Clay Lane

Posts in The Copybook credited to ‘Clay Lane’

193
The Lion of Piraeus Clay Lane

A marble statue in Venice bears witness to Europe’s long history of brave defeats and fruitless victories.

The Piraeus Lion has seen some remarkable history pass before his eyes, from the days when Scandinavian and English mercenaries were taking the fight to the Normans in Italy, to the day when the Turks came knocking imperiously on the doors of Vienna.

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194
Mary Anning Clay Lane

A twelve-year-old girl from Lyme Regis made a historic discovery while selling seashells to tourists.

Around the time that the fictional Anne Elliot paid a visit to Lyme Regis in Jane Austen’s novel ‘Persuasion’, in real life a young girl named Mary Anning was chipping away at the nearby cliffs, and had already entered the history books.

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195
Heracles and the Girdle of Hippolyte Clay Lane

A princess covets the belt of a warrior-queen, so Heracles is despatched to get it for her.

The Ninth Labour of Heracles follows a break in the Labours, during which Heracles has been travelling with Jason and his Argonauts. It must also be told in two parts. Later we will follow Heracles to Troy, but first his jealous cousin Eurystheus sends him from Tiryns, near Athens, to the land of the fearsome Amazons.

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196
Bede and the Paschal Controversy Clay Lane

The earliest Christians longed to celebrate the resurrection together at Passover, but that was not as easy as it sounds.

To keep Easter together during the Biblical festival of Passover was the shared dream of all the earliest Christian churches. But everyone seemed to have questions about how and when to celebrate the most important feast of the year, and no one seemed to have answers.

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197
The Battle of Nechtansmere Clay Lane

King Ecgfrith of Northumbria dismissed repeated warnings about his imperial ambitions.

The location of ‘Nechtansmere’, the Old English name for a crucial battle in 685 between Northumbria and the Picts of Scotland, is uncertain, though it appears to have taken place in mountainous country north of the Tay. Its result, however, could not be more clear: Northumbria would now begin its slow decline.

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198
St Bega Clay Lane

An Irish princess fled to Cumbria to escape the Vikings, clutching her precious silver bracelet.

St Bega gave her name to the former Priory at St Bees, on the Cumbrian coast. Later biographers buried her life under conventional mediaeval romance, and confused her with St Begu, founder of a monastery at Hartlepool in the 7th century. But beneath it all lies a ninth-century Irish princess, and a mysterious bracelet.

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