HADAS
DIARY: FORTHCOMING EVENTS
Tuesday 9
June: Annual General Meeting
Wednesday
8 July: Outing to Syon Park
13-20
July: HADAS DIG in Church Farm House Museum garden
Sunday 26
July: Outing to Broughton Castle and Oxfordshire
Sunday 2
August: Brockley Hill Pottery Display & Roman Cookery Demonstration
Wednesday
26 August to Sunday 30 August: HADAS long weekend in Hereford
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Sunday 26
July: OUTING TO BROUGHTON CASTLE & OXFORDSHIRE
It is
becoming increasingly difficult to find venues which are open on Saturdays so
we are experimenting with a Sunday outing. Our main visit will be to
Broughton Castle near Banbury. Some of you may have heard the Radio 4 reading
of William Fiennes’ book “The Music Room” which is about his young days
living in the castle which has been the home of the Fiennes family for twenty
generations. We found it enchanting when we visited it and the fourteenth
century church in the grounds. It is close to Swalcliffe village where there
is a tithe barn (1409) with a small museum, remains of a Roman road and villa
(at this point we are not sure whether digging will be in progress) and a
hill fort which we promise not to make you climb! It should be an enjoyable
day in a beautiful part of Oxfordshire. Application forms are included in
this Newsletter.
Stewart
Wild and June Porges
HADAS DIG
Don
Cooper
HADAS are going to dig at the back of Church Farm
Museum again this year. The dig will start on the 13th July for
one week. The Wednesday and Thursday the 15th and 16th
of July will be devoted to the pupils of St Mary’s School. HADAS members will
be welcome to come along on the other days to watch, get involved, chat and
maybe get a cup of tea!
This is a rare opportunity for members to get
involved with the practical side of archaeology. We look forward to seeing
you there.
CORRECTIONS
In the May Newsletter (p3) it was reported that the
site of the burial place of Anthony and Cleopatra has been found 17 miles
North of Alexandria. Dr Jeffrey Lesser points out that “North” must be wrong
(unless this is underwater archaeology?).
In last month’s newsletter the old Discussion List
URL was quoted by mistake.
The correct one is below:
http://groups.google.com/group/hadas-archaeology
BROCKLEY
HILL POTTERY DISPLAY& ROMAN COOKERY DEMONSTRATION
Sun 2
August 14.00-17.00 Avenue House, 17 East End Rd, Finchley, London N3 3QE
This
event will be a display of Roman pottery excavated from kiln sites on
Brockley Hill near Edgware (sometimes thought to be the settlement of Solloniacis).
The material comes from a number of digs during the 1930s, 40s and 50s which
eventually came into the care of the HADAS. We are now processing the pottery
to current museum standards, on show will be a wide range of pottery types
that were made at Brockley Hill, examples of which were distributed all over
Roman Britain. Also, there will be a demonstration of Roman cooking by Rose
Baillie of the City of London Archaeological Society . Rose will show how she
thought a Roman kitchen worked and will cook a number of dishes in replica
Roman pots.
The above event is part of the Festival
of British Archaeology two week extravaganza organised by the CBA. For
further information please contact Sophie Cringle, Marketing and Events Officer,
Council for British Archaeology, St Mary’s House, 66 Bootham, York YO30
7BZ. Tel: 01904 671417. Email: festival@britarch.ac.uk.
See the full list at: http://festival.britarch.ac.uk/.
We are listed under the London events (not Greater London). For members
with no access to the internet, HADAS has ordered a small number of the
National Events booklet which we hope will arrive to display at the AGM.
Bill Bass & Stephen Brunning
ELIZABETH ANN HOLLIDAY
by
Sheila Woodward
We were shocked and saddened to hear of the sudden
death (from pancreatic cancer) on the 8th April of Liz
Holliday at the comparatively early age of 62. Before moving from Barnet to
Chipperfield 18 years ago she had been an active and enthusiastic member of
HADAS and she maintained the connection even after her move.
