The Future of History
Showing posts with label Goldsmiths University. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Goldsmiths University. Show all posts
Monday, 4 April 2016
The Mind's Construction in the Face
In a phone conversation on Thursday 26 November 2015, the director of the Channel Four documentary Shakespeare's Tomb tried very hard to assure me that the programme would not be spending very much time at Beoley, was not terribly interested in the skull, and didn't expect to discover much about the mysterious "veritable skull of William Shakespeare."
The director seemed startled when I mentioned Dr Caroline Wilkinson, who I already knew was involved. No, I was told, Caroline Wilkinson probably wasn't going to be doing much with the skull - at most, maybe coming up with some thoughts about possible age and gender - and she almost certainly wouldn't be doing any sort of facial reconstruction from the skull or anything like that at all.
I'm still at a loss to explain why the director told me all that, unless it was to throw me off the scent. Given that I had only just been made aware of the fact that I was no longer involved with the documentary, I can imagine that she was trying to mollify my (i.e. "No, don't worry, we won't be doing anything that directly concerns you and your work") or, to put it another way, I was being fobbed off and kept in the dark.
Anyway, surprise-surprise, Dr Wilkinson did do something of a facial reconstruction from the skull after all. Maybe she had a bit of time on her hands, I don't know, or maybe that was the plan all along but the director didn't want me to know about it. The image above is partly that of Dr Wilkinson's reconstruction, made under the apprehension that the skull is that of an "unknown woman in her seventies". Obviously, for copyright reasons, I haven't reproduced the whole image.
Something about the eyes in the reconstruction reminded me of an early 17th-century portrait in the royal collection. This portrait of an unknown man was flagged up by Lee Durkee on his fascinating Lost Shakespeare Portraits blog. Lee Durkee knows his stuff, and when he suggests that the "unknown man" in the portrait might be Shakespeare, I'm inclined to think he might be onto something.
So the image of an "unknown female" you see at the top of the blog has been merged with the features of the "unknown man" from the portrait in the royal collection. Look closely: it's difficult to see where the "unknown man" ends and the "unknown female" begins.
Now to the reproduction image proper. For some bizarre reason, the forehead reproduced from the skull has been blurred. This has the effect of focusing attention on the central features of the face - eyes, nose and mouth. It is unfortunate, because (as those who follow my work will know) many of the identifying features of the skull which also show up, with a remarkable degree of consistency, in the Shakespeare portraiture, are to be found on the forehead. Which, in the image taken from the Shakespeare's Tomb documentary, has been blurred.
Moreover, the forehead is one of the best-preserved parts of the skull. It is pretty much intact. The face of the skull has been smashed to bits (much of that damage, I believe, done at around the time of death). Which means that much of what we see most clearly of the face in the reconstruction is not actually taken from the skull, because those parts don't actually exist. Where it is most in focus, then, the reconstruction is based on a reconstruction.
You have a laser scan of a damaged skull, onto which have been projected (we must assume) the missing parts of the structure (cheekbones, maxilla, lower jaw). In other words, the facial reconstruction shown in the programme is based on another reconstruction - the conjectural reconstruction of the missing parts of the skull - which is itself based, not on the original skull, but on a laser scan thereof.
Complicated, isn't it? But the point to be made here is that those parts of the skull which do exist, and which we ought to be able to see very clearly in the facial reconstruction, have been largely blurred, while those parts of the skull which don't exist, and therefore had to be speculatively reconstructed, have been rendered rather clearly.
Odd, hunh? Even so, the image yields some interesting surprises. Let me concentrate on the left eye, temple and forehead as shown in the facial reconstruction (part of which is blurred) for the Channel Four programme:
Let's start with the forehead. Blurred though it is - so as not to give the game away - some features can still be made out. Looking up from the outside half of the eye, it is quite clear that there are a couple of grooves or indentations, running down from the hairline, with something resembling a raised area in between.
