Tuesday, 8 May 2012

How similar are London and Ancient Rome?




Statue of Augustus 
A place of staggering wealth and grinding poverty. A society nourished by unbridled immigration - whose inhabitants lived cheek by jowl in high-rise flats. An urban environment riven by looting and mob violence.
"There are both some extraordinary similarities and some quite startling differences," Professor Beard observes.
This, surely, is the secret of the enduring fascination with Rome, at once so familiar and so otherworldly.
Multiculturalism
"London has bought into a liberal view of multiculturalism and respect for other cultures," says Professor Beard. "Our version is to celebrate ethnic traditions - we want a Chinatown full of Chinese restaurants and Chinese banners. But a Roman would simply not have understood the idea of respecting another culture."
Brick Lane sign  
Both Rome and London attracted large numbers of migrants and yet Rome sucked in millions of migrants.
"There were lots of other cultures in Rome," says Professor Beard. "But no Roman I know ever wrote, 'Oh, I had this really good Egyptian meal last night! Romanness trumps everything and other cultures were expected to adopt it."
The only foreign imports celebrated by Romans were gods, simply thrown into the pantheon.
"The one place where modern London finds real difficulty in multiculturalism is religion. But that's the one place where the Romans do accept the outside world."
Yet Rome was no utopia. Like modern London, it was not immune to...
Racism and prejudice
"There are some really appalling examples from ancient Rome," says Professor Beard. "Not of extreme racism, but really grumpy curmudgeonly old men. Juvenal, the Roman poet, talks about the Tiber getting all polluted by the Syrian river Orontes, which is his way of criticising foreign influence. You have to have a trade off. Rome is a city that needs immigrants, just like London needs them."
And many of those migrants would have expected...
Streets paved with gold?
Dick Whittington  
Dick Whittington came to London to seek his fortune. In Rome, penniless migrants were in theory able to end their lives stinking rich.
Professor Beard says: "That is really like modern London - a lot of migrants did very well. Of course, there are a lot of poor migrants who struggle in both ancient Rome and London. But both cities offer opportunities, the sense that anyone can make it."
Yet with so many people moving in, there was intense pressure on...
Housing
"Everybody thinks of Rome as being full of palatial villas where all the toffs live." says Professor Beard. "But most people are packed into multi-storey accomodation - they lived in flats without gardens, as do Londoners."
Yet there are differences.
Roman tenement block  
Most Romans lived in high rise tenement blocks
"We have the idea that a penthouse at the top is very desirable," explains Professor Beard. "In Rome it was the reverse. And ancient Rome was not zoned like London is. You don't have that huge division between Mayfair and Brixton - you couldn't make a Monopoly board for Rome."
So would Romans have couched the situation in the same language as Londoners, with talk of a 'housing crisis'?
"Definitely," says Professor Beard. "One of tombstones we looked at for the programme says, 'At least I am not in hoc to the rent collector any more.' You get this hugely similar urban sense of humour at all the difficulties of urban life."
And what is one of the most cliched criticisms of London life?
Anonymity
"You get these little glimpses of Romans realising the irony of the situation they are in," says Professor Beard.
Mary Beard  
"You can get "little glimpses" of Romans' innermost thoughts, although they live on top of each other many barely know each others' names. There's a nice bit of Roman poetry in which the writer says he could lean out of his home and shake hands with the guy who lives across the street - but they've never met. It definitely could have been a lonely place, just as London can be."
Anonymous, perhaps. But, just maybe, the...
Centre of the world?
"Both London and Rome have thought of themselves as the centre of the world," says Professor Beard. In London you have the Greenwich Meridian, so literally you have people seeing it as the place where measurement of the world's time starts. And in the Forum at Rome you have the golden milestone, which gave the distances to all the cities in the empire. Rome really was the centre of the world in its day."
Just as London's financial district is arguably the centre of the world's...
Economy
"Was there a City of Rome, like there is a City of London?" asks Professor Beard.
City of London 
Unlike Rome, London is a centre of world finance.
"It's a matter of huge debate. The ancient economy was much less specialised. You don't have banks as we know them. You don't have specialised credit arrangements - how they bought houses God only knows."
But in some respects the economies were very similar. Both sucked in food and resources from the periphery, producing little apart from services.
"Rome is a consumption city," explains Professor Beard. "It can't support itself."
Looting and rioting
"Looting and rioting and mugging are not just our problems," says Professor Beard. "We share them with ancient Rome."
Man faces police  
A depressingly familiar sight - for Londoners and Romans.
"During the Great Fire of Rome, in the Emperor Nero's time, they had a fire brigade - just about. But according to one ancient writer, rather than fighting the flames they took part in the looting."
Yet there is no doubting which is the safer city.
"Rome is fundamentally much more dangerous than London," says Professor Beard. "There is no-one to report a crime to."
All of which makes Rome seem a rather bleak place to live - were it not for the...
Street-life
"In both ancient Rome and London the street-life is terribly important," says Professor Beard. "Streets are the key."
Dancer at Notting Hill Carnival  
London's street-life is terribly important.
"You have people flogging things in markets, all the hustle and bustle. There is an awful and frightening side to Roman street-life - but also a liberating one. There is a level of spontaneity perhaps missing from London's streets. In London you're constantly being watched. If you jump into a fountain someone will be there to tell you off, unless it's New Year's Eve. But perhaps in that respect Rome was closer to a big third world city today - vast, scary, huge numbers of deaths - but still enormously, edgily fun. It's is exactly what attracts us to cities like that today."

