Castle, Pevensey, England between ca. 1890 and ca. 1900. Views of the British Isles England Pevensey
#Castle #Pevensey #England #theBritishIsles #PevenseyCastle #photography #historicalPhotos #photochrom
Castle, Pevensey, England between ca. 1890 and ca. 1900. Views of the British Isles England Pevensey
#Castle #Pevensey #England #theBritishIsles #PevenseyCastle #photography #historicalPhotos #photochrom
Here's hoping the good weather holds for Saturday when I'll be leading a couple of tours around Pevensey Castle https://englishheritage.seetickets.com/event/puzzling-over-pevensey-the-demolishing-of-1216/pevensey-castle-east-sussex/3357399 #archaeology #castleslighting #PevenseyCastle
📷 by Piotr Zarobkiewicz, CC-BY-SA 3.0
Seeing #sketchfab in the news made me nostalgic for some of the cool #archaeology models you can find on there. Like this beautiful 15th-century posey ring found at #PevenseyCastle
Then I looked at the description...
https://sketchfab.com/3d-models/posy-ring-36f143b2ebcf4c70a4e2d2875d481e2a
British, gold, 15th century Rings like this, bearing inscriptions that are usually love notes or messages of fidelity, are called posy rings, the name deriving from poetry. They were often used as wedding rings. An inscription on the outside, as here, is more common in 14th- and 15th-century rings; as their use continued into the 16th and 17th centuries the inscription moved inside. This inscription was not understood until recently but Malcolm Jones used this model to demonstrate that it reads ‘bi e va’, not ‘vi e va’ as previously thought. The extension after the ‘e’ shows that it is an abbreviation of ‘en’ so the whole reads as ‘bien va’, which translates as ‘go well’. The same inscription appears on a contemporary ring brooch from the Isle of Wight, now in the British Museum. Four very similar rings were found about 30 miles away at Lewes, possibly suggesting that they were all made locally. They are on display at Lewes Museum. From the Pevensey Castle collection (not on display). - Posy Ring - 3D model by English Heritage (@EnglishHeritage)
It's about digital methods and skills. It reminded me of a personal favourite application of data skills. This is a timeline of King John's movements in one year of his reign. neolography.com/timelines/JohnItinerary.html
It was very helpful for me when trying to understand where he was when he gave instructions to slight #PevenseyCastle and #KneppCastle. Having a visual component to data is so important. #slighting #castles
Naturally I skipped to the bit which discussed the events of 1216 when John ordered the castle's destruction. In short it says it's not clear cut whether the orders were followed.
That's absolutely right, and I explore the subject in detail in a paper I've submitted to the Sussex Archaeological Collections. Hopefully it will appear in the next volume as that would be a neat bridge from this one. #PevenseyCastle #CastleSlighting #SussexArchaeologicalCollections #Sussex #archaeology #castles