Liz spent her childhood in North London. She
attended Henrietta Barnett School where she was Head Girl in 1965, went
on to study librarianship at the North London Polytechnic, and joined the
Barnet Libraries Service and, in due course, HADAS. With her love of
literature, history and art, her organizing abilities and her boundless
energy, Liz became a valued contributor to many HADAS projects. She undertook
research, wrote articles for publications (and designed at least one of our
booklet covers) and helped to mount exhibitions. She served as Honorary
Secretary to HADAS in the 1980s and early 1990s, continuing for a spell after
her move to Chipperfield in 1991. While in Barnet she had been a regular
attender at lectures and she enjoyed our Society outings. I vividly remember
her at Bosworth Battlefield in 1993, passionately defending the reputation of
Richard III!
Indeed Liz’s great “passion for life” was the main
theme of the tributes paid to her at the Service of Thanksgiving in
Chipperfield Parish Church on the 21st April attended by over 200
people. The number of village organizations in which she had served as
Chairman or Secretary or Treasurer was mind-boggling. They included the
Choral Society, the Horticultural Society, the Women’s Institute, various
church committees, a Bookworms Club which she founded, and the Chipperfield
News of which she was joint editor. Her love of dogs was legendary and she
always owned at least two. Following her early retirement she had become a
keen traveler, venturing as far afield as China and telling delightful tales
of her adventures.
But above all, Liz’s family (sister, brother-in-law,
nephew and niece) and her many friends and neighbours in Chipperfield
remember her affection, her kindness, her wit, her cheerfulness and her
courage. I am sure that is how her friends in HADAS remember her too.
EXIT
SCOLA
Peter
Pickering
SCOLA is,
or was, the Standing Conference on London Archaeology. I became its
Assistant Secretary in 1995 and its Secretary in 2005; Michael Hammerson (a
HADAS member) was its Treasurer even longer, having taken over from Derek
Renn (a HADAS vice-president).
SCOLA was
formed in 1992 in the wake of the Rose Theatre affair and the transfer of the
responsibility for providing archaeological planning advice to London
boroughs (the old Greater London Council had, of course, been abolished in
1986) from the Museum of London to English Heritage. SCOLA was intended to be
a formal, pan-London forum with a solid constitution where issues of
importance to the conduct of archaeology could be discussed, problems raised,
and solutions found. It was originally sponsored by the Council for British
Archaeology, the Society of Antiquaries and the two county archaeological
societies, and had local archaeological societies, some local authorities and
individuals among its membership. Its Chairman was not elected by the
membership, but nominated by the Society of Antiquaries and the Council for
British Archaeology; several very eminent people have become Chairman,
including Barry Cunliffe, Michael Robbins, Martin Millett and Peter Addyman
(twice)
SCOLA
took a great interest from the beginning in the way in which developer-funded
archaeology (under the Government's Planning Policy Guidance (PPG) 16) was
working in London, financed research into this, and held a conference in
2002. In its earlier years it ran other conferences with a more general
appeal, on prehistoric London, on Dark Age London, and revisiting Martin
Biddle's seminal 'The Future of London's Past'.
Much of
SCOLA's effort, was spent on trying to ensure that the powers that be took
account of archaeology (and the historic environment generally). This was not
easy - the Greater London Authority, at least under Ken Livingstone, was a
great disappointment to us, as was the Government's decision last year to
drop the Heritage Protection Bill from its legislative programme. Borough
councils have not supported SCOLA as was hoped, and several borough museums
have been closed or are under threat (though there is some better news -
Havering is going to open a new one.)
SCOLA
also took up some special cases where the system was not working well - for
instance the decision to "preserve in situ" under a car park rather
than excavate properly an Anglo-Saxon cemetery in Croydon, and the failure to
impose an adequate archaeological condition on some redevelopment along the
line of the Roman road in Bow. More recently, we pressed for proper
excavation and recording before the Olympic facilities were built; this seems
to be proceeding satisfactorily, though there remain concerns about the
effect of the equestrian events on Greenwich park. Although providing finance
was not among its primary purposes, SCOLA did on a few occasions grant-aid
the publication of excavations and other projects. In furtherance of its aim
to inform the public, in 2004, 2006 and 2008 SCOLA, in conjunction with the
'London Archaeologist' magazine, offered a prize for the best publication
relating to the archaeology of Greater London that had appeared over the
previous two years.
Throughout,
SCOLA was anxious to inform and involve local societies, who in turn
supported SCOLA through subscriptions. In the early days SCOLA had 'local
area groups' and organised an annual meeting for local societies to share
information and views. In 2002 these were subsumed in the London
Archaeological Forum, under the aegis of the Museum of London.
This year
SCOLA was dissolved. That was because of the formation of the London Group of
the Council for British Archaeology. To know more about that, read on . .
.
ENTER CBA London
by Don Cooper
The Council for British Archaeology (CBA) has for
many years wanted to have a regional group that reflected the size and
complexity of our capital city. The creation of CBA London in April 2008
provides this group. For those not familiar with the objectives of the
national CBA they are spelt out on the following website: www.britarch.ac.uk/cba/objectives.
In summary, as well as carrying out its statutory role with respect to listed
buildings, three specific strategic objectives are identified as follows:
Advocacy: campaigning on behalf of the historic
environment both above and below ground, championing the role of the
voluntary sector, ensuring that archaeology has a place in education and
life-long learning.
Participation: CBA London will support and encourage
participation by all levels of London society
Discovery: Enabling and supporting the research by
others to advance knowledge in archaeology.
These strategic objectives are complementary to SCOLA’s
objectives and CBA London proposes to build on the excellent work that SCOLA
has carried out over the last seventeen years.
The advent of CBA London represents an opportunity
for local societies to take advantage of a large, national charity dedicated
to the promotion of archaeology and able to bring its formidable advocacy
skills to local archaeological issues and opportunities via local
representation.
In practical terms CBA London will support young
people’s participation in archaeology through the Young Archaeologists’ Club
and promoting and helping with local schools practical archaeology
endeavours.
In research CBA London has a particular objective in
assisting with advice and support the processing of local archaeological
excavations towards publication and the creation of an accessible archive.
CBA London also supports and encourages participation in the Thames Foreshore
Project
CBA London represents a great opportunity for local
societies to raise participation in archaeology to a new level and if there
are any other roles/activities that HADAS members would like CBA London
to consider please don’t hesitate to contact me.
DIGGING IN ISRAEL--Tel
Gezer
Micky Watkins
In January I had a wonderful holiday in Israel. My
niece Ros and her Perry took my sister Bunty and I on a tour including
Nazareth, the Crusader Castle at Acre, mosaics at Zippori, and the Carmel
range. We had a delicious falafel lunch in a tiny café and a Bedouin
breakfast. Everybody was glad that the terrible hostilities in Gaza had
finished.
After all the famous sites, Ros and Perry sprung a
surprise. One kilometre from their house is Tel Gezer, one of three cities
founded by Solomon. There are no crowds, no entry fee, no barrier and no
shop.. Only a magnificent view, and a partially excavated site of world
importance with no one but us to look at it. The site is large, 30 acres, and
has been important since Canaanite times as it guards a valley leading from
the coast road to Jerusalem. The early inhabitants lived in caves cut in the
rock. In the 2nd millennium BCE it became one of the foremost
Canaanite cities with massive walls and towers. At the centre was a cult area
with ten monolithic steles, some still standing, and a large stone tank,
possibly used for sacrificial blood. The Egyptian Pharoahs destroyed the city
with fire and the kings of Gezer became their vassals.
The city was rebuilt in the 11th century
BCE and was then conquered by Joshua and the Israelites. Its great period was
under King Solomon who made it one of the three royal centres away from
Jerusalem. He built strong fortifications and a water system.
Among the many finds is the famous Gezer Calendar –
a small limestone tablet on which a list of agricultural chores done each
month is engraved. It is one of the earliest examples of Hebrew writing.
There is an excavation every summer with archaeologists
and amateurs from all over the world joining in. Details can be found on the
internet: http://www.gezer.swbts.edu
If you just want to visit the site and Israel, you
can ask Ros and Perry to help you. They could pick you up at Tel Aviv airport,
accommodate you in their very comfortable house and take you round Tel Gezer.
