annwfyn: (studious - belle)
[personal profile] annwfyn
So, the other night I went to see the very lovely [profile] jholloway talking about Anglo-Saxon paganism at Treadwells. Now, once upon a time, in a land far far away, which we shall refer to as 'Oxford', I did an MPhil in European Archaeology, specialising in the Anglo-Saxon period. In my first year I wrote a 5000 word extended essay on the mystery of the missing infant burials of the period, and in my second year I wrote my thesis on the changing archaeological attitudes towards death and burial within the context of the conversion period.

And then I realized that I was soon going to go on a killing spree and destroy all in my path if I didn't leave Oxford soon, gave up on the phd, ran away to London to go to Camberwell, and the rest is history. And for ages, I kind of half forgot about the whole subject in a mildly pained way.

Anyway, fairly recently, [profile] jholloway said he was doing a talk at Treadwell's on Anglo-Saxon paganism, focusing on the conversion period. Which was the area I knew best. Sadly for me, and thankfully (I think) for him, I couldn't find my notes and so went along with nothing but my five year old memories of my MPhil.

And I had a wonderful time. Listening to James talk, I felt all the old love I had for that period come rushing back. I remembered how much I'd enjoyed speculating wildly in the silence of my own mind on the missing infant burials,* I remembered Tania Dickinson pushing bad photocopies across the room and squinting to try and see what she was talking about when she showed me pictures of these shield wotsits** and I remembered how much I just loved that whole period. It was marvellous, and James is a really good speaker.

In general, I'm also beginning to really enjoy just going to Treadwells, which is such a weird and interesting place. There's quite a cool evening event on 4 June, which is a fake Victorian seance which I'm considering going to. Would anyone be interested? The blurb for it is here.

Finally, I think anyone who has some free time on Sunday should cough up a tenner and come along to hear me talking about the Craven Street Bones. Come on! It'll be fun! I am pretty good value for money when it comes to 18th century gore and guts.



*Most pre-industrial cultures have a really high rate of infant mortality. Either the Anglo-Saxons magically didn't, or they disposed of their infant dead differently, as they don't show up in most early Anglo-Saxon cemetaries.

** That's the technical term.
This account has disabled anonymous posting.
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting

Profile

annwfyn: (Default)
annwfyn

March 2025

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
9 101112131415
161718 19202122
23242526272829
3031     

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Feb. 10th, 2026 12:07 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios