RGSSALibraryCatalogue

RGSSALibraryCatalogue
RGSSA Library Catalogue

Thursday, 20 September 2012

From Russia with Love


FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE

 We have been rather at a loss at the RGSSA these last few weeks as our dear Librarian, Kevin Griffin, is very ill. He has done a tremendous lot of work, both in managing the library on a day-to-day basis and in curating and setting up the exhibitions. It will be very hard to fill his shoes. Volunteers are rallying round and we had a good turnout at the recent meeting of the Library Committee. Special thanks are due to Jenny, Alan, and our new volunteer, Janet, who are helping with the shelf tidying and shelving.

 I hadn't managed to prepare anything for the blog this month but the Society's President, Rod Shearing, who is being a tower of strength all round, has written a contribution on Russia for it. Coincidentally, we did have an online contact from Russia back at the beginning of the year (very exciting!), but although our webmaster asked around I don’t think anybody knew how to say "Happy New Year" in Russian.

Rod writes:

Geographical News - From Russia with Love

We recently received a postcard from our Secretary, Paul Hayes, who has recently travelled through Russia (Siberia) to Moscow and then through Spain and Italy. Paul noticed a building in Irkutsk that was a part of the East Siberian Branch of the Russian Geographical Society. During the Communist putsches of the 1930’s and 40’s the Branch probably closed. At that time the Communist Party seemed to think the Geographical Society was too concerned with ‘environmental’ issues and not collective farming issues. ( http://int.rgo.ru/about/ )


Through Wikipedia we read that the Siberian branch of the Russian Geographical Society was founded in the 1850’s in Irkutsk, and afterwards became a permanent centre for the exploration of Siberia; while the opening of the Amur and Sakhalin attracted Richard Maack, Schmidt, Glehn, Gustav Radde, and Leopold von Schrenck, who created works on the flora, fauna, and inhabitants of Siberia.

The scientific exploration of Siberia, commenced in the period of 1720 to 1742 by Daniel Gottlieb Messerschmidt, Johann Georg Gmelin, and Louis de l'Isle de la Croyere, was followed up by Gerhardt Friedrich Müller, Fischer, and Johann Gottlieb Georgi. Peter Simon Pallas, with several Russian students, laid the first foundation of a thorough exploration of the topography, fauna, flora, and inhabitants of the country. The journeys of Christopher Hansteen and Georg Adolf Erman were the most important step in the exploration of the territory. Alexander von Humboldt, Christian Gottfried Ehrenberg, and Gustav Rose also paid short visits to Siberia.


The Russian Geographical Society is the oldest scientific organization in Russia that has been uniting professional geographers and other scientists, public figures and geography buffs since 1845. See more through http://int.rgo.ru/about/ 

Our Society has around 90 references to Russia through its collections dating from 1699, including 11 titles by A von Humboldt dating from 1850.

The pictures show the ornate building in Irkutsk and an 1886 scene crossing the Angara river at Irkutsk.

Rod's notes have inspired me to have a look in the catalogue, so here is just a sampling of the Russia-related titles, some expectable but some rather surprising, in the library of the Royal Geographical Society of South Australia.

A very early English experience of Russia is chronicled in the "English reprints" edition of this little 1590 work:

Webbe, Edward, b. 1553 or 4
Edward Webbe, chief master gunner, his trauailes. 1590. London : A. Murray & Son, 1868.

In a time when Queen Elizabeth I was on the throne and England did not rule the waves of the so-called known world, but Spain and the Turkish Ottoman Empire did, the 12-year-old Edward Webbe's father placed him in the service of Captain Anthony Jenkinson, England's ambassador to Russia, who sailed from England in 1566. Webbe's little book recounts in simple, direct, everyday language the story of his adventures abroad, his observations of how the foreigners he saw lived and behaved, and his long years as a galley slave: as he puts it, the "extreme slavery sustained many years together, in the galleys and wars of the Great Turk against the lands of Persia, Tartaria, Spain, and Portugal." The reprint edition reproduces the Elizabethan spelling of the original, but it is still quite readable.



Another venture to Russia, a century later, is one of the most mysterious works in the collection:

Foy de la Neuville.
An account of Muscovy : as it was in the year 1689. In which the troubles that happen'd in that empire from the present Czar Peter's election to the throne, to his being firmly settled in it, are particularly related. With a character of him, and his people. By Monsieur de la Neuville, then residing at Moscow. London : printed for Edward Castle, 1699.

