Ten Things You Never Knew About The Restoration

Restoration England was one of the most exhilarating periods in English history, a brief but brilliant flowering of artistic and literary talent only equalled by a hedonistic dedication to self-indulgence and pleasure that has made every other age seem tame. Yet the clichés of strutting fops and preening great ladies overwhelm what is a more interesting and complex story. Here are ten things that you never knew about the era.

  1. The man responsible for it was George Monck.

After Oliver Cromwell’s death in 1658, the future of the Commonwealth government that he had headed looked at risk, in no small part to the comparative uselessness of his son Richard, a man described by his enemies as ‘Tumbledown Dick’. It was left to one of his father’s supporters General George Monck to make secret contact with the exiled Prince Charles, penniless and desperate in Europe, and propose a deal whereby he could return to England and be crowned king in exchange for an act of ‘indemnity and oblivion’ against those who had been responsible for his father’s death. Except…

  1. The Restoration began bloodily.

Underneath his jocular and mild-mannered exterior, Charles sought vengeance for his father’s murder with implacable hostility. He ensured that the commissioners who had signed Charles I’s death warrant in 1649 were executed first, and then, with the aid of his mentor and right-hand-man Edward Hyde, Earl of Clarendon, saw to it that anyone who could be described as hostile to him and his court was done away with. Sometimes this was judicially; at other times, those who had fled England upon the Restoration were pursued to Europe and murdered by agents of the crown there.

  1. The most famous victim of religious persecution was John Bunyan.

One of Charles’s first reforms was the 1662 Act of Uniformity, which sought to strengthen the power of the Church of England. This meant that all other forms of worship, whether Quaker or Dissenter, were effectively outlawed and their practitioners, such as Bunyan, imprisoned. Bunyan spent 1666 in Bedford jail, a place he described as being ‘like hell itself’; as there had originally been no legislation to charge him under, he had been prosecuted under the obscure Religion Act of 1592. However, the authorities’ plan backfired. Not only did Bunyan use his time in jail to write his allegorical masterpiece The Pilgrim’s Progress, but he also successfully radicalised many of his fellow inmates due to his charisma and subversive preaching.

  1. Isaac Newton (may have) discovered gravity in the Restoration

It is impossible to know for certain when Isaac Newton observed the fall of an apple, but one politician, a Whig named John Conduitt, shared an anecdote that suggested that it took place when he was 23. Conduitt wrote that:

‘In the year 1666 he retired again from Cambridge to his mother’s house in Lincolnshire. Whilst he was pensively meandering in a garden it came into his thought that the power of gravity (which brought an apple from a tree to the ground) was not limited to a certain distance from earth, but that this power must extend much further than was usually thought. Why not as high as the Moon said he to himself & if so, that must influence her motion & perhaps retain her in her orbit, whereupon he fell a calculating what would be the effect of that supposition.’

  1. It was believed that the king healed sickness

Although Charles was probably best known in the era for his love of high living and glamorous mistresses, he also had a great interest in science and medicine. It was partly as a result of this, but also a desire to ensure his popularity with the public, that he continued a royal tradition known as ‘touching the king’s evil’. This consisted of him touching people with scrofula and giving them a gold coin, a twice-weekly ceremony that took place whether he was in London or elsewhere. It was estimated that he touched around 4000 people a year, with a total cost of around £5000 in gold coins. It is uncertain as to whether he really cured anyone; there are a few cases of patients recovering after being touched by the king, but the results were probably coincidental.

  1. Protection from the plague was rudimentary

The Great Plague was first detected in late 1664 – with a blazing comet rumoured to have foretold its arrival – and wrecked havoc on England until early 1666. It killed around 200,000 people in total, which was anything up to around one in five of the population in the Restoration. And doctors and apothecaries had no clear idea how to treat it. Those afflicted by it were normally shut up in their houses with their families and left to die, while mountebanks and other conmen offered fanciful remedies, including powdered unicorn horn and liquid gold. Even reputable doctors could offer little assistance, turning to such folk remedies as powdered nutmeg and glasses of warm sack, a kind of Spanish white wine. None of which had any effect.

  1. Samuel Pepys was one of the first men to fall in love with an actress

One of the innovations of the Restoration period was that women were allowed to act on stage for the first time in English history. One of these actresses was a member of the King’s Company, Elizabeth Knepp, who specialised in both female and ‘breeches’ (boys or male) roles, and Samuel Pepys became infatuated with her. He recorded in his diary that ‘she (is) the pleasantest company in the world’ and, inevitably, that ‘I (am) very pleasant to her’. This ‘pleasantness’ took the form mainly of kissing and fondling, although he did write with glee in 1668 that ‘I had the opportunity, the first time in my life, to be bold with Knepp’.

