haq · @haq
124 followers · 2096 posts · Server kolektiva.social

I decided to name author Gail Simmons and her extremely bad book Between the Chalk and the Sea, about a walk across southern England, because of her constant errors (from after pg56 which caused this thread):

pg64 "Christians, quick to embrace pagan rituals to placate the incumbent population" - no, lmao, definitely not in the British Isles;

pg68 "Early Christian writers, keen to appropriate popular pagan traditions transformed him [a "god" Lugh she claims is "Celtic"] into the Archangel Michael" - also no, Christianity inherited Michael from some forms of apocalyptic Judaism, and he's mentioned in two different books of the Christian new testament;

pg68 "in Ireland, where Lugh was strongest [citation needed], he metamorphosed into the leprechaun of Irish folklore" - lmao, presumably sourced from some Victorian antiquarian who'd huffed too much Celtic Twilight.

pg93 Mention of "Druids", as I predicted, but the modern type so she managed to get her factette correct (the pagan sort do sometimes "revere" yew trees*)

pg94 cba to type out a quote but there's a whole horrifying scene where she visits a village churchyard during a funeral (presumably held under covid protections that restricted the number of people attending) and tries to engage the gravedigger in conversation then, because he's short with her, she concludes he's an archetypal strong, silent, son of the soil rather than an acquaintance of the deceased who wishes she'd shut up and go away and take her increased risk of infection with her.

pg113 Even her editor didn't read this rubbish: "It's said that a holloway sinks by one metre every 300 years, so by that reckoning this one was nearly 1,000 years old, fitting perfectly with the Roman occupation of Britain from AD 43 to 410." Lmao, Gail Simmons believes she lives somewhere between 1043 and 1410 CE.

So, in conclusion, this is badly written in style, the content is nonsense, and the person who wrote it decided to go for a long linear walk with multiple overnight stays in the worst part of a pandemic.

* One of the few religious impulses I understand is feeling reverence towards a living being that's 1000+ years old.

#books #reading #history #EnglishHistory #christianity #paganism #COVIDIOTS #pandemichistory

Last updated 1 year ago

haq · @haq
124 followers · 2096 posts · Server kolektiva.social

I decided to name author Gail Simmons and her extremely bad book Between the Chalk and the Sea, about a walk across southern England, because of her constant errors (these are from after pg56 which originally caused this thread):

pg64 "Christians, quick to embrace pagan rituals to placate the incumbent population" - no, lmao, definitely not in the British Isles;

pg68 "Early Christian writers, keen to appropriate popular pagan traditions transformed him [a "god" Lugh she claims is "Celtic"] into the Archangel Michael" - also no, Christianity inherited Michael from some forms of apocalyptic Judaism, and he's mentioned in two different books of the Christian new testament;

pg68 "in Ireland, where Lugh was strongest [citation needed], he metamorphosed into the leprechaun of Irish folklore" - lmao, presumably sourced from some Victorian antiquarian who'd huffed too much Celtic Twilight.

pg93 Mention of "Druids", as I predicted, but the modern type so she managed to get her factette correct (the pagan sort do sometimes "revere" yew trees*)

pg94 cba to type out a quote but there's a whole horrifying scene where she visits a village churchyard during a funeral (presumably held under covid protections that restricted the number of people attending) and tries to engage the gravedigger in conversation then, because he's short with her, she concludes he's an archetypal strong, silent, son of the soil rather than an acquaintance of the deceased who wishes she'd shut up and go away and take her increased risk of infection with her.

pg113 Even her editor didn't read this rubbish: "It's said that a holloway sinks by one metre every 300 years, so by that reckoning this one was nearly 1,000 years old, fitting perfectly with the Roman occupation of Britain from AD 43 to 410." Lmao, Gail Simmons believes she lives somewhere between 1043 and 1410 CE.

So, in conclusion, this is badly written in style, the content is nonsense, and the person who wrote it decided to go for a long linear walk with multiple overnight stays in the worst part of a pandemic.

* One of the few religious impulses I understand is feeling reverence towards a living being that's 1000+ years old.

#books #reading #history #EnglishHistory #christianity #paganism #COVIDIOTS #pandemichistory

Last updated 1 year ago

Michelle · @ThunderHoneySnow
282 followers · 1239 posts · Server mas.to

How past pandemics may have caused Parkinson's

Surviving a pandemic isn't always the end of the story – some viruses can have health effects that linger on for decades, eventually leading to a range of devastating diseases.

bbc.com/future/article/2022012

#MaskUp #covid #thosewhoforgethistoryaredoomedtorepeatit #covidresearch #pandemichistory #sciencehistory #histodon

Last updated 1 year ago

MikeeZero · @Mikee
74 followers · 108 posts · Server zeroes.ca

Well this one didn’t age well. Think I’ll just start adding hash marks every year.

#2020

#ornaments #PandemicLife #pandemichistory #xmas #holidays #christmas

Last updated 2 years ago

MikeeZero · @Mikee
74 followers · 107 posts · Server zeroes.ca

Well this one didn’t age well. Think I’ll just start adding hash marks every year. :oof:

#2020

#ornaments #PandemicLife #pandemichistory #xmas #holidays #christmas

Last updated 2 years ago

CovidCanada · @Covidcanada
731 followers · 15 posts · Server zeroes.ca

“A year later, Honigsbaum wrote that if the Russian flu pandemic was indeed due to a coronavirus that infected at least 60 per cent of the population, the experience does not auger well for the future.

“Herd immunity does not appear to have been reached hence the recurrent waves of illness, marked by high mortality.”

thetyee.ca/News/2022/02/14/Pan

#pandemichistory #covid

Last updated 2 years ago