Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Episode #23-Ghosts!



If there's something strange
In your English manor
Who you gonna call?
Podcasters!

This week’s episode is a co-production between History, Bitches and the Renaissance English History podcast. So, grab a blanket and flashlight because it’s about to get spooky. Tune-in as co-host Heather and I talk about Anne Boleyn’s headless specter, the tortured spirit of Lady Jane Grey, and lots more!


Monday, October 26, 2015

Episode #23-Ghosts! (Show Notes)

The show-notes below relate to the ghosts I discussed in the episode. To learn more about the ghosts discussed by Heather, check-out the show-notes on her website!

Anne Boleyn ( 1501? – May 19, 1536), the unfortunate 2nd wife of king/tyrant Henry VIII, is rumored to haunt Blickling Hall, the Boleyn’s ancestral home. For more, check-out:


A biography of Anne Boleyn


The ‘Anne Boleyn Files’ is a breath-taking number of articles relating to Anne and Tudor England


The National Trust’s webpage for Blickling Hall


Spook spotters turn out to see Anne Boleyn's ghost (ITV article + video)


Hampton Court, a royal residence favored by Henry VIII. is supposedly haunted by the king’s favorite wife, Jane Seymour (1508? – 24 October 1537) , and Sybil Penn (a.k.a. the Grey Lady), a domestic servant. For more, check-out:


A biography of Jane Seymour


Ghosts at Hampton Court Palace (by Historic Royal Palaces )


Eek! There are ghosts in my royal palace: After this eerie photo of Hampton Court's Grey Lady, the building's curator says it's jam-packed with spooks (Daily Mail article)


Catherine Parr, Henry VIII’s 6th wife, is said to haunt Sudeley Castle, the site of her death and final resting place. For more information, check-out:


A biography of Catherine Parr


Catherine Parr’s Ghost At Sudeley Castle (article on the Tudors Weekly blog + video)


Sudeley Castle website


The restless ghost of Catherine of Aragon, Henry VIII’s much-wronged 1st wife, is reported to haunt Kimbolton Castle, the dreary palace to which she was banished after her marriage ended. For more information, check-out:


A biography of Catherine of Aragon


Catherine of Aragon's Ghost (article on the Times of the Tudors website)


Kimbolton Castle (now Kimbolton School) website


For more information about Henry’s VIII’s six wives or Tudor England, check-out:


Henry VIII & His Six Ghosts (History in the (Re)Making article)


The Ghosts of Henry VIII’s Queens (nerdalicious article)


On the Tudor Trail website


The Six Wives of Henry VIII (PBS miniseries website)


The Wives of Henry VIII (Renaissance English History Podcast episode)


This episode is a co-production between myself and Heather at the Renaissance English History Podcast. So, please check-out Heather’s podcast and website!

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Episode #22-Theodosia Burr


The Encyclopedia of Women in American History described her ‘one of the best educated women of her generation,’ while America’s 3rd Vice President regarded her as his most trusted confidante. The daughter of (in)famous Founding Father Aaron Burr, Theodosia’s life was characterized by public scandals and private tragedies including her own mysterious disappearance at age 29. Tune-in to this week’s Halloween-inspired episode to learn more!


Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Episode #22: Theodosia Burr (Show Notes)

Frustratingly, there are few sources  which focus on Theodosia’s life exclusively.  The majority of information about her life is from books about her father, 3rd U.S. Vice President, Aaron Burr.  Here are some of the texts I used  when researching the podcast:


Biographies of Theodosia Burr

Theodosia Burr Alston: Portrait of a Prodigy
By Richard N. Côté 

Theodosia, the First Gentlewoman of Her Time

By C.M. Clark 

Notable American Women, 1607-1950: A Biographical Dictionary, Volume 1 (entry for Burr, Theodosia)


Encyclopedia of Women in American History (entry for Alston, Theodosia Burr)



Biographies of Aaron Burr


Fallen Founder: The Life of Aaron Burr

By Nancy Isenberg

American Emperor: Aaron Burr's Challenge to Jefferson's America

By David O. Stewart

Duel: Alexander Hamilton, Aaron Burr, and the Future of America

By Thomas J. Fleming


For further information regarding Theodosia’s family:


This website provides a treasure-trove of information about the Burr-Hamilton duel and the Burr Conspiracy:


The American Experience: The Duel


Further information regarding Theodosia’s parents from the Hermitage Museum:


Theodosia Prevost and Aaron Burr


For more information about Theodosia’s disappearance and purported sitings of her ghost, check-out:




History: Disappearance of Theodosia Burr a source of speculation for 200 years (article from Coastal Observer newspaper)

Photographs of the Alston family memorial 


Information concerning the Nag’s Head portrait and other paintings of Theodosia:


Portrait of Nag’s Head (article from Antique Trader magazine)


Old Painting Gives Clews to the Fate of Theodosia Burr Alston (article from San Francisco Call, June 1906)