I've blogged about this feature before: in Call ye Midwife I suggested that, along with a defining depression high up in the forehead, just left of centre, they were the result of the rushed and insanitary midwifery practices of the day, while in Shakespeare's Face (3) I used them as part of my evidence to indicate that the somewhat controversial Cobbe portrait is indeed of William Shakespeare.
Basically, that double groove running down the left side of the forehead is a fairly consistent feature of the Shakespeare portraiture. And, let's remember, it's there on the skull - one of the remaining parts of the skull - from which Dr Wilkinson made her reconstruction.
Moving down a bit, there seems to be evidence of a scar running across the top of the left eyebrow. I examined this in my 2014 paper for Goldsmiths University, The Faces of Shakespeare. Again, the skull concurs with the portraiture, the scar being especially visible on the Wadlow portrait.
The outside of the left eye shows what appear to be two lines descending to meet in a sort of V-shape immediately to the left of the eye. I have written about this extensively, describing and illustrating this feature in Who Killed William Shakespeare? and elsewhere. It is another defining feature of Shakespeare portraiture and is caused by the breakage of the end of the facial bone and the lower edge of the orbit showing through the skin. The crease which comes round from the left, just under the eye, in the reconstruction is also a feature of Shakespeare portraiture, clearly visible in the Droeshout engraving (First Folio, 1623) and the Chandos portrait (National Portrait Gallery).
The damage to the lower part of the eye socket shows up both in the Shakespeare portraiture (often as a faint, thin, bluish or greyish line, as in the Wadlow portrait) and is replicated in the facial reconstruction as a sort of puffy, saggy, bags-under-the-eyes look. Indeed, a forensic archaeologist and biological anthropologist who studied the photos of the skull told me that the "guttering" at the bottom of the eye sockets would produce just such a look in the portraits.
Just inside the eye, alongside the nose, there is shading and a minor blemish, consistent with the portraits (the Cobbe shows this as a sort of bluish tinge with what a friend, who has seen the Cobbe portrait at Hatchlands Park in Surrey, described as a "slight boil or deformity on the nose side of the left eye orbit"). This is where a pointed instrument, a stabbing weapon such a poignard, was jabbed into the eye socket, puncturing the inner medial wall of the left eye. This forced the eyeball forwards, and slightly to the left, as we see in the death mask and the "wall-eyed" look of the portraits. The death mask shows the scar made by this weapon. The portraits, and the facial reconstruction, reflect the damage that was done to the inner eye socket by this stabbing weapon (for more on this, see my paper for Goldsmiths and my Historical Honey article, Shakespeare and the Dragonfly.)
Finally, the cheek. First of all, there appears to be something of a swelling, a raised area, where the (missing) cheekbone should be - and curiously enough, something very similar appears in much the same place on Dr Wilkinson's facial reconstruction of the Darmstadt death mask (Shakespeare, again).
Look more closely at the facial reconstruction and you'll see a thin line meandering slightly as it runs down the left cheek, from just beneath the eye to just to the side of the mouth. That really is a giveaway: you'll find it in the portraits, too, especially the Chandos, where I first noticed it - a thin grey slightly wavy line running own the left cheek, with another, fainter but similar, immediately to the left of it.
That's the outline of the broken maxilla (upper jaw).
So - even though they did their best to misinterpret certain features of the skull and to obscure the others, the facial reconstruction which Dr Wilkinson apparently wasn't going to do but then went ahead and did anyway does, in fact, confirm that the Beoley skull matches the portraiture of William Shakespeare.
How much longer, I ask you, must we allow the cover-up to go unchallenged and the world to remain in the dark about the true identity of the owner of the Beoley skull?
Thursday, 18 February 2016
Two Wills, Two Brows
It all kicked off in The Times on Monday, with a piece entitled "Lowbrow clue that poet was Shakespeare's secret son". Not entirely a surprise: Dominic Kennedy, Investigations Editor, had already been in touch with me, and rather charmingly said, "I really enjoyed this book [Shakespeare's Bastard: The Life of Sir William Davenant] and congratulate you on your research."
