Published inEscape Into History·PinnedEscape Into History — Newsletter #3A warm welcome to all subscribers. Autumn is definitely upon us in this part of the northern hemisphere, a time of the year to stay cosy and read. If you haven’t yet had time to peruse this fledgling publication online, make yourself comfy with a brew of choice and dip…History3 min readHistory3 min read
Published inEscape Into History·PinnedMember-onlyHistory in my LandscapeHow did it all begin? — How did my interest in History begin? We have to go back some time (oh, puns as well!). In the United Kingdom children transfer from junior to senior school at the age of eleven. …History3 min readHistory3 min read
Published inAbout Me Stories·PinnedMember-onlyAbout Me — Linda AcasterFiction writer, history lover, map junkie — Hi! I’m Linda Acaster and thanks for stopping by my Profile. We are all busy so I’ll keep this short. I’m a Brit from the English county of Yorkshire, situated halfway up the country. My close family currently lives a short walk from the chilly North Sea, which proved a…About Me2 min readAbout Me2 min read
Published inEscape Into History·1 day agoMember-onlyDurrington Walls — The Land of the Living?Come visit the people who built Stonehenge — Two miles north-east of Stonehenge stands Durrington Walls. It is a henge of gigantic proportions — a diameter of 470 metres (1500 feet) with an earth and chalk bank in some places still standing to the height of 3 metres (18ft). …History7 min readHistory7 min read
Published inEscape Into History·Nov 6Member-onlyThe Orkney Isles — Homes Set In StoneSkara Brae’s blueprint for Neolithic furnishings. — Following on from the Stonehenge Overview, we travel 680 miles north. Ten miles off the UK’s Scottish mainland lies Orkney, an archipelago of 70 islands which cosset some of the most spectacular Neolithic remains in Europe. From nearly 3,000 Neolithic sites, a handful have been designated a UNESCO World Heritage…History6 min readHistory6 min read
Published inSix Word Photo Story Challenge·Oct 27Member-onlyBanishing The GreySix Word Photo Story: Freestyle — Artworks make passers-by turn and smile. A few years ago the north promenade of my Yorkshire seaside town had a makeover, but the south promenade was left to its own devices. Seawalls feature prominently along this stretch of coast. The land mostly consists of boulder clay deposited during the last Ice Age, and the sea can…Six Word Photo Story2 min readSix Word Photo Story2 min read
Published inEscape Into History·Oct 16Member-onlyStonehenge Sacred Landscape — An OverviewOne piece in History’s gigantic jigsaw puzzle — Standing close to an arterial road in Wiltshire, England, Stonehenge is the most iconic historical monument within the group of islands encompassing Britain and its western neighbour, Ireland. It is found mentioned in documents from the Medieval period, and has been studied by antiquarians since at least the 17th century…History3 min readHistory3 min read
Published inSix Word Photo Story Challenge·Sep 29Member-onlyDeliver Me Your Bruised And Your BrokenSix Word Photo Story: Freestyle — Food waste? Not in this house! It’s that time of year again — harvesting fallen apples, currently aided by annoyingly high winds. I do my rounds early every morning. Why do the birds always prefer the big ones? Some are delivered to neighbours without apple trees, eaters are sliced on top of our breakfasts, the rest…Food Waste2 min readFood Waste2 min read
Published inSix Word Photo Story Challenge·Sep 17Member-onlyLiving in the ShadowSeptember Six Word Photo Story Challenge: “Shadows” — “Yellow, lift your head.” “I can’t!” Growing in the shadow of a dark fence and over-bearing trees is no joke for sunflowers. The clue is in the name: they need the sunshine, especially this far north in England. In our garden, we grow ours for the colour and — if we’re lucky — seed heads to…Six Word Photo Story2 min readSix Word Photo Story2 min read
Published inEscape Into History·Sep 15Member-only800 Years a Barn — From Knights Templar to Modern SeedsmanThe care of a farmer changes not a jot down the centuries — One Pope’s over-enthusiasm for the protection of Christian shrines caused the raising of the Knights Templar military-religious order. Another Pope’s timidity caused its bloody demise. In the intervening 193 years the “Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and the Temple of Solomon” revitalised production of food and ancillaries across much of Europe…History7 min readHistory7 min read