Gibbes Museum’s entry for 1811 portrait of Theodosia


Blogpost of John Wesley Jarvis’ portrait of Theodosia



Theodosia’s has also been featured in historical fiction novels and, most recently, a broadway musical:

My Theodosia
By Anya Seton

Burr

By Gore Vidal

Hamilton (links to the cast recording for the broadway musical)

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Episode #21-'History, Bitches' Gets Undressed, Part 2 (Show Notes)

Bodies, stays, and busk points, OH MY! This week, for ‘History Bitches Gets Undressed, Part 2,’ I speak to guest co-host Sarah Bendall about the predecessors to the corset. Tune-in to hear about Catherine de' Medici’s rumored connection to the stay’s invention, how busks and busk points were exchanged as love tokens, and how little views about women’s bodies have changed from the 17th century! For visual references to the garments discussed in the podcast, check-out the show notes!

Bodies & Stays
Bodies’ or corset of ivory silk worn by
Pfalzgräfin Dorothea Sabin von Neuberg, c. 1598.
Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, Munich (You can see the channel that the
busk would have slid into running down the front of the bodies.)

Bodies of Dame Elizabeth Filmer, c. 1620-1640.
Manchester Art Gallery, Manchester.

Stays of silk damask, lined with linen, reinforced with whalebone,
hand-sewn, English 1770-1790. Victorian and Albert Museum, London

Corset, 1883. British. Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Busks


For more about historical women's fashion, visit Sarah's blog:

Sarah has also written a piece on the history of corset for the Powerhouse Museum. Check it out here:

Thursday, April 2, 2015

Episode #20-'History, Bitches' Gets Undressed, Part 1 (Show Notes)

Centuries before the Victoria’s Secret Angels were raising eyebrows on the cat-walk, European noblewomen set fingers wagging and hearts racing with their voluminous skirts! For this week’s episode of ‘History, Bitches,’ I chat with Sarah Bendall, a Phd candidate researching women’s history through the lens of underwear. For the first in a two-part series, we discuss the farthingale, a structural garment worn under the skirt to increase its diameter. For visual reference, Sarah has provided the following pictures:

Spanish Farthingale: c. 1540s-1580s
       

French Farthingale: c. 1570s-1620s


Wheel Farthingale: c. 1580s-1620s


Mantua, from the Museum of London c. 1750s



Check-out more historical fashions on Sarah’s blog:

Sunday, March 15, 2015

Episode #19-Settler Women & the White Colonial Identity in South Africa


During the year 1820, roughly 5,000 Britons descended on what is today the Republic of South Africa to seize land and spread their ‘civilizing’ influence to the Xhosa natives. Among these early settlers were numerous daughters, mothers, and wives. What function did these oft-overlooked women play in the British colonizing scheme?

Episode #19-Settler Women & the White Colonial Identity in South Africa (Show Notes)

During the year 1820, roughly 5,000 Britons descended on what is today the Republic of South Africa to seize land and spread their ‘civilizing’ influence to the Xhosa natives. Among these early settlers were numerous daughters, mothers, and wives. What function did these oft-overlooked women play in the British colonizing scheme?

Rarely in examinations of Great Britain and colonization is the role of women as colonial agents acknowledged. One postgraduate World History & Cultures student at King’s College London has endeavored to rectify this through her research on women and the white settler identity. On this episode of History, Bitches I chat with my classmate Becca about how white South African women helped cultivate and disseminate ideas of cultural and racial superiority. 

You can read Becca’s paper here:

Settler Women and the White Colonial Identity on the Cape Colony’s Eastern Frontier, 1820-1870

During her research Becca used primary sources like memoirs. Check-out British settler Martha Jane Kirk’s memoir’s here:


For further reading, Becca recommends Alan Lester’s ‘Imperial Networks: Creating Identities in Nineteenth-Century South Africa and Britain’

Sunday, February 22, 2015

Episode #18-Female Tars



 During the 19th a handful of extraordinary British women disguised themselves as men and sailed the high seas. Whether driven by financial desperation or seeking a distant lover, these ‘female tars’ endured countless hardships and the constant danger of having their true gender exposed.


Episode #18-Female Tars (Show Notes)


During the 19th a handful of extraordinary British women disguised themselves as men and sailed the high seas. Whether driven by financial desperation or seeking a distant lover, these ‘female tars’ endured countless hardships and the constant danger of having their true gender exposed.

For this podcast, I interviewed my fellow King’s College London postgraduate student Alanna Stanton. Alanna is presently researching perceptions of female sailors during the 19th century through the lens of contemporary newspaper reports. If you’d like to check-out the work she’s done thus far, here’s a link to her paper:


For additional reading on this subject, check-out: 

       Female Tars: Women Aboard Ship in the Age of Sail              Heroines and Harlots: Women at Sea in the Great Age of Sa: Women at Sea in the Great Age of Sail