And then, the story went everywhere. And, predictably, the backlash started straightaway.
Out of a book of some 95,000 words, Dominic Kennedy had zeroed in on two key issues. One is Shakespeare's Sonnet 126, "O Thou my lovely Boy", which I suggest might have been written to the infant William Davenant, Shakespeare's "godson" and, in all probability, his actual son.
The other is the matter of the drooping eyebrow. Both Sir William Davenant and William Shakespeare appear to have had left eyebrows which drooped. As this condition, known as ptosis, can be inherited, I had included the information in Shakespeare's Bastard, albeit in all of about three sentences.
If I was a little taken aback that the eyebrow comparisons should have attracted so much attention, I have been even more surprised that a largely unknown portrait, said to be of Davenant as a young man, should have been given so much exposure. The portrait (above, photographed by Keith Barnes) hangs in the Fellows' Common Room at Davenant's old Oxford college, Lincoln, and was all but forgotten. The only accepted image of Davenant was the engraving by William Faithorne, based on a lost portrait, which adorned the title page of Davenant's Works, published in 1673:
Frankly, I prefer the Lincoln College portrait, even if the provenance is uncertain. But it's worth returning to the Faithorne engraving because, as it focuses on the left side of Davenant's face, the misshapen left eyebrow is more clearly visible than it is in the portrait:
... if you look at both temples on the skull, you may notice that the left temple is more "bumpy" than the right. This happens in areas where the bone needs to hold on to the soft tissue more than it normally would. If there was scar tissue in that area, that would explain why the temple bone is "bumpy" on the left and not the right. The scar tissue need not be on the skin, it could be in the muscle or facia (the stuff that holds the muscle on to the bone ...) Scar tissue often makes a depressed area in the skin so that would explain the depression behind the left eye in the portraiture. There are also a few ways this can occur developmentally with essentially the same results.
"And interestingly," she added, "the Davenant Bust has fatty deposits (we all have them) across all of his right eyebrow, only half of his left (near facial midline). If this is true, it would fit. Fatty tissue often doesn't grow in regions where there is scar tissue."
The clue seemed to be the presence of a scar, clearly visible in a photo of the Beoley skull taken in about 1939, and also on the portraiture (the Wadlow replicates this scar exactly):
So, it appeared at first that a scar above Shakespeare's left eyebrow might have displaced the fatty tissue, causing the bone to become "bumpy" and the eyebrow to "droop" (it might have been this scar that the poet Ted Hughes had in mind when he wrote in a letter to Nicholas Hagger, "But what do you think of the deep scar on Shake's left temple (in the Chandos, & on the [death] mask)." - I'm grateful to Deivis Garcia of Jersey City for pointing that out to me). Obviously, this scar had been a long-term feature of Shakespeare's appearance, because the bone of the skull had adapted to the lack of fatty tissue, and was therefore unrelated to the manner of his death.
The problem came when I was analysing the Davenant portraits. The Rector of Lincoln College, Oxford - who, along with the Fellows, was kind enough to give me permission to reproduce the portrait in Shakespeare's Bastard - was unconvinced that the portrait at Lincoln was of Davenant. Comparing the portrait with the Faithorne engraving (the latter post-dating the syphilis which ravaged Davenant's nose), I became fairly convinced that the chin, lips and cheekbones offered a pretty good match:
But what to make of that slightly odd fold over the left eye in the Faithorne engraving? Although the left eye is less visible in the Lincoln College portrait, the left eyebrow does seem to descend at a rather steep angle, apparently matching the swollen or drooping left eyebrow seen in the engraving.
If Shakespeare's eyebrow was made to droop by a wound, the scar from which caused the fatty deposits of the eyebrow to slip, then that feature could not have been inherited. Whereas, if the drooping left eyebrow was caused by something else - one of the other ways that the loss or displacement of the fatty tissue could occur developmentally - then perhaps it was an inherited feature.
