Editor

Britain’s herbal heritage: Folklore and a kernel of truth

A homespun pharmacopeia was once more than simple folklore, as Mark Greener shows   Folklore often contains kernels of truth. In 1568, for example, gardeners in England began cultivating Goat’s Rue (Galega officinalis). First recorded in the wild in 1640, Goat’s Rue (also called French Lilac or Italian Fitch) is now a common wildflower.1 Healers […]

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On the origins of megaliths

Mark Greener reviews recent findings on ‘megalithisme’   The 35000 remaining megaliths scattered across Europe – from Sweden to Sicily, from Poland to Portugal – include tombs, standing stones, stone circles, alignments and buildings.1,2 Despite this widespread distribution, megaliths share numerous features.1 As long ago as 1719, the Swiss antiquary Jacques Christophe Iselin remarked on

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Yew’ll drink to that?

In NE145, a review of the ‘Celts’ exhibition that took place in London and Edinburgh observed the curiosity of a wooden keg assumed to have held drink being made from the highly toxic yew. Mark Greener considered the implications.   At first sight, yew isn’t the wood you’d choose for a tankard, bucket or barrel.

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Dreaming Valleys 2

March 2020 was a tense time for us, as the government considered the first lockdown and we had a groundbreaking event planned in Hebden Bridge! In the end, we made it with a week to spare, and the day was lapped up by a motley crowd of folklorists, geographers, historians, earth mysterians and psychogeographers sharing

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NE172 coming soon!

NE172 is at the printers and will be ready for publication by May 18th. Subscribe now to ensure your copy! https://northernearth.co.uk/subscription/ Contents The Season’s Gleanings: Our usual eclectic eye across the news media Mike Haigh’s Archaeology Review: Another investigation into hidden meanings in cave art, Neanderthal social diversity, and history for hens Were the Wollaton

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