Monday, 7 May 2012

Paper.

Paper used to make extraordinary things.


ZsaZsa Bellagio: Paper Dresses!!!:
I love Paper Dresses! I need to make one! Everyone should make one! Send me pictures if you do! I should have a Paper Dress Contest!  I t...

Friday, 4 May 2012

April 2012 - I shall be able to move back into my studio very soon. The hen is recovering from the attack by a dog last month in there and as soon as I have made a gate for the new hen pen and secured the fence so that they won't be able to fly over, I can start work in there once again. I have in mind a series of papier mache bowls based on work by potters I admire. Time for some experiments.







These bowls are enamel and are here to remind me how much I love to recreate the effect of other materials with papier mache.
And then there is ancient glass that has gained patina and iridescence over the centuries.

Source: google.com via Hilary on Pinterest



And then there are painters who manage to tune into the same response to colour that I find myself immersed in.































Wednesday, 2 May 2012

May 2012 - It is only the 2nd of May today. The weather has been pretty good so I have been working hard on the hen pen. I don't really have a choice. The hens have to have a safe place with room to scratch and roam before I can seed the new lawn and plant out the flowers etc that are taking over my studio. I need to get in there and paint. So - the hen pen and lawn.
I often take photos at the end of the day to keep a track of what I've done but needless to say it's into the sun, hence the lovely shooting prisms! I have used the timber from an old gate that I was using to contain the potatoes to screw together the posts. It's my Heath Robinson way of keeping them straight whilst I put the wire netting up. The torrential rain has at least made the ground easier to dig.
The beginnings of the entrance. I have a vague idea how to make a gate. I am digging out an area all along the edge so that I can bury the netting to deter the foxes.
The hens will be able to scratch away here but as the soil pile is nearly at the top of the fence, they could easily hop over so I have a plan to prevent them.
The stones that I have gathered together for the path to the studio are being used here now. Another change of plan. It seems far better to use them here and cover up the wire netting. I think that I will be able to grow beans and sweet peas up the wire with forget-me-nots along the bottom next to the path. Feeling quite pleased with myself today as I can actually see some progress, although pretty stiff and tired. Sailing tomorrow morning so an early night. My weekends are composed of Thursdays and Sundays.
I have moved this container from the kitchen window, where it was just not working as there is so little sunshine to here at the end of the hen pen and planted a Kiftsgate rose! This is fox proof if he tries to jump in. It is totally lethal, well in time it will be. I shall train it along the top. I have yet to add an extra level as in the photo below. I could clip the chicken's wings but I can't bring myself to. I have also added another rose to train to the left. It is called Jolly Roger and looks like this -


Thinking of planting artichokes along the wire netting as I have so many young plants.