Such a drooping of the eyebrow as can be seen in the Davenant and Shakespeare portraiture is known as "ptosis". It can be an autosomal dominant inheritance, meaning that a single copy of the relevant gene is enough to cause the defect. Even if the mother had no such mutation, the fact that the father had it would mean that it was passed on to the child.
Hence my remark, in Shakespeare's Bastard, concerning the line in Ben Jonson's 1623 poem to Shakespeare in the First Folio: "Looke how the fathers face / Lives in his issue ..." When Ben Jonson wrote those words, William Davenant was already settled in London and working for the sister-in-law of Ben Jonson's patron.
Might not Davenant's drooping left eyebrow have produced in Ben Jonson a shock of recognition, that the father's face had lived on in his issue - given that Ben would have been familiar with the unusual shape of Shakespeare's left eyebrow caused, it would seem, by congenital ptosis?
(* X-ray of the Chandos portrait:)
And then, the story went everywhere. And, predictably, the backlash started straightaway.
Out of a book of some 95,000 words, Dominic Kennedy had zeroed in on two key issues. One is Shakespeare's Sonnet 126, "O Thou my lovely Boy", which I suggest might have been written to the infant William Davenant, Shakespeare's "godson" and, in all probability, his actual son.
The other is the matter of the drooping eyebrow. Both Sir William Davenant and William Shakespeare appear to have had left eyebrows which drooped. As this condition, known as ptosis, can be inherited, I had included the information in Shakespeare's Bastard, albeit in all of about three sentences.
If I was a little taken aback that the eyebrow comparisons should have attracted so much attention, I have been even more surprised that a largely unknown portrait, said to be of Davenant as a young man, should have been given so much exposure. The portrait (above, photographed by Keith Barnes) hangs in the Fellows' Common Room at Davenant's old Oxford college, Lincoln, and was all but forgotten. The only accepted image of Davenant was the engraving by William Faithorne, based on a lost portrait, which adorned the title page of Davenant's Works, published in 1673:
Okay, so let's go back to Shakespeare. The subject of Shakespeare's left eye had much preoccupied me while writing Who Killed William Shakespeare? (The History Press, 2013). One thing that is clear from such portraits as the Chandos (National Portrait Gallery) and the Droeshout engraving from the First Folio is that there was something wrong with the outside corner of Shakespeare's left eye socket:
(* An x-ray of the Chandos portrait, reproduced at the bottom of this piece, illustrates the peculiarity of the left eye, the shading indicating some sort of abnormality in the left eyebrow.)
Close inspection of those images, and comparison with the Beoley skull - which will soon hit the world's media, by way of a Channel 4 documentary - suggested that the extreme corner of Shakespeare's left eye socket was damaged, probably very shortly before his death. However, that does not necessarily explain the oddity of Shakespeare's left eye as it appears in many portraits.
Close inspection of those images, and comparison with the Beoley skull - which will soon hit the world's media, by way of a Channel 4 documentary - suggested that the extreme corner of Shakespeare's left eye socket was damaged, probably very shortly before his death. However, that does not necessarily explain the oddity of Shakespeare's left eye as it appears in many portraits.
In several portraits thought to be of Shakespeare, the artists appear to have struggled with the left eye, making it look lower than the right eye, as if the shape of the eyebrow demanded an adjustment to the placing of the left eye - as below, in the Grafton, Janssen, and Coblitz portraits:
If these portraits appear to "drop" the left eye, in order to accommodate the deformed left eyebrow, the Soest portrait takes a different approach, squashing the left eye somewhat:
Two portraits which arguably do a better job of representing the swollen "droop" or overhang of Shakespeare's left eyebrow are the Cobbe and the Wadlow:
The fold of the overhanging left eyebrow is surely unmistakable in these images, the first trumpeted by the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust as Shakespeare, the second identified by yours truly as a portrait of Shakespeare in my paper for Goldsmiths, The Faces of Shakespeare.