If they have time they could take you on a further tour. Perry is on the
local archaeological committee and they are keen to promote visits. Ros is a
landscape gardener and Perry an environmental consultant. Their e-mail
address is: ecobon@gmail.com
THE EYE OF CHILDHOOD: children’s writers
and artists in Barnet borough
(30 May- 27 September 2009 )
Church Farmhouse Museum’s Summer exhibition reveals
the many children’s authors and illustrators, past and present, with
connexions to our area: from Oliver Postgate (The Clangers; Bagpuss)
to Joe Craig ( the Jimmy Coates series); from Sydney Hulme Beaman (the
Toytown stories on radio and TV) to Helen Craig & Katharine
Holabird (Angelina Ballerina); from Anthony Buckeridge (Jennings)
to Spike Milligan (Silly Verse for Kids).
Earlier authors featured include Frank Horrabin,
whose Japhet & Happy comic strip in the News Chronicle
rivalled Rupert Bear in popularity in the 1920s; Mark Lemon (first editor of
Punch) who lived at Church Farm as a boy in the early 1800s; and Lewis
Carroll, as the Lewis Carroll Society was founded in Hendon in 1969.
Children visiting the exhibition will have the
opportunity to write their own poems and brief stories, or draw illustrations
to their favourite tales.
Reading is one of childhood’s greatest adventures.
Come along and see how much the many and varied writers and artists of Barnet
borough have contributed to it.
OTHER SOCIETIES
EVENTS
Eric Morgan
Friday 5
June 2.15pm: The Match Girls Strike (1889) Talk by Dr Louise Raw. Free
Hampstead Museum, Burgh House,
New End Square NW3
Monday 8 June 3pm:Foul Deeds & Suspicious Deaths
in Barnet, Finchley & Hendon. Talk by Nick Papadimitriou. Barnet &
District Local History Society, Church House, Wood St Barnet (opp.museum)
Wednesday 10th June 7.45pm: The History
of Churchyards. Talk by Dr Michael Worms. £1 Hornsey
Historical Society, Union Church Hall, corner Ferme Park Rd./Weston Park N8
Saturday 13 June Highgate Summer Festival
12.30-5.30pm: Lots of stalls. Pond Square N6
Saturday 13 & Sunday 14 June: London Open Garden
Squares Weekend. Visit gardens not normally open to the public. Tickets £8 (£6.75
if booked in advance). www.opengardens.org
Sunday 14 June 1-5pm: Avenue House 150th
Anniversary Celebration Fun Day. Entrance £2.50 Lots of stalls
including HADAS. The Garden Room will be open from 10.30am
15 June—26 September: Exhibition of Oral History Recordings
& Photographs of Local People. Camden Local
Studies & Archives, Holborn Library, 32-8 Theobalds Rd WC1
Friday 19 June 7pm: Play Houses of Tudor London.
Talk by Julian Bowsher. Visitors £2
COLAS, St Olaves Parish Hall, Mark Lane EC3
Friday 19 June 8pm: Geoffery Gillam Memorial Lecture
– His Contribution to Local Archaeology. Talk by IAW
Jones. Jubilee Hall, 2 Parsonage Lane/junction Chase Side, Enfield
Saturday 20 & Sunday 21 June: Victorian Country
Fair, part of London-wide Festival
Kenwood, Hampstead Lane NW3
http//www.londongov.uk/mayor/culture/story of
London.jsp
Sunday 21 June: East Finchley Festival. Lots of
stalls. Cherry Tree Wood (opp. Station)
Sunday 21 June 2pm: East Barnet Village, Guided Walk
led by Paul Baker. 2 hours
Meet outside E. Barnet Library, Brookhill Rd
Tuesday 23 June 7.30pm: Barnet Borough Arts Council
AGM. (HADAS is affiliated to BBAC)
Trinity Church Centre, 15 Nether St N12
Thursday 25 June 8pm: East Finchley’s History
Through Maps. Talk by Tony Roberts. £2
Finchley Society, Drawing Room, Avenue House, East
End Rd N3
Sunday 28 June 11.30am: Plaque unveiling ceremony,
St Mary’s Church, Hendon Lane N3
To bring attention to the architectural &
historical importance of the Church
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