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Denny Bradbury Books

Denny Bradbury Books

Category Archives: History

Entertainment during the Iron Age

22 Wednesday Jun 2011

Posted by dennybradburybooks in History

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Entertainment During the Iron Age, Iron Age Britain, Iron Age music, Iron Age Sport, Iron Age Storytelling, Iron Age Writing

Entertainment During the Iron Age

Entertainment during the Iron Age

The main focus for Iron Age Britain involved agriculture and survival.  However this didn’t mean there wasn’t any time to take part in games, sports, challenges and generally enjoy life.

Many of the past times were social, having various forms of entertainment at festivals, markets and weddings.

Sport was prominent as it brought that basic competitive nature and gave those who weren’t taking part a chance to bet on the winner.  Swimming was the main sport of the day, a simple routine with a minimum of rules.  It would have agreeable to try and drown your opposition to win.  Water endurance tasks, such as wearing heavy items of clothing and holding your breathe for as long as possible would have acted as an alternative to a swimming racing.

Running races was another staple of sport during the Iron Age.  Often running would involve carrying a heavy item, like a suit of armour or an animal to the make the task more endurable.  For the real macho, wrestling was also a favourable past time for Anglo Saxon Britons.  But of course there were no rules in those days, so occasionally the fight would end with either broken or dislocated limbs, and in more rare cases fatalities.

For children growing up, it wouldn’t have been unheard of for them to go hunting with the elders as a form of survival training.  An educational experience which progressed into a sport to hunt a rare or wild animal such a bore of deer.  The pay off would be the feast at the end of the day.  This can still be seen in today’s culture through today’s sport of fishing.

For the more academic members of Iron Age Britain games were invented.  Some which are even played today in one form or another for example chess and backgammon.  These involved strategy and thinking ahead of your opponent.  However it’s been unclear as to whether chess came before or after the Iron Age, but I think it’s clear the idea and the rules were in the making during the time.  Dice based games were also prominent, but instead using dice knuckle bones from pigs were used.  The diversity of these would mean virtually any sort of game could be formed within 2 or three members.

Ancient music

Ancient music

Another social past time was music and storytelling.  Stories were often told of ancient heroes such as Beowulf and the Norse.  A tale which still survives today.  In those days, other than raw imagination story telling came from reality.  Old war stories and fables which changed like Chinese whispers, however as the old saying goes, there’s no smoke without fire.  The ability to spin a story was highly regarded to the point where professional story tellers known as “Scops” would roam the land going from village to village to tell tales for money or food.  Singing and dancing was also another well sought after skill with one or two entertainers known as “Gleemen” again travelling the country entertaining the villagers.  There was no radio or television in those days, everything was live!  Archaeological digs have found evidence that whistles were formed out of bones, along with horns and pipes.  Ancient literature has also revealed that some sort of a harp or other string based instruments were crudely put together along with some sort of a drum.

Where there’s music, there’s dancing.  Social gatherings such as weddings would invite musicians to play and make the occasion go down well.  Which is not much different from today’s.  The only difference is that it is unknown what the music would have been like during the Iron Age as the instruments have deteriorated with time.

Eddie Fox

To purchase one of Denny’s books please click on the images below or contact Denny directly at email denisebradbury@btinternet.com.
The Reunion Denagerie of Poems by Denny Bradbury

A History of Christianity Part II.

20 Monday Jun 2011

Posted by dennybradburybooks in History

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beliefs, Borvo, Christianity, Denny Bradbury, King Alfred, Paganism, religion

Christianity and Borvo

Christianity and the church are central themes in "Borvo"

As mentioned in Part I, Christianity is the world’s largest religion.  It has the greatest number of followers with approximately two billion around the world and forty million in the UK alone, with many different types of Christianity being practised. It is a belief system that over the years has had immense cultural and political consequence across nations, with major divisions occurring between Western Christianity – itself divided into Roman Catholicism and Protestantism – and Orthodox Christianity, and from the 16th and 17th centuries onwards it was a religion that developed missionary movements which established its beliefs throughout the world.

Central to Christian beliefs and practices is the Bible, split into the New Testament that details the life of Jesus and the Early Church and the Old Testament which is identical to the scriptures that Jesus would have referred to as a practising Jew.  Other important texts are the Creeds: the Apostles ’ Creed and the Nicene Creed which are both summaries of the beliefs formulated in the early years of Christianity.

In 1054, a formal division opened up between Western Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy, caused by Christianity spreading throughout the world, with different groups disagreeing over different aspects, thereby causing the Church to begin to split into various branches but prior to this, as mentioned in Part I, it was the Pagan beliefs that were the first direct conflict with Christian values.

Just as in the famous poem “Beowulf” where the two sets of beliefs are accommodated, with Paganism promoting the earthly good and Christianity asserting heavenly salvation, Denny Bradbury also combines the pagan values of bravery and loyalty through her pagan hero Borvo in her soon to be released second novel of the same name. She combines the healing powers of the young boy with the Christian values of forgiveness and peace and a spiritual life through her portrayal of King Alfred, fighting to introduce Christianity to an England being invaded by the marauding Pagan Danes, illustrating how the pagan belief system and Christian traditions are alike in some respects.

Like the book “The Mists of Avalon” released in 1983, in which the chief character is a Pagan Priestess whose half brother is King Alfred, Denny Bradbury also has a main protagonist from a Pagan background finding his way at a time when patriarchal Christianity is taking hold.