The question of what was going on with Shakespeare's left eyebrow was first raised for me by a research student in biological anthropology. Perusing the images I had of the Beoley skull and assorted Shakespeare busts and portraits, including the Darmstadt death mask, the student noticed something:
... if you look at both temples on the skull, you may notice that the left temple is more "bumpy" than the right. This happens in areas where the bone needs to hold on to the soft tissue more than it normally would. If there was scar tissue in that area, that would explain why the temple bone is "bumpy" on the left and not the right. The scar tissue need not be on the skin, it could be in the muscle or facia (the stuff that holds the muscle on to the bone ...) Scar tissue often makes a depressed area in the skin so that would explain the depression behind the left eye in the portraiture. There are also a few ways this can occur developmentally with essentially the same results.
Evidently, seen through the eyes of a biological anthropologist, the "bumpy" texture of the bone above the left eye of the Beoley skull (above, from a photo by Richard Peach, 2009) corresponds with the imbalance of the fatty tissue of the eyebrows, visible on the Davenant Bust of Shakespeare (Garrick Club). A significant amount of the fatty tissue above Shakespeare's left eye was, apparently, missing, causing the bone to become "bumpy" as it sought to hold on to the skin.
So, it appeared at first that a scar above Shakespeare's left eyebrow might have displaced the fatty tissue, causing the bone to become "bumpy" and the eyebrow to "droop" (it might have been this scar that the poet Ted Hughes had in mind when he wrote in a letter to Nicholas Hagger, "But what do you think of the deep scar on Shake's left temple (in the Chandos, & on the [death] mask)." - I'm grateful to Deivis Garcia of Jersey City for pointing that out to me). Obviously, this scar had been a long-term feature of Shakespeare's appearance, because the bone of the skull had adapted to the lack of fatty tissue, and was therefore unrelated to the manner of his death.
The problem came when I was analysing the Davenant portraits. The Rector of Lincoln College, Oxford - who, along with the Fellows, was kind enough to give me permission to reproduce the portrait in Shakespeare's Bastard - was unconvinced that the portrait at Lincoln was of Davenant. Comparing the portrait with the Faithorne engraving (the latter post-dating the syphilis which ravaged Davenant's nose), I became fairly convinced that the chin, lips and cheekbones offered a pretty good match:
If Shakespeare's eyebrow was made to droop by a wound, the scar from which caused the fatty deposits of the eyebrow to slip, then that feature could not have been inherited. Whereas, if the drooping left eyebrow was caused by something else - one of the other ways that the loss or displacement of the fatty tissue could occur developmentally - then perhaps it was an inherited feature.
Such a drooping of the eyebrow as can be seen in the Davenant and Shakespeare portraiture is known as "ptosis". It can be an autosomal dominant inheritance, meaning that a single copy of the relevant gene is enough to cause the defect. Even if the mother had no such mutation, the fact that the father had it would mean that it was passed on to the child.
Hence my remark, in Shakespeare's Bastard, concerning the line in Ben Jonson's 1623 poem to Shakespeare in the First Folio: "Looke how the fathers face / Lives in his issue ..." When Ben Jonson wrote those words, William Davenant was already settled in London and working for the sister-in-law of Ben Jonson's patron.
Might not Davenant's drooping left eyebrow have produced in Ben Jonson a shock of recognition, that the father's face had lived on in his issue - given that Ben would have been familiar with the unusual shape of Shakespeare's left eyebrow caused, it would seem, by congenital ptosis?
(* X-ray of the Chandos portrait:)
Monday, 28 July 2014
Apologia
I've been remiss. Dreadfully so.
The only thing I can say in my defence is that I have been busy writing my biography of Sir William Davenant (Shakespeare's Son) and enjoying myself giving tours in Stratford-upon-Avon - some days, you might see me in doublet and breeches, leading a troupe of tourists or students from one Shakespearean site to another, whilst on Saturday evenings I guide intrepid visitors through the dark delights of Tudor World on Sheep Street, every Ghost Tour threatening to yield at least one supernatural experience. So, yes, I've been busy.