"Foy de la Neuville is the mysterious author of 'Relation curieuse de la Moscovie', a late seventeen-hundreds account of a foreign traveler's trek to Russia. Almost nothing is known about this author, not even his real name. His reasons for traveling to Muscovy are also not known with certainty. It is speculated that he may have been a Polish diplomat assigned to Russia." His book decribes Foy de la Neuville's "visit to Russia in the Winter months of 1689. The writing shows that he clearly had access to the Russian government and its officials at high levels. It has been at times suggested that he never actually visited Russia..." Some of his stories may be taken from other writers or simply made up, but "it is clear that even more are not. His travels to Russia in service of the king of Poland are well documented." He has been identified as another writer, Adrien Baillet, but this has been disproved. (Source: "Foy de la Neuville", Wikipedia)

Direct from Russia, 1823, is the catalogue of maps, nautical charts and manuscripts from the library of Prince Aleksandr Lobanov-Rostovskii (variously known in the literature as Prince Alexandre/Alexander Labanoff, Prince Alexandre Labanoff de Rostoff, Fürst Alexander Lobanow Rostowsky, or, as here, le prince Alexandre Labanoff de Rostoff):


Lobanov-Rostovskii, Aleksandr IAkovlevich, kniaz, 1788-1866.
Catalogue des cartes géographiques, topographiques & marines, de la bibliothèque du prince Alexandre Labanoff de Rostoff, à Saint  Pétersbourg :  Suivi d'une notice de manuscripts. Paris : Typ. de Firmin Didot, 1823.

Look out! A Russian spy is out and about at RGSSA!

Nikolaevskii, Boris Ivanovich.
Aseff : the Russian Judas / by Boris Nicolaievsky ;  translated from the Russian by George Reavey ; with 16 illustrations. London : Hurst & Blackett, [1934.
Evno (or Yevno) Fishelevich Azef (variously Aseff, Azev), 1869-1918, was "a Russian socialist revolutionary who was also a double agent working both as an organizer of assassinations for the Socialist-Revolutionary Party (also known as SRs or Esers) and a police spy for the Okhrana, the Imperial secret police." One might have expected him to meet a horrid fate, as his whole adult life seems to have been one of trickery and deception interspersed with assassination (including that of the Tsar's uncle, the Grand Duke Sergius Alexandrovich, in 1905). However, though he was in prison during the First World War it was merely as an enemy alien, in Germany, and far from being put against a wall as he richly deserved, he died of kidney disease shortly thereafter. (Source: "Yevno Azef", Wikipedia)


Two intrepid ladies in Russia, spanning two centuries:


Craven, Elizabeth Craven, Baroness, 1750-1828
A journey through the Crimea to Constantinople. : In a series of  letters from the Right Honourable Elizabeth Lady Craven, to His Serene Highnesse the Margrave of  Brandebourg, Anspach, and Bareith. Written in the year  MDCCLXXXVI. Dublin : printed for H. Chamberlaine, R. Moncrieffe, W. Colles, G. Burnet, W. Wilson, L. White, P. Byrne, P. Wogan, H. Colbert, J. Moore, J. Jones, and B. Dornin, 1789.

Elizabeth, Lady Craven, was later the Margravine of Ansbach, so the letters are that much more interesting on account of it!

Portrait of Lady Craven by George Romney
Elizabeth Craven, a daughter of the Earl of Berkeley, was born to the purple, but her life was certainly not the conventional one of a proper English lady of the 18th century. She was a talented woman who wrote, in addition to her letters and travel works, a number of musical works and light works for the stage. In her day she was not best known for her talents, however. "Her life was full of scandal". She was married for thirteen years to William Craven, 6th Baron Craven. They had six children, but after "affairs reported on both sides," separated in 1780. In those days divorce was extremely difficult in Britain, one had to get an Act of Parliament passed, which apparently was a very expensive business. The Cravens did not divorce: instead Elizabeth went abroad, where "she maintained a romantic relationship with Alexander, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach and Bayreuth" - yes, the addressee of her letters. In 1791 both his wife and Lady Craven's husband died, and Elizabeth was able to marry the Margrave. They then settled in England, where she was generally known as the Margravine, in spite of the fact that Germanic law in fact forbade her the title - which also meant she could not be received at Court by her husband's cousin, King George III. Many proper persons shunned her, but this did not stop her and the Margrave living "a full and opulent life". They had a house in Hammersmith, London, and a country place, Benham Park, at Speen in Berkshire. He died in 1806, and Elizabeth returned to the Continent, to live in Naples at the lovely Craven Villa in Posillipo. She died there in 1828 and was buried in the English Cemetery. (Source: "Elizabeth Craven", Wikipedia)


Marsden, Kate, 1859-1931
On sledge and horseback to outcast Siberian lepers / by Kate Marsden ; Illustrated from photographs and drawings. London : Record Press, [1892?]