The Church, Royalty and ideas collide in the new book "Borvo"

The Church, Royalty and ideas collide in the new book "Borvo"

Nowadays, Christianity is responsible for the way our society is organised and for the way thousands of people currently live.  Its influence can be found in laws, economics, politics, art, music, literature, and architecture, to name just a few and it is a religion split into Roman Catholics, Orthodox, Protestant, Anglican, The Free Churches and Pentecostal, with its impact is felt across all manner of fundamental areas of life such as Human Rights, Marriage and Family, the Governing of countries, and the emergence of scientific laws .

As King Alfred himself showed through his dedication to bringing the written word to his subjects, regardless of class, great emphasis is placed on education through the beliefs of Christianity.

Historian J.M.Roberts, from the book “What’s So Great About Christianity?” by Dinesh D’Souza writes: “We could none of us today be what we are if a handful of Jews nearly two thousand years ago had not believed that they had known a great teacher, seen him crucified, dead  and buried and then rise again”.

Elizabeth Bridgefield

To purchase one of Denny’s books please click on the images below or contact Denny directly at email denisebradbury@btinternet.com.
The Reunion Denagerie of Poems by Denny Bradbury

The Link between Poetry and Music Part 2

17 Friday Jun 2011

Posted by dennybradburybooks in History, Poetry

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A look at two similar artforms, Structure of Music, Structure of poetry, The Link Between Poetry and Music

Poetry and music

Poetry and music

Originally, poetry and music were one of the same.  The composition of the words would help generate the rhythm of the piece and therefore the tone.  For example if you were to write something upbeat and positive then short sharp words would execute the piece quickly.  If you were writing something mournful then it would be the opposite.  Unfortunately in the fabric of history musical relics are scarce, excluding classical music.  So we are left with just the words.  However reading the antiquities that have been left behind, we can piece together their purpose and deduce that music and poetry do indeed go together.  It’s a known fact that Ancient Greeks considered to two as one.  A lot has changed since ancient times and both music and poetry have established their own independence.  Poets would have written their work without taking music into consideration.  Moving through history, say the Renaissance, sonnets and poems were rife.  They were composed but not in a musical sense.

Interestingly, in contemporary society and culture, music is big business for many artists.  Music today carries more associates than just music.  Today music could mean fame and fame means money.  The consumer, your everyday listener is more likely to remember a song lyric than a poem.  The reasons for this are numerous.  It could be because the listener enjoys the song; it could be that they have been bombarded with the sound in their surroundings, through the radio, in shops, the internet and even the television.  Ironically this is why the phrase “I can’t seem to get that song out of my head” has been coined.  Music has a number of genres but is no less human than poetry.  It does indeed come from the mind of a person.  Since the birth of literature, if you look through history; music and poetry are very similar in many ways but their origins differ.  In Medieval literature poems were crafted through grammar and rhetoric.  Whereas music started from science and maths, this is because beats per minute were taken into account more with music than with poetry.  Poetry comprises more of a representation of reality.  The language of music is more abstract and separate from that of words.  Steering away from the original and constructive differences; repetition, pulse, rhythm, accent, sequence and dramatic climax are common features present in the two art forms.

Unless you look at the two art forms under a microscope and strip down the two to its bare bones the similarities and differences are not always immediately obvious to the audience.

To purchase one of Denny’s books please click on the images below or contact Denny directly at email denisebradbury@btinternet.com.
The Reunion Denagerie of Poems by Denny Bradbury

Wantage

15 Wednesday Jun 2011

Posted by dennybradburybooks in History

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Borvo, Denny Bradbury, historical significance, history, Oxfordshire, pagan, Vale of Whitehorse, Wantage

Wantage

 

The statue of King Alfred in Wantage - by Colin Smith

Wantage is a small market town in Oxfordshire – best known for being the birth place of King Alfred.

Its history can be traced back to Roman times, there was a small settlement there.

King Alfred was born in the royal palace in the 9th century, around the year 849. In 1877 a statue of King Alfred was commissioned by Lord Wantage. It was created by Count Gleichen, a famous sculptor at the time. The marble statue still stands in the market place. King Alfred’s legacy remains in the town with schools and pubs bearing his name.

Wantage and King Alfred appear in a new book from Denny Bradbury. Combining the rich history of Wantage and the legend of King Alfred, Denny has created a story of a peasant boy who comes to the aid of the king. Borvo looks out how a great King can ever be helped by a young boy.

Wantage is situated in the Vale of White Horse, considered to be a prime area for horse racing. Many of its village’s house stables and gallops can be found at Black Bushes.

Wantage also appears in the Doomsday book, with its value stated as £61. At the time it was owned by the monarch, but it’s thought it was given to the Earl of Albemarle in 1140.

In Borvo Denny Bradbury explores the relationship between a great King and a young pagan healer. The historical significance of towns like Wantage play a huge part in the novel.

To purchase one of Denny’s books please click on the images below or contact Denny directly at email denisebradbury@btinternet.com.
The Reunion Denagerie of Poems by Denny Bradbury

A hat-trick of wins for Michael Morpurgo

13 Monday Jun 2011

Posted by dennybradburybooks in History, Literacy News

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book awards, fiction, Michael Morpurgo

ShadowIt’s a hat-trick of wins for Michael Morpurgo.

His novel Shadow has won this year’s Red House children’s book award.

He’s become the only author to win the prize three times in the awards history.

The book tells the story of boy who is befriended by an army sniffer dog in Afghanistan.

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