Added to that, my paper on The Faces of Shakespeare is about to be published by Goldsmiths University; Moon Books will soon be publishing Naming the Goddess, to which I contributed a chapter, and my own The Grail; Relic of an Ancient Religion is currently passing through the Moon Books production process. Oh, and I've also been quietly working on a project based on events in 1964-65 for a company set up by a very good friend of mine from my drama school days.
So I hope you'll forgive the radio silence.
Anyhoo - my great buddy and artistic collaborator on The Grail, Lloyd Canning, got a fantastic four-page spread in this month's Cotswold and Vale Magazine, including (as you can see) the cover shot. Lloyd's amazing images really came out well in the magazine, and The Grail got a good mention (as well as my Who Killed William Shakespeare?), which means that we're all very chuffed. A hearty CONGRATS to Lloyd for the well-earned and much-deserved publicity.
I'll try to post another update very soon. I promise.
The only thing I can say in my defence is that I have been busy writing my biography of Sir William Davenant (Shakespeare's Son) and enjoying myself giving tours in Stratford-upon-Avon - some days, you might see me in doublet and breeches, leading a troupe of tourists or students from one Shakespearean site to another, whilst on Saturday evenings I guide intrepid visitors through the dark delights of Tudor World on Sheep Street, every Ghost Tour threatening to yield at least one supernatural experience. So, yes, I've been busy.
Added to that, my paper on The Faces of Shakespeare is about to be published by Goldsmiths University; Moon Books will soon be publishing Naming the Goddess, to which I contributed a chapter, and my own The Grail; Relic of an Ancient Religion is currently passing through the Moon Books production process. Oh, and I've also been quietly working on a project based on events in 1964-65 for a company set up by a very good friend of mine from my drama school days.
So I hope you'll forgive the radio silence.
Anyhoo - my great buddy and artistic collaborator on The Grail, Lloyd Canning, got a fantastic four-page spread in this month's Cotswold and Vale Magazine, including (as you can see) the cover shot. Lloyd's amazing images really came out well in the magazine, and The Grail got a good mention (as well as my Who Killed William Shakespeare?), which means that we're all very chuffed. A hearty CONGRATS to Lloyd for the well-earned and much-deserved publicity.
I'll try to post another update very soon. I promise.
Thursday, 12 June 2014
Call Ye Midwife
More from the wonderful world of Davenant research.
Liza Picard's book on Restoration London is a witty little treasure trove of stuff. The book describes "Everyday Life in London 1660-1670" and it does so beautifully. I was particularly struck by the section on the Medical Risks of Birth and Infancy.
Midwives, it seems, were generally in a hurry to get to their next patient. If the mother's waters hadn't broken, the midwife wasn't going to hang around. A specially sharpened fingernail, or the sharp edge of a coin, would slit the amniotic sac, and then the baby would be yanked out.
Such was the hurry that the midwife would be unlikely to wait for the afterbirth to be expelled. That, too, would be grabbed and pulled out.
Midwifery was a pretty good way of killing baby and mother. Bacteria would be transferred from one mother to another by the midwife who had just tugged baby and the afterbirth out of one womb before moving on to the next.
Liza Picard's book on Restoration London is a witty little treasure trove of stuff. The book describes "Everyday Life in London 1660-1670" and it does so beautifully. I was particularly struck by the section on the Medical Risks of Birth and Infancy.
Midwives, it seems, were generally in a hurry to get to their next patient. If the mother's waters hadn't broken, the midwife wasn't going to hang around. A specially sharpened fingernail, or the sharp edge of a coin, would slit the amniotic sac, and then the baby would be yanked out.
Such was the hurry that the midwife would be unlikely to wait for the afterbirth to be expelled. That, too, would be grabbed and pulled out.
Midwifery was a pretty good way of killing baby and mother. Bacteria would be transferred from one mother to another by the midwife who had just tugged baby and the afterbirth out of one womb before moving on to the next.