"While serving as a nurse in Bulgaria, Kate Marsden saw firsthand the horrors of leprosy--and determined to journey to the leper colonies of Yakutsk, 2,000 miles across the Siberian wastes. Armed with the patronage of both Queen Victoria and the Russian Czarina, she strode forth. With passion and wit, this extraordinary Victorian lady recounts the amazing story of her search for the lepers and for an elusive remedial herb." (Publisher's description, "On sledge and horseback to outcast Siberian lepers / Kate Marsden ; with an introduction by Eric Newby", London, Phoenix, 2001)


Siberia is well represented in the collection. British relations with Russia were hardly at their peak during the 19th century but nevertheless we have a range of British publications that were written by travellers to Siberia throughout the century; these are just a couple:


A trip taken in the 1820s:

Cochrane, John Dundas, 1780-1825.
Narrative of a pedestrian journey through Russia and  Siberian Tartary, from the frontiers of China to the frozen sea and Kamtchatka; performed during the years 1820, 1821, 1822, and 1823 by Capt. John Dundas Cochrane. London : John Murray, 1824.

Another trip, thirty years later:

Atkinson, Thomas Witlam, 1799-1861.
Oriental and western Siberia : a narrative of seven years' explorations and adventures in Siberia, Mongolia, the Kirghis Steppes, Chinese Tartary, and part of central Asia Oriental and western Siberia and Chinese Tartary. London : Hurst and Blackett, 1858.

And to return to the subject of Irkutsk, which the Trans-Siberian Railway reached in 1898, in the pamphlet collection we have:

The Great Siberian Railway / edited by the Chancery of the Committee of Members. St. Petersburg : Govt. Printing Office 1901.


Above, a train on the Trans-Siberian Railway, between Perm and Ekaterinburg, circa 1910. (A very early coloured photograph; the original is in the Library of Congress.) Below, map of section of the railway showing position of Irkutsk, far right:

--
This post was researched and created by Kathy Boyes 

Wednesday, 15 August 2012

Happy Birthday Julia Child (RGGSA Books on Food & Cookery)


Happy Birthday, Julia Child


It was one of those circular email letters: the ones that come from lovely websites that you sign up to in a moment of enthusiasm... Usually these messages from Epicurious (http://www.epicurious.com/ ) are about gorgeous recipes that are far too complicated for me and that I can’t afford the ingredients for anyway. This one got my attention, though: advertising the fact that August 15th 2012 is the centenary of the birth of Julia Child. She was the greatest cooking guru ever - nothing like the self-proclaimed experts we get on TV these days. A lady who had standards. She was one of the first writers to reveal classic French cooking to the English-speaking public. Her recipes are real cuisine, not those icky, much-handled little piles that posh nosh places serve up today. She’s a household name in America, where she grew up, and there’s a recent film about her life: Julie & Julia. It's also about a blogger who cooked her way to sanity, and incidentally fame and fortune, by working her way through Julia Child’s classic cookbook, Mastering the Art of French Cooking. Meryl Streep plays Julia. I'm not wholly a fan, but she’s excellent. And it was the blogger’s story that encouraged me to have a go at blogging, so I've got to celebrate the anniversary! No way can I devise a cake recipe to Julia’s standards, as Epicurious suggests, so instead, here are some of the food-related gems I've found in the RGSSA’s catalogue.

The Art of Living in Australia?
I've no idea why the Royal Geographical Society of South Australia has this treasure - possibly someone was misled by its title. It’s not a sociological study, or an “immigrants’ manual” (a popular genre of the time), it's a cookbook! In fact, one of my favourite early Colonial examples of the type; I knew it long before I found out the RGSSA holds it:
Muskett, Philip E. and Wicken, H., Mrs
The art of living in Australia / by Philip E. Muskett ; together with three hundred Australian cookery recipes and accessory kitchen information by Mrs. H. Wicken. London : Eyre and Spottiswoode, [1894]
You can download a copy from Project Gutenberg: http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/4219. Today, although that was not its purpose, it does gives us an interesting picture of the habits and commonplaces of the Australian way of life at the period. It’s fascinating to see which dishes have survived well into the later 20th century and even until now – though in some cases as commercial products rather than good home cooking – and which have fallen by the wayside. Like all the cookery books of its period it relies heavily on those that went before it, and so we can see the influence of Mrs Beeton, but without all her table embellishments. It is determinedly middle-class, as the cookbooks of the period were: if all housewives were still not expected to do their own cooking, in the colonies many did, and at the least they were closely involved in supervising the kitchen. The recipes are for the most part quite practical, and still useable today. Mrs Wicken’s approach, in fact, is in strong contrast to the pompous, dictatorial and sometimes hectoring tones of Dr Muskett! Post-Mrs Beeton most cookbooks in English were written by women, and he only tells us what to think about food, not how to cook it. Here he is on “Abuse of tea by the gentler sex”:
“The gentler sex are greatly given to extravagant tea-drinking, exceeding all bounds of moderation in this respect. Many of them, moreover, live absolutely on nothing else but tea and bread and butter. What wonder, then, that they grow pale and bloodless; that their muscles turn soft and flabby; that their nervous system becomes shattered; and that they suffer the agonies of indigestion? Their favourite time for a chat and the consumption of tea is at any period between ten o'clock in the morning and three in the afternoon. Now, if there is anything of which I am certain, it is that tea in the middle of the day, say from ten o'clock to three, is a deadly destructive fluid.”

Ladies ready for tea in Australia, 1880-1890
(From an original photo in the State Library of Queensland)
Muskett isn’t wholly opposed to tea drinking: he does allow it to be drunk judiciously: ”It should rather be looked upon as a delicate fluid to be imbibed only in very small quantities.”

Afternoon Tea & The Alien Corn
Amazingly, two recipes for teacakes got past Dr Muskett! Well done, Mrs W.! Or did the good doctor perhaps fancy a plate of buttered teacakes, himself? These two demonstrate an interesting stage in the history of the teacake in Australasia. One version, which Mrs Wicken attributes to Yorkshire, rather than giving it as her basic teacake recipe, resembles the traditional English teacakes. Teacakes (earlier “tea-cakes” or “tea cakes”) were originally small muffin- or crumpet-like flattish yeast cakes, meant to be served hot, buttered. The classic recipe, as given by Mrs Beeton, is a yeast dough without dried fruit, though she offers the addition of currants as an alternative. Later versions usually incorporated dried fruit, and with the introduction of baking powder, used it or self-raising flour. They were an afternoon tea dish: never mind old Muskett’s objections, the habit was already well established here! This is Mrs Wicken’s basic version:
Tea Cake
1 lb. Flour--2d.                                        1/2 pint Milk--1d.
2 oz. Butter--1 1/2d.                               1 Egg--1d.
2 teaspoonsful Baking Powder            1 teaspoonful Sugar--1 1/2d.
Total Cost--7d.                                       Time--20 Minutes.
Rub the butter into the flour, stir in the sugar and baking powder. Beat up the egg and milk, and mix the dry ingredients into a dough with them; divide into two pieces and form each into a flat cake. Cut lightly across into four with a knife, put on to a buttered tin, and bake twenty minutes. Cut open, butter, and serve.
(Mrs Beeton also says you eat teacakes fresh, hot, but adds: “but, when stale, they are very nice split and toasted.”)

Keen cooks still sometimes make their own teacakes:
they usually seem to be eaten toasted today
Unlike scones, these plain teacakes have not survived into the standard modern repertoire, though similar recipes (often not nearly so clearly written) would reappear in the unspecialised books until about 1950. We can see that baking powder - much more convenient and less time-consuming to use - has replaced the traditional yeast, here. It had already come in in Mrs Beeton's time, just over 30 years earlier, but her recipe still uses yeast. Over the next few years teacakes became sweeter. Their place has largely been taken today in Australasian cuisine by sweet American muffins, which are readily available commercially.

The foundation of all baking at the time The Art of living in Australia was written was, of course, white flour. Australia had been producing wheat since the early days of European settlement: there are several items in the RGSSA’s collection on wheat growing and milling, including a curious little offering by F.B. Guthrie from the Agricultural gazette of New South Wales, 1901: 28 pages on  The history of a grain of wheat.

The Goddess Pomona
Pomona was the Roman goddess of fruit trees. She had lots of suitors, so the story runs, including Pan. It was Vertumnus who seems to have been most desperate to win the luscious lady, wooing her disguised as a reaper, a grape grower, a fisherman, and a soldier, none of which worked, which when you think about it, they wouldn’t! He finally dressed up as an old woman and talked her into accepting him in his proper form: the god of gardens and changing seasons. Well, you can see that that might ring a bell with the fruit goddess. A remarkable early fruit-related item in RGSSA’s collection, a real hymn to Pomona, is:
Langley, Batty, 1696-1751.
Pomona, or, The fruit-garden illustrated. : Containing sure methods for improving all the best known kinds of fruits now extant in England. Calculated from great variety of experiments made in all kinds of soils and aspects. Wherein the manner of raising young stocks, grafting, inoculating, planting, &c. are clearly and fully demonstrated ... London : Printed for G. Strahan; R. Gosling, W. Mears, F. Clay, D. Browne, B. Motte, and L. Gilliver; J. Stagg; J. Osborn; and C. Davis, 1729.

