The Language of Colonisation: A Case Study In 1782, Volume One of The Geographical Magazine compiled by William Frederick Martyn was published by Harrison and Company of London, offering the reader a ‘New, copious, Compleat and Universal system of Geography.’ Included was an entry on New Zealand (reproduced below in its entirety), that fed into the early impression of… Continue reading The Language of Colonisation: A Case Study
Category: Summer Solstice
Frances Hodgkins and Corfe
In the south-west of Dorset is the beautiful village of Corfe. The village sits beneath the impressive castle ruins which today draw many visitors to the area. Starting as a Saxon stronghold, the site has gone through several metamorphoses, as a Norman Castle with the Keep built by Henry I, a home for the Bankes… Continue reading Frances Hodgkins and Corfe
A World Apart: Portland Island (Hawkes Bay, New Zealand) and Portland Bill (Dorset, England)
On 12th October 1769, sailing south in the Endeavour, Captain James Cook first viewed an island off the tip of Mahia Peninsula which measured some three kilometres in length. He named it Portland Island “on account of its very great resemblance to Portland in the English Channel“. What Cook didn’t know was the island already had a… Continue reading A World Apart: Portland Island (Hawkes Bay, New Zealand) and Portland Bill (Dorset, England)
What’s in a Name?
As the campaign against the preservation of statues and street names named after persons associated with slavery gathers momentum in the United Kingdom, if we pause to look around the countries of the old empire, we can see its imprint everywhere: in place names, monuments, streets, parks, gardens, festivals and so on. This is particularly… Continue reading What’s in a Name?
Time for Cricket
The Self-Fielding Cricket Ground In Hawkes Bay, just off the main road between Napier and Wairoa, or more accurately between Whirinaki and Tutira and only a short distance from the crest of the Devil’s Elbow hill, some 400 metres above sea level, is a cricket pitch, nestled in a gully. If you were passing and… Continue reading Time for Cricket
Messaging
Messaging: My experience of Learning and Teaching History in a former British Colony I was educated in New Zealand and I expect my history education was the same as for most of my contemporaries. In primary years history was included as part of Social Studies which included both geography history. Apart from learning about Abel Tasman… Continue reading Messaging
The Anteater’s Analyst
THE ANTEATER’S ANALYST By Peter Tait with illustrations by Sarah Tait The allegorical tales of Jeremiah Freak, as told to his grandson, Plumb Lucky, and passed down by their richly coloured housemate, the wealthy Macaw. Contents: 1. The Anteater’s Analyst 2. The Centipedes’ Chiropodist 3. The Walrus’s Washboard 4. The Penguin’s Peccadillo 5. The… Continue reading The Anteater’s Analyst
Empire? What Empire?
Empire? What Empire? One of my regrets in recent years is not being able to get to the Chalke Valley History Festival which for some years now has been a wonderful celebration of Britain’s history. Of course, I have always realised that such festivals are commonly used to flog books or wares and that the… Continue reading Empire? What Empire?
The Class Divide
We sometimes forget just how polarised British society is. Class underpins everything that we think and do, however subconsciously. Whereas in most of the world, the mere presence of loadsamoney is enough to open doors and define your social status, in England that only nudges the door ajar. Class – the division of society by… Continue reading The Class Divide
Repairing the Damage
Repairing the Damage ‘And, you know, there is no such thing as society. There are individual men and women, and there are families. And no government can do anything except through people, and people must look to themselves first. It’s our duty to look after ourselves and then, also to look after our neighbour. People… Continue reading Repairing the Damage