  1. The first fine dining restaurant in England opened in the Restoration

While we might think of upmarket restaurants as a comparatively recent phenomenon, the first one associated with expensive food and wine opened in 1665. Run by a Frenchman named Arnaud de Pontac, it was named the Pontac’s Head and specialised in serving expensive imported Bordeaux wine that Pepys praised as ‘Ho Bryan’; better known as Haut-Brion, it has continued to delight oenophiles for centuries since. It didn’t come cheap, however, being served at seven shillings a bottle (around £30 in contemporary money) – given that the average price of a pint of beer was between a penny and a half and threepence, this was a considerable cost.

  1. Charles never wanted to fight the Second Anglo-Dutch War

The Second Anglo-Dutch War of 1665 – 67 resulted in a humiliating English defeat, much to Charles’s chagrin; he had never wanted to fight it in the first place. He had built up a good relationship with the Dutch during his exile, and also knew that they had offered him and his father great financial generosity, so felt indebted to them. Nevertheless, those around him at court were said to be ‘mad for a Dutch war’ on commercial and trading grounds, and so Charles reluctantly acquiesced to attacks on Dutch ships by privateers, which led to a formal declaration of war by the Netherlands in March 1665. Had he stood firm and refused, he would have saved both face and a considerable amount of money.

  1. More than seven people died in the Great Fire of London

Great_Fire_LondonA myth exists, repeated by school textbooks and teachers, that there was very little loss of life in the Great Fire. This is untrue, but the story came about through royal propaganda circulated in such publications as the London Gazette, which even went as far as to say nobody died at all. Given the widespread damage to property and the unchecked progress of the blaze, it is impossible to know for certain how many were killed, but the extreme heat was such that many bodies would have been incinerated, leaving no trace. Of the reported deaths, one observer saw ‘a human body…parched up as it were with the flames; whole as to skin, meagre as to flesh, yellow as to colour’. It is possible that thousands of poor and illiterate people died, unmourned and unnoticed.


Alexander LarmanAlexander Larman writes regularly about literature and the arts for publications including The Guardian, New Statesman, Spectator, Telegraph and the Observer. He also reviews restaurants and hotels. His first book Blazing Star: The Life and Times of John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester was awarded an Elizabeth Longford grant by the Society of Authors and his latest book, Restoration was published in April.

He will be speaking at Chalke Valley History Festival on 28th June 2016, looking at the year 1666 through the eyes of the people of the time. Tickets are available here.

OVER THE TOP: THE STORY OF DOROTHY LAWRENCE

Lizzie Crarer PRODUCTION SHOT 3

A BIT ABOUT THE RESEARCH AND THE RATIONALE BEHIND THE SHOW

Any historical narrative is shaped by its conclusion, and I knew about the end of Dorothy’s life before I knew anything else about her. In 1925 she was committed to Hanwell Lunatic Asylum, and remained in psychiatric institutions until her death in 1964. What she did at the start of her life however was quite remarkable, and I have wanted to find a way of retelling her story in a way that celebrates the energy and verve of this extraordinary personality.

Dorothy’s adventures are recounted in her short autobiographical book ‘Sapper Dorothy’, first published in 1919 and still in print today. On first reading, I was immediately engaged by the exuberant and unusual voice that jumped off the pages, and the story that defied all my preconceptions about female aspirations in World War One. In June 1915 Dorothy set off for northern France, intent on becoming the first female war correspondent. She wheedled and hoodwinked her way to procuring uniform and false papers, and ended up spending ten days under enemy fire on the frontline of fighting, disguised as ‘Private Denis Smith’. Finally discovered, she was sent packing back to England – not before being interrogated by some of the highest-ranking officers in the Third Army.

And there was one line that caught my eye: ‘if my highly respectable guardian, living in that dear old Cathedral city, could see me now, they would have forty fits.’

Screen Shot 2016-06-14 at 14.13.04Having grown up in a ‘dear old Cathedral city’ myself, this oblique reference piqued my interest. Following a hunch, I began what was to turn into a year-long process of research. Following a paper trail of letters, photographs, census entries and asylum records, I have confirmed that Dorothy’s cathedral city was in fact the same as mine – Salisbury.

A shared geographical point of reference enables a deeper level of imaginative engagement with her story; and for this reason I decided that the show had to be made in Wiltshire, for an audience in the southwest. I have wanted to explore the forgotten story of Dorothy’s childhood as a teenage orphan sent from London to live with her guardian in the Salisbury cathedral close; and I also want to ensure that who she was and what she did was remembered and celebrated as part of our regional World War One centenary commemorations.