Pomona, Plate XVIII (Some cherry varieties)
Batty Langley (he was named for a family friend, poor guy!) was an eminent English architect of the period when the Classical influence was all the rage and they were all competing in the Palladian stakes to outdo Palladio himself. Most of his published works contain detailed illustrations of the most monumental kind, including one effort which tells you how to de-Gothic your genuine Gothic architecture! Help! One gets the impression from those very grand tomes that he must have been one of the greatest stuffed-shirts that ever walked, but actually, this volume on fruit growing gives one pause: maybe he was a keen gardener as well, and, if undoubtedly carried away by the glories of Classical architecture, did a lot of what he did in order to please his noble clients. Well, I like to think so. His Pomona, unlike his architecture, is not Classical or grandiose. The plates have got rather dark over the years but they're still lovely. I think he really did love gardening and especially raising fruit. Though only the richest of his noble clients would have managed to raise table grapes in England!
"Black Esperione Grape". Plate XLV from Pomona
The name “Pomona” derives from the Latin pomum, meaning apple or fruit: it is also the root of the French word for apple, pomme. Mrs Wicken’s nicest recipe using apples is:
Apple Fritters
3 Apples--2d.                                         Frying Batter--1d.
Hot Fat; Sugar;                                       Lemon--1d.
Total Cost--4d.                                       Time--5 Minutes.
Peel and slice up the apples into rounds, take out the core with a small round cutter. Make frying batter by directions given elsewhere, and flavour with lemon juice.
Dip in the pieces of apple, plunge into plenty of hot fat, and fry till a good colour. Drain on kitchen paper, pile high on a dish, and sprinkle well with sugar; serve very hot.


Frying Batter
1/4 lb. Flour--1/2d.                                 1/2 gill Tepid Water
White of Egg                                          1 dessertspoonful Oil--1d.
Total Cost--1 1/2d.                                 Time--5 Minutes.
Sift the flour into a basin, pour over it the oil, then the water, and beat into a smooth batter; stand away for an hour, if possible in a cool place. Whip the white of the egg to a stiff froth, and stir it in, and it is ready to use. This batter is useful for fritters and many dishes both sweet and savoury.
If you're growing apples, watch out for the BLACK SPOT!!! Truly: this must prove it:
Crawford, Frazer S. (Frazer Smith), d. 1890.
Report on the Fusicladiums (Black spot, scab and mildew diseases) : the Codlin Moth, and certain other fungus and insect pests attacking apple and pear trees in South Australia. Adelaide : Published by direction of the Hon. Commissioner of Crown Lands, 1886.
Did someone feel we ought to collect all South Australiana? We do have a large collection, yes, but most of it relates to the early explorers. ...That “Codlin Moth” sounds threatening, too (those caps are not mine, no idea who catalogued it). Shades of “Mothu” in that early post-Hiroshima Japanese horror movie.

“And is there honey still for tea?”


Purchas, Samuel, d. ca. 1658.
A theatre of politicall flying-insects : Wherein especially the nature, the worth, the work, the wonder, and the manner of right-ordering of the bee, is discovered and described. Together with discourses, historical, and observations physical concerning them. And in a second part are annexed meditations, and observations theological and moral, in three centuries upon that subject. London : printed by R.I. for Thomas Parkhurst, 1657.
Don’t get over-excited, all you geographical-historical experts out there: This is not the Samuel Purchas of "Hakluytus posthumus" or "Purchas his pilgrims" fame. This Purchas is remembered precisely for this early work on bees. I haven't been able to find out anything about him except that his book describes him as “pastor of Sutton in Essex”.

Mrs Wicken doesn't seem to use honey in her recipes, perhaps because it was still regarded as merely a spread. In fact, a few years later in 1900 we find F.B. Guthrie (again), feeling the need to advocate it as a food in an odd little 7-page pamphlet, the N.S.W Dept. of Agriculture’s Miscellaneous publication no. 386: Honey as food. Dr Muskett certainly mentions it as a spread when he has a go at the Australian breakfast:
    “...the monotony of the ordinary breakfast is almost proverbial. With regard to the average household it is a matter of deep conjecture as to what most people would do if a prohibition were placed upon chops, steak, and sausages for breakfast. If such an awful calamity happened, many the father of a family would have to put up with scanty fare. It is very much to be feared that the inability to conceive of something more original for the morning meal than the eternal trio referred to is a melancholy reproach to the housekeeping capabilities of many. To read an account of a highland [i.e. Scottish] breakfast, in contradistinction to this paucity of comestibles, is to make one almost pensive. The description of the snowy tablecloth, the generously loaded table, the delicious smell of the scones and honey, the marmalade, the different cakes, the fish, the bacon, and the toast, is enough to create a desire to dwell there for a very prolonged period. However, revenons à nos moutons; this has been adverted to, not so much with the idea of urging people to copy such an example, because expense would render it an impossibility, but to try and awaken a determination to make more variety at the breakfast table.”
He wasn’t criticising the deleterious affect on the cholesterol count, because his next para is an encomium of saturated fats, in particular butter. Ice should be cheaper so that even the “mass of the people” can afford a “very small and suitable ice chest” to store their butter in.


He goes on: “Not only is this fatty breakfast a necessary feature in the diet of everybody, particularly of the young and growing population, but it is likewise a most important matter with all brain workers. If the business or professional man can put in a liberal breakfast, consisting largely of butter, fat bacon or ham, he can go on all day with a feeling of energy and buoyancy. It is in this aversion to fatty matter, in any shape or form, that the bilious and dyspeptic are so fearfully handicapped.” Times have changed, all right: of late years Julia Child has been criticised for using butter and cream. But human nature doesn't change with the fads: the dietary-conscious were just as manic in the late 19th century as they are today!

