These textiles were made from plant fibers. Archaeologists have known about the site for decades, but it hasn’t been touched since 2006. Efforts to fully uncover the settlement were given an added sense of urgency after fears emerged that falling water levels could cause the remains to degrade quickly. The $1.58 million (£1.1 million), 4-year project is being handled by the CAU, who are being funded by Historic England. All items are being sent to labs for further analysis. A detailed paper is expected in a few years, after which time the items will go on public display. Similar European prehistoric wetland sites have been found before, but nothing quite like this one. Other examples include the ancient loch-side dwellings known as crannogs in Scotland and Ireland, the stilt houses of the Alpine Lakes, and the terps—human-made hill dwellings—in the Netherlands. “Usually at a Later Bronze Age period site you get pits, post-holes and maybe one or two really exciting metal finds. Convincing people that such places were once thriving settlements takes some imagination,” said CAU Archaeological Manager David Gibson. “But this time so much more has been preserved—we can actually see everyday life during the Bronze Age in the round. It’s prehistoric archaeology in 3D with an unsurpassed finds assemblage both in terms of range and quantity.”
BatmanghelidjhCamila Batmanghelidjh, CBE (/kəˈmɪləbætmænˈɡɛlɨdʒ/; Persian: کامیلا باتمانقلیچ Kamylā Batmanghelych; born c. 1963) is an Iranian-born author and charity executive in the United Kingdom. She is best known as the founder of Kids Company, a charity which, until its financial collapse in August 2015,[1] worked with inner-city children and young people in the UK.
Batmanghelidjh was born in Iran. Her mother was a Belgian, whilst her father was the Iranian doctor Fereydoon Batmanghelidj. She was born two-and-a-half months premature, with the umbilical cord wrapped around her neck, and she was not expected to survive. Her birth was not registered and the date was not noted.[2] Batmanghelidh believes that her severe dyslexia comes from her traumatic birth.[3]
She attended Sherborne Girls School, an independent school in Dorset.[4] She attended the University of Warwick where she received a first class degree in Theatre and the Dramatic Arts.[5] At the age of 25 she was employed as a part-time psychotherapist in a project in Camberwell, south London, funded by Children in Need.[5] She has claimed to have been practising psychotherapy for more than twenty years,[6] although she has apparently no formal qualifications on or membership in professional self-regulatory organisations with regards to psychotherapy.[7]
In 1991, Batmanghelidjh was involved in the formation of The Place to Be (now Place2Be), a charity working with troubled children in primary schools.[8][9] Place2Be had originated from a SouthwarkFamily Service Unit (FSU) "The Place to Be", placing a counsellor in a primary school.[10] Batmanghelidjh left the charity in 1995.[9] She was replaced by Benita Refson.[10] Place2Be now reaches 80,000 children, working in 235 schools across the UK.[11][11]
In 1996, after leaving the Place2Be, Batmanghelidjh founded Kids Company, a charity that provided care to children whose lives had been disrupted by poverty, abuse and trauma. Originally a single drop-in centre in Camberwell, Kids Company claimed that it helped some 36,000 children, young people and families, although this figure is disputed and the organisation is said to have reached only 1,600 children.[16] The charity operated through a network of street level centres, alternative education centres, therapy houses and with over 40 schools in London and Bristol as well as a performing arts programme in Liverpool.[17] Deborah Orr, in an interview with Batmanghelidgh, reported in 2012 that fifteen independent evaluations of Kids Company had found that 96 per cent of children assisted return to education and employment and an "impact on crime reduction" of 88 per cent.[5]
In July 2015 a report by Newsnight and BuzzFeed revealed that public funding for Kids Company was to be withheld unless Batmanghelidjh was replaced.[18] On 3 July it was reported that Batmanghelidjh would step down as chief executive in the next few months and continue in a "presidential" role.[19][20]
On 5 August 2015, Kids Company closed its operations[21] less than a week after receiving a government grant of £3,000,000. The charity was given the money against the advice of officials, who had raised concerns about value for money and how it would be spent.[22] The charity had announced that it was closing down because "it is unable to pay its debts as they fall due”.[23]
Speaking to the Telegraph newspaper in August 2015, Camila Batmanghelidjh said she hoped Kids Company could make a comeback after some restructuring and once the media storm had died down.[24]
In mid-August 2015, Batmanghelidjh announced that she would be opening a food bank in Lambeth, south London. She said fifty former staff had volunteered to help run the pop-upKids Dining Room in Loughborough Junction to provide food for up to 3,000 children and young people. Approximately 200 people used the service in August 2015. [25][26]