 

For further information please contact The Heroine Project Presents producer Lizzie Crarer | 07747 833864 | lizziecrarer@hotmail.com


Crarer,Lizzie
Lizzie Crarer is a Bath-based theatre-maker and performer, and the director of ‘The Heroine Project Presents’: making theatre that tells the stories of women from history who have been overlooked or misrepresented.

OVER THE TOP: THE STORY OF DOROTHY LAWRENCE will be performed at Chalke Valley History Festival at 6.30pm on 30th June 2016

Luke Irwin and the Tale of The Deverill Villa

Have you ever dreamed of finding buried treasure? For London-based rug designer, Luke Irwin, that dream became a reality when he discovered the remains of a Roman villa in the garden of his Wiltshire home – the most significant discovery of its kind in over a decade.

In little over a year, Luke has learnt, via involvement with Historic England, that his Wiltshire home is the site of the Deverill Villa, one of the most significant Roman finds in decades – a vast two-storey ‘palace’ that once housed dignitaries of some importance. While Brixton Deverill may now be a sleepy backwater, the discovery of oyster shells, sarcophagi and seemingly endless ’tesserae’ blocks of Cirencester mosaic suggest that the peaceful valley may have once been quite the opposite.

He will be speaking with Tom Holland on Sunday morning 3rd July at 11.30am in one of our free ‘Pop Up History’ talks at the Festival. In the meantime, here he is talking about this amazing find..

Deutsches Afrikakorps Knight’s Cross Winner

This extraordinary clip is from the German newsreel ‘Die Deutsche Wochenschau’ produced by Josef Goebbels’ Propaganda Ministry from 1940 until the end of the war.  This particular episode clip shows Günter Halm receiving his Knight’s Cross from Field Marshal Erwin Rommel for destroying nine British tanks at the First Battle of Alamein in 1942.

Herr Halm will be appearing at this year’s festival, and will be speaking on Sunday 3rd July about his wartime career and his time serving under Rommel with the Deutsches Afrikakorps and then during the Battle for Normandy in 1944.  It promises to be a fascinating and very special occasion. You can book tickets for this event here.

Making the oldest cocktail in the world

What is a cocktail? And is there really a cocktail recipe which is over 400 years old? Here is Ruth Ball, Founder of Alchemist Dreams with the oldest cocktail in the world..


Ruth BallRuth Ball is related to Admiral Edward Vernon, the man who invented grog as a way to serve the rum ration to the navy in 1740. Founder of Alchemist Dreams, a company dedicated to making handmade liqueurs blended to order, she started out in her own kitchen and now boasts an enviable list of clients.

On Friday, 1st July she will be at Chalke Valley History Festival to talk about Rebellious Spirits: The Illicit History of Booze,  sharing the fascinating stories of wit and ingenuity required to stay one drink ahead of the law – she may even share some of her intriguing recipes!

Tickets to this event are available here.

Farming, Fighting and Family: A Memoir of the 2nd World War

I am particularly delighted to have been asked to speak at this year’s CVHF because it will feel like another home-coming.  Although I have lived almost all my adult life in London or its outskirts, I was brought up on my parents’ farm just over the hill in the neighbouring Wylye Valley, with my grandparents Street a few miles up the road.

Author’s proceeds are being donated to a certain local branch of Mencap that directly benefits a young Street family descendant with learning disabilities, whose existence I only discovered during the course of my researches.


Miranda McCormickMiranda McCormick is the granddaughter of the Wiltshire farmer/author/broadcaster A. G. Street and daughter of the novelist Pamela Street.  Her book Farming, Fighting and Family is a memoir of life during WW2 in this area of Wiltshire.

On Tuesday, 28th June Miranda will be drawing on family diaries and letters to tell the story not only of A.G., but also his daughter during those extraordinary years of national adversity.

Tickets available here.

Women’s History Month 2016

CVHF presents The Bomber Crew

We had the privilege of having a complete 7-man crew who made up the different roles on a Lancaster bomber during the Second World War at CVHF this year. George ‘Johnnie’ Johnson, Jo Lancaster, Frank Tilley, Hal Gardner, John de Hoop, Dave Fellowes, Steve Bethell were in discussion with Paul Beaver.

It was the chance to hear what it was like to fly over Nazi-occupied Europe, whether pilot, bomb- aimer, navigator, flight engineer, tail-gunner, radio operator or mid-upper gunner – and from men whose combined experience amounted to over 150 operations.

CVHF presents The Bomber Crew from Chalke Valley History Trust on Vimeo.

BBC South Today visits the Festival

Tom Bradby interview

Tom Bradby talks to us about the Festival and his passion for History.