And Revenons à nos moutons

Merino sheep from Lydekker's The sheep and its cousins
Sheep form an important, nay dominant, motif in the earlier agricultural literature of Australia, but most of the works we hold seem to relate to the wool industry rather than the food side. Quite possibly the meat was taken so much for granted that it wasn’t worth mentioning. Those breakfast chops that Muskett criticises would undoubtedly have been sheep meat. But they would have been mutton, not lamb: our modern lamb wasn't common until the post-war period, according to my friend Max, who grew up before World War II. A couple of the RGSSA’s books on sheep are: Australian sheep husbandry : a handbook of the breeding and treatment of sheep and station management. With concise instructions for tank and well-sinking, fencing, dam-making &c., by Albert Stapleton Armstrong and G. Ord Campbell. (Melbourne : G. Robertson, 1882);

"Novel wire strainer" from Australian sheep husbandry
and: Our wool staple, or, A history of squatting in South Australia, by W.R.L. (Adelaide : John Howell, 1865). The latter is only 44 pages, but it's interesting that a history should already be being written and that the word “squatting” was already in use.

19th century non-fiction was characterised, it seems to me, by the compendious work. Everything that could be said on a subject was said. And everything had to be understood in its place in the scheme of things. The 18th century is traditionally seen as the age of the great classifiers, taxonomists, if you like, such as Linnaeus, but I've always felt that the trait was even more pronounced in the 19th. Possibly even Darwin is symptomatic, but I'm not talking about him so much as the men like Melvil Dewey, the obsessive inventor of the Dewey Decimal Classification scheme that’s been the curse of libraries ever since. (Now I come to think about it, Mrs Beeton’s The book of household management (1861), is an example of the syndrome, and so is her hubby’s work that the RGSSA holds: Beeton's dictionary of universal information : comprising geography, history, biography, mythology, Bible knowledge, chronology, with the pronunciation of every proper name (1859); presumably the pair of them had their heads down at their desks all day!) A terrific amount was published during the 19th and early 20th centuries in the animal husbandry area attempting to describe all the members of whatever-it-was fully, and sheep are no exception. We’ve got Richard Lydekker’s The sheep and its cousins (London, Allen, 1912) “with 61 illustrations”, which is a prime example of the type. I mentioned him in the last posting, on lizards. He wasn’t into animal husbandry himself, he was an eminent English naturalist.

Some more sheep breeds from The sheep and its cousins
An earlier compendious work, which includes practical advice on sheep husbandry, was doubtless the sort of book that was brought out to the colonies by the optimistic English settlers: 
Youatt, William, 1776-1847.
Sheep : their breeds, management, and diseases ; to which is added, The mountain shepherd's manual. London : Baldwin and Cradock, 1837. (Library  of useful knowledge)
I hope they did find it useful. That “mountain” bit doesn't augur well – oh, dear.

Mrs Wicken has a lot of recipes for mutton, including many for “chops”, meat unstated. She doesn't have to specify “mutton”: everybody would have known that was what she meant. Recipes for larger cuts are also given. The following is a fairly typical recipe for a time when in many households the fire was lit in the morning and the oven was on all day. It very clearly derives from Mrs Beeton’s 1861 recipe of the same name: there is little difference except that she used bacon instead of ham. Her total cost was 5 shillings, a lot more than Mrs Wicken’s! Does this reflect the ubiquitous presence of sheep in the colonies?
Braised Leg of Mutton


1 Leg of Mutton--1s. 3d.                        1 Rasher of Ham--2d.
1 fagot of Herbs; 20 Peppercorns--1/2d.
1 1/2 oz. Butter--1d.
2 Carrots; 1 Turnip; 1 Onion; 1 quart Stock--1d.
Total Cost--1s. 7 1/2d.                          Time--Four Hours.
Put the butter into a saucepan, and when it is dissolved put in the mutton and brown it all over; then lay the ham and vegetables round it, pour in the stock, and bring it to the boil. Cover down closely, and stand the saucepan in a moderate oven where it will cook slowly. If the braising is being done by a coal fire the lid of the stewpan may be reversed and some hot coals placed in it; these will want renewing from time to time. In any case cook very slowly, then dish the meat, strain the gravy, remove the fat carefully, and boil to a sort of half glaze; pour round the dish, serve with julienne or plain vegetables.