The skull in the crypt at Beoley Church, which I suggest in Who Killed William Shakespeare? was Shakespeare's, is rather interesting in this respect. There is an oval depression, mid-brow, near the top of the frontal bone. Heading down the left side of the temple, the skull is uneven, with a ridge sloping down across the brow and slight depressions on either side of it.
These features - the oval depression and the ridge - are visible in portraits of Shakespeare. The "missing link" between the skull (which disappeared) and the portraits is almost certainly the "Death Mask of Shakespeare" in Darmstadt Castle:
The depression and ridge are present on the death mask (dated 1616, the year of Shakespeare's death), and since this was probably the model for most of the portraits, we see the same features in some of the more familiar images of Shakespeare. They are present, for example, in the Cobbe portrait:
And, indeed, in the Wadlow portrait:
And on others. These distinguishing features, along with other "defects" visible on the face, are what I now look for in order to determine whether or not an image of Shakespeare s genuine.
In Who Killed William Shakespeare? I focussed on the very noticeable depression high up in the middle of the forehead. It can be seen very clearly on the Shakespeare bust in his funerary monument in Stratford Church:
In the well known Chandos portrait in the National Portrait Gallery:
And on the Davenant bust of Shakespeare at the Garrick Club:
Among others.
But by focusing on that depression as one of the key indicators that the portraits were based on the death mask, and the death mask replicates the actual face of the man whose skull is in the crypt at Beoley, I neglected to consider the ridge and grooves to the side of the main depression.
I concluded - wrongly, I fear - that the depression was a sunken fontanelle, caused by malnutrition or dehydration in early childhood.
I now suspect, and I made the point in the paper on The Faces of Shakespeare, which I gave at Goldsmiths, University of London, a couple of months ago, that the depression near the top of the frontal bone and the ridge and grooves beside it are connected. They are finger marks.
I had begun to think that the midwife had grasped his skull with her left hand during the delivery. Her thumb had impressed itself into the soft bone of his cranium, and her first two fingers left their marks alongside. The pattern of the depressions indicates that she gripped his skull a bit too tightly. When the bones of his skull hardened, the finger marks remained; indeed, it may be that their presence caused the coronal suture to fuse a little oddly, leaving a sort of raised wiggly line running up from the sides of his head.
The description of midwifery practices given by Liza Picard in her book on Restoration London confirms the possibility, at least, that Shakespeare might have been forced out of his mother's womb by an over-enthusiastic or impatient midwife. I've argued elsewhere on the blog that Shakespeare wasn't a very tall man (which is why his skull seems "undersized"), and it may be that he was from his mother's womb "untimely ripped".
Quite simply, he wasn't ready. But maybe the midwife had been called because the mother's health was at risk. Or he was believed to be due.
Perhaps the woman nicked the sac with her jagged fingernail, reached in, gripped the skull with her left hand (the right hand underneath) and pulled. There is no reason to assume that the midwifery profession had changed very much in the hundred years separating Restoration London from Elizabethan Stratford.
Shakespeare bore the marks of the midwife's fingers all through his life. And they are still visible - on his portraits, on the busts, on the death mask ... and on the skull at Beoley.
Monday, 24 March 2014
Revealing Shakespeare
Last Thursday (20 March) I gave a paper at Goldsmiths College, University of London. The subject was "The Faces of Shakespeare". And I enjoyed it immensely.
Here's how the Goldsmiths website reported one of the key elements of the talk: the unveiling of the newly-discovered "Wadlow" portrait.
Here's how the Goldsmiths website reported one of the key elements of the talk: the unveiling of the newly-discovered "Wadlow" portrait.
Saturday, 15 March 2014
White Lady, Dark Lady
Sorry. I've been a terrible blogger. But I haven't been idle.
Last month, the excellent History Vault website published my article about Shakespeare's White Lady.