I took this photo a couple of years ago wandering through the narrow lanes of Kingswear on my way to Classics and just had a feeling that it would be a good idea. Well, the hens are escape artists. It's obvious really as all they have to do is hop over from compost heap to hen house and then it's one small step for chicken freedom. This idea will solve the problem. It will take ages for the roses to reach the netting so I am wondering if I could actually plant them in the top of the compost heap. Probably not but I need to dwell on contemplating a solution along similar lines. A raised bed of about 5' 6" in fact. It must have been done before...
Ha ha - they will not be penned in. They will persist in launching themselves onto the top of the fence and leaping to freedom.
Emmy has her own quarters now within the hen pen. She was attacked by a dog a few weeks ago but has survived with lots os attention and constant care. Stitched back together and a course of pain killers and anti-biotics. This is the hen with only one eye. She was attacked by a hawk before she came to live with us. She is a survivor!


I have been trying to tidy up this side of the hen pen. Under neath the wire fence on the right are the foundations of a stone wall so nothing much can grow. I've added some soil on left and right and shall make a crazy paving path. I have put a beautiful red rose into the largest pot I could find and got it off to a good start with rotted horse muck and compost and bacteria. It will look really pretty later on in the year and better and better in the coming years.
The path to the studio will have to be re-thought, now that I've pinched all the stones for the path round the hen pen. Gravel here perhaps. It will be a lot easier!


I've removed the tulips and rather gaudy daffodils to put somewhere else. The main reason is to let the lavender get some sunlight and stand a chance at growing. They can grow quite tall.


I have lost count of how many barrow loads of earth I have deposited her in order to adjust the height, fill in the dips and generally level this for the new lawn. Nearly there.
Well that's it really. I could go on and on but it is level enough and so I shall seed it now. I may put some more barrow loads of soil around the borders so that there will be a sense of enclosure when the flowers have a little extra height around the lawn later on in the summer. I have also put another Clematis at the base of the Cherry tree. A Montana.


I have had to protect the plants along the shed from the ravages of my hens. I find stretchy trellising very versatile. Towards the end of May now and I have finally given in and clipped the hens wings! Peace now reigns and plants can grow.
I now have the barge boards painted and ready to go up, at least at the front. Such a slow process. I have slowed down on the gardening front and been able to spent more time actually in the shed towards the end of this month as sometimes it is simply too hot to work in the garden.

Tuesday, 1 May 2012

Hortus - meaning literally "enclosed garden".

Hortus Palatinus - designed and built outside Heidelberg by Salomon de Caus, a French Huguenot refugee to the English Court, for Frederick V and his wife Elizabeth Stuart, daughter of James 1, this unbelievable garden took five years alone for the massive construction to be carved out of the hillside between the years of 1614 and 1619. It is no wonder that it became known as the '8th Wonder of the World.'
It had robotic birds that sang and hedges cut to represent mythical creatures. Even the paths had symbolic patterns that are thought by some to hold symbols of the Rosicrucian's.
Salomon was a scientist, a genius from the stable of Leonardo da Vinci, maker of fountains, sun dials, greenhouses and grottoes. 
For more details and links about  the Hortus Palatinus and for more extraordinary garden history do go to the blog of the garden history girl from whom I am learning so much.


The Great Western Railway's poster, made by Arthur Gunn in 1907.
Cornwall - Known to the Romans as The Western Lands.
Italy - Known to the Greeks as The Western Lands.
The Cornish Riviera Express has been connecting Penzance with Paddington since 1904 and takes all of 5 hours today. In 1904 it took 7 hours.
Italy is 2.5 times the size of England
Cornwall is 2.5 times the size of Rome.




Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...