Taming the Savage Beasts
Of course to get ’em on the tables of the nation, you had to get them out here and get them to thrive. Colonial literature is thus full of works on “acclimatisation” –bringing alien plants and animals out to a country which is almost wholly unsuitable for them and expecting them to thrive. No wonder the farmers still complain about droughts and floods. We’ve got umpteen reports of the various societies involved (“Acclimatisation Society” in Victoria and New South Wales; “Acclimatization Society” in South Australia). Everything that walked or grew and could be eaten was pretty well covered by these societies and the many other advocates of the practice: here’s just one on plants, by one of the better-known names:
Mueller, Ferdinand von, 1825-1896.
Select extra-tropical plants, readily eligible for industrial culture or naturalisation, with indications of their native countries and some of their uses. New South Wales ed. (enl.). Sydney : T. Richards, Govt. Printer, 1881.
It's another compendious work: over 400 pages.

In case you were in doubt as to what you might raise out here in the way of meat-bearing animals, P.L. Simmonds was on the job, too, with his The animal food resources of different nations : with  mention of some of the special dainties of various people derived from the animal kingdom (London : Spon, 1885). It’s over 400 pages, as well!

“There’s nothing for it, chaps, we’ll have to eat the camels.”
It wasn't funny at the time, of course. Warburton’s party of explorers nearly died in Central Australia. We have several publications relating to the expedition; this is his own account, published in London:
Warburton, Peter Egerton, 1813-1889.
Journey across the western interior of Australia. London : Sampson Low, 1875.
In 1872 Warburton was commissioned to lead an expedition across the Great Sandy Desert in the interior of Australia. They had 17 camels and enough supplies for six months. They left Alice Springs in April 1873: it was no longer full summer but in the Outback it was still searingly hot, with drought conditions. Food ran out and they had to eat some of the camels. Warburton got out, but he was blind in one eye and too weak to walk; it was thanks to his Aboriginal companion Charley that he survived this first crossing from the centre of Australia to the west.

When in Doubt, Hang the Cook!
If food can save your life, it can also be a weapon. This final work is one of the very many that the Royal Geographical Society of South Australia holds which document the story of the British in India; I've mentioned some of them in a previous blog. This book tells the story of “Nikal Seyn”, one of the most colourful characters of the period – and there were quite a few of them!
Trotter, Lionel J. (Lionel James), 1827-1912.
The life of John Nicholson : soldier and administrator, based on private and hitherto unpublished documents. London : T. Nelson, [1908]
Nicholson was an Army officer of the East India Company who rose to be a brigadier-general – a rise due solely to his capabilities and bravery, certainly not to any boot-licking of his superior officers. He was known as the hero of Delhi to the British public after he successfully planned and led the storming of Delhi in 1857 during the Sepoy Rebellion (the “Indian Mutiny”). He was wounded and died some days after the battle. Many stories were told about him; this is typical of the man. It was during the mutiny but things were calm enough for the British officers to be waiting for dinner in their mess tent. Nicholson walked in, cleared his throat and said: "I am sorry, gentlemen, to have kept you waiting for your dinner, but I have been hanging your cooks."  He’d heard that the soup had been poisoned – the cooks of course were all Indians. They refused to taste it so he force-fed it to a monkey, which dropped dead. So he hanged the cooks from a tree.

Shouldn’t it be the fate of all bad cooks? I certainly feel it should, as I shudder and turn off those ghastly cookery efforts on Australian TV.

So thank you, dear Julia Child, for reminding us all that great cooking is possible and that good food can be wonderful. Happy birthday.


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This post was researched and created by Kathy Boyes 

Thursday, 19 July 2012

Here Be Dragons - Well, Lizards


HERE BE DRAGONS – WELL, LIZARDS

Has anyone seen our dragon? It's gone missing!


One morning teatime towards the beginning of this year we were talking about dragons at the other library where I volunteer - because it’s the Chinese Year of the Dragon. When I mentioned the Royal Geographical Society of South Australia’s book Dragon lizards of Komodo, Susan, who like me also volunteers at RGSSA, suggested I write it up for the blog. Great idea! Especially since I love lizards of all descriptions. Oops, the book’s gone missing. It might just be misshelved, and we are embarking on a shelf-check as part of the current cataloguing project. But on the other hand, it’s had - not 100 years, like a large part of the collection, but a very long time to go missing, with volunteers coming and going, and until very recently no-one managing what went in and out.

So if anyone spots our dragon, please bring it to the desk for shelving! Or if you've got a copy you can spare, it would be lovely to have a replacement. This is it:

Burden, W. Douglas (William Douglas), 1898-1978
    Dragon lizards of Komodo : an expedition to the lost world of the Dutch East Indies. New York : G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1927
Burden was an American naturalist and explorer; as well as writing this book he also produced a documentary film "The Silent Enemy" on the Indians of North America. The gigantic Komodo dragons, native to a few islands of Indonesia, including of course Komodo Island, had already been discovered by Europeans, but it was largely Burden’s book about his trip which brought them to the attention of the Western world. He cane back with 12 preserved specimens and 2 live ones, and it was he who coined the name “Komodo dragon,” now the common name of Varanus komodoensis.  It’s also said that it was his expedition that was the inspiration for the original King Kong movie.