This month, the follow-up piece has just been posted. So, with thanks to The History Vault, I'm proud to bring you ...
The Dark Lady!
And let's not forget my illustrated talk coming up at Goldsmiths, University of London, this week, about The Faces of Shakespeare. Believe me, there's some interesting (and maybe even startling) material in this, so if you happen to be in London on the evening of Thursday, 20 March, why not come along? It's free.
If you can't make it, I'll let you know how it went.
Last month, the excellent History Vault website published my article about Shakespeare's White Lady.
This month, the follow-up piece has just been posted. So, with thanks to The History Vault, I'm proud to bring you ...
The Dark Lady!
And let's not forget my illustrated talk coming up at Goldsmiths, University of London, this week, about The Faces of Shakespeare. Believe me, there's some interesting (and maybe even startling) material in this, so if you happen to be in London on the evening of Thursday, 20 March, why not come along? It's free.
If you can't make it, I'll let you know how it went.
Tuesday, 11 February 2014
Reviews, News, Interviews
Today, we're playing catch up. Or archiving, if you prefer.
First, some news. I have a couple of talks booked for the near future.
The first will take place at Goldsmiths, University of London, on 20 March and is entitled The Faces of Shakespeare: Revealing Shakespeare's Life and Death Through Portraits and Other Objects - should be an interesting one, as I expect to unveil a "new" portrait of William Shakespeare, and it's free to attend! So, if you're in the area ...
After that, I have an appearance at Stratford Literary Festival on 29 April. Not free to attend, that one, but for a mere £8 you get me talking about Who Killed William Shakespeare?, plus tea and cake! It'll be just days after the 450th anniversary of Shakespeare's birth.
I've also had a couple of interviews published online lately: one with the lovely Stephanie Moore Hopkins for her Layered Pages blog, the other for Paula Lofting, tireless mastermind of the Review Group blog (Simon Stirling Discusses the Mysteries of Shakespeare).
But that's not all! I've also been indulging in a bit of book reviewing myself. So, for your information and/or delectation:
My review of Keane's Company by Iain Gale for the fantastic Historical Honey website can be found here.
My review of Nancy Jardine's The Beltane Choice for the Review Group can be found here.
And finally, my affectionate tribute to Richard Findlater's lovely old theatrical biography of Grimaldi, King of Clowns can be read here.
Plenty more of that sort of thing to come, folks, and I'll do my damnedest to keep you posted about it all. Meanwhile, in other news, I'm now on Twitter - @WhoKilledWill.
Onwards and upwards ...
First, some news. I have a couple of talks booked for the near future.
The first will take place at Goldsmiths, University of London, on 20 March and is entitled The Faces of Shakespeare: Revealing Shakespeare's Life and Death Through Portraits and Other Objects - should be an interesting one, as I expect to unveil a "new" portrait of William Shakespeare, and it's free to attend! So, if you're in the area ...
After that, I have an appearance at Stratford Literary Festival on 29 April. Not free to attend, that one, but for a mere £8 you get me talking about Who Killed William Shakespeare?, plus tea and cake! It'll be just days after the 450th anniversary of Shakespeare's birth.
I've also had a couple of interviews published online lately: one with the lovely Stephanie Moore Hopkins for her Layered Pages blog, the other for Paula Lofting, tireless mastermind of the Review Group blog (Simon Stirling Discusses the Mysteries of Shakespeare).
But that's not all! I've also been indulging in a bit of book reviewing myself. So, for your information and/or delectation:
My review of Keane's Company by Iain Gale for the fantastic Historical Honey website can be found here.
My review of Nancy Jardine's The Beltane Choice for the Review Group can be found here.
And finally, my affectionate tribute to Richard Findlater's lovely old theatrical biography of Grimaldi, King of Clowns can be read here.
Plenty more of that sort of thing to come, folks, and I'll do my damnedest to keep you posted about it all. Meanwhile, in other news, I'm now on Twitter - @WhoKilledWill.
Onwards and upwards ...
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