Komodo dragons - I could go on for some time - are absolutely fascinating. Not only are they enormous relics of the reptilian megafauna of Indonesia and Australia, they are carnivorous, and can be parthenogenetic. That is, if isolated, e.g. on a small island away from any males, a female Komodo dragon can reproduce without fertilization. Unlike all other lizards, they will hunt in groups. Want more? There’s a lot! Wikipedia has a very detailed article on these extraordinary creatures.

Once I got started on lizards I couldn't stop, of course. Sadly, not much resulted from a keyword search in the catalogue. But I have come across a few books in which our intrepid explorers and travellers wrote about lizards, so here they are:

Bates, Henry Walter, 1825-1892
    The naturalist on the River Amazons : a record of adventures, habits of animals, sketches of Brazilian and Indian life, and aspects of nature under the Equator, during eleven years of travel. London : J. Murray, 1863. 2 v.
No, that’s not a typo! Amazons, with an S. Bates was a 19th-century English naturalist - one of the many who were also, in fact needed to be, explorers. This was the period at which Darwin put forward his theory of evolution, and Bates was one of the bright sparks who had sufficiently open minds to support it. He was best known for this expedition to the Amazon, which began in 1848 and from which he didn’t return for another 11 years. He sent back more than 14,000 species, mainly insects, not lizards, though! Eight thousand of them were new to science - imagine it! His name is remembered today in the scientific expression “Batesian mimicry,” the discovery of which emerged from his study of the Amazonian butterflies. In this curious natural phenomenon a tasty morsel which predators like to eat mimics the appearance of something that tastes nasty or is actually poisonous to the predator.
   Bates observed a wide variety of life forms during his prolonged trip, and this is one of the lizards he saw:
Gold tegu
           "The Jacuarú (Teius teguexim)" = Tupinambix teguixin Linnaeus, 1758.

Forbes, James, 1749-1819
    Oriental memoirs: a narrative of seventeen years residence in India. 2nd ed., rev. by his daughter, the Countess de Montalembert. London : R. Bentley, 1834
First published in 1813, Oriental memoirs is a work based on the copious notes and drawings James Forbes made during his travels in India in the 1770s and 1780s. Forbes spent most of his working life in Western India, particularly in Gujarat. The book is full of observations of the ethnology and natural history of the region.
  This charming illustration from the 1st edition which, alas, we don’t hold, comes from Wikimedia Commons, as does the annotation:
'Blue lizard and Neva Tree"
“Plate twenty-five from the first volume of James Forbes' ‘Oriental Memoirs’... Fascinated by the blue lizard on the Neva tree in bloom, he observed: ‘Nothing can exceed the brilliant colouring of the lizard attempted in this plate; when the sun shone upon the blue and yellow divisions of its body, the richness baffled all attempts at imitation. The Neva tree when covered with its pensile blossoms, is one of the most elegant vegetable productions in Hindostan.’” You can certainly see the beautiful “pensile blossoms” hanging down. And the lizard’s lovely, too.

In the last example we find a picture of one of Australia’s unique lizards.

Lydekker, Richard, 1849-1915
    The royal natural history. London : Frederick Warne, 1893-1896. Vols. 3-6

Moloch horridus
                     Moloch horridus, commonly referred to as the Thorny Devil
I don't think he's horrid at all! He's wonderful. As for the Moloch bit—! Moloch was a Canaanite idol in the Bible to whom children were offered as sacrifices. Well, poor old thorny devil. Just because you don’t look like what the 19th century thought a lizard did oughta.
    Richard Lydekker was another English naturalist of the 19th century. He wrote many works on aspects of natural history, including some substantial volumes which became standard reference items in their time, The royal natural history being one. He wrote for both the specialist and the general reader, contributing a number of articles to the Encyclopaedia Brittanica. Many of his works were on the birds and animals of the modern world, but he was also a palaeontologist, working for the Geological Survey of India on the vertebrate fossils of northern India, particularly Kashmir, from 1874, shortly after finishing his degree, until 1882, and cataloguing the fossil mammals, reptiles and birds of the Natural History Museum, this last resulting in a massive 10-volume work (1891). He was also an important figure in early biogeography, the study of the geographical distribution of plants and animals. In 1895 he delineated the biogeographical boundary through Indonesia, known as Lydekker's Line, that separates the two biogeographical areas of Wallacea on the west and Australia-New Guinea on the east. Many of his works are profusely illustrated, some by himself, some by eminent zoological and ornithological artists of the time. RGSSA holds, amongst other works of his, another work which references the Australian fauna: A hand-book to the Marsupialia and Monotremata (1896).

I was really disappointed not to be able to find our dragon. So here is a lament for it, in the form of an apology - with thanks to Susan for the idea of the blog.


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This post was researched and created by Kathy Boyes