Yes, Friends, are YOU cursed by having inconsiderate neighbours, constantly taking advantage of your generosity? It's often said that we choose our life-partners, our kids' names, our jobs etc, but we can't always choose our neighbours - ever thought of that?!!!!
Check out this morning's local Onion News, if you want chapter and verse!!!
Poor Simmonses !!!! Or should I say "Poor Millers!!!" - it comes to the same thing in the end, doesn't it! And have you ever noticed that "neighbouring" is a totally
reciprocal thing. We're all neighbours to our neighbours, which is kind of weird!!!!
And reading the Onion Story this morning in semi-idyllic Liphook, Hampshire, brings a wry smile to the lips of me and my wife Lois, to put it mildly!!!!
my wife Lois and me - a recent picture
Mine and Lois's problem, neighbour-wise, is a bit different from those of the Millers and the Simmonses, to be clear!
Our headache is that so many of our neighbours are celebrities, as we should have expected, living as we do in what's been dubbed "the showbiz capital of East Hampshire", so it's very much a case of "our bad", to put it mildly!!!!
Even members of our own family are celebs - just last Sunday we watched our grandson Isaac played the dual roles of "Harvard Law Student" and "new hunky UPS guy" in the Surrey Theatre Academy's production of "Legally Blonde the Musical" in Haslemere Hall.
flashback to last Sunday: Lois and me in the audience (right) watching
our grandson Isaac (left) as a Harvard law student, singing his song in
the Surrey Theatre Academy's performance of Legally Blonde the Musical
And just a few days ago, on one of mine and Lois's daily walks, who should we bump into but a near-neighbour of ours who is playing the key role of the back-end of a cow in the Mad Company's production of iconic pantomime "Jack and the Beanstalk", which will be playing at Liphook's Millennium Centre the weekend after next.
the bawdy scene in the Jack and the Beanstalk panto, where the pantomime cow is
getting some attention from a local farmer or vet possibly. We're assured that no
panto cow-halves (front or back!) were injured in the staging of the scene (!)
- but what madness !!!!
Our neighbour pressed us to buy tickets for the show, and added, somewhat threateningly I thought (!), that she'd be watching out for us in the audience. I suppose her back-end-of-a-cow-costume has some sort of peep-hole or other observation device - but that's modern technology for you, isn't it!!!!
poster for the pantomime Jack and the Beanstalk, that one of our near-neighbours is playing the back-end of a cow in
I tell you, we're bumping into stars all the time round here!!!!
However, as relative newcomers to Liphook, we obviously don't want any trouble with our new neighbours, so this morning we check out the box-office at the Millennium Centre, although in the end, we decide not to buy tickets.
Lois and I have a severe case of "showbiz overload" at the moment! You see, although there's a special "old codgers matinee session" of "Jack and the Beanstalk" on the Sunday afternoon, we decide, as we're attending a Gilbert and Sullivan operetta in Godalming on the Saturday, that if went to a panto as well, the following day, it would just make us over-excited and liable to be throwing tantrums at bedtime - always a worry at our age, going through the so-called "silly seventy-nines", as we are, always a difficult year haha!!!!
Busy busy busy!!!!!
And we're actually here at the Millennium Centre this morning for a quite different reason. As members of the Liphook U3A's "Intermediate Local History for Old Codgers" group, we're here to attend the group's monthly meeting, at which local archaeologist Peter is giving a talk on "What did the Romans ever do for East Hampshire?", which is a nice thing to be doing on a somewhat drizzly Liphook morning, to put it mildly!
(left) Lois and I come early to make sure we get good seats at Liphook's Millennium Centre,
where (right) "late-arrival" old codgers are still filing in, as bearded archaeologist Peter stands
impatiently at the lectern with his slides, waiting to start his talk - poor Peter!!!!!
After the talk Lois and I snatch a quick 2,500-step walk round the Millennium Centre area itself, checking out the housing estate's iconic Canadian street-names, all in honour of the brave young Canadians who came to help "the old country" in two world wars, and who were all stationed just outside Liphook.
in semi-drizzle Lois and I take a 2.500-step walk around the Millennium Centre area,
known as Little Canada, because of its Canadian-associated street names
This association with world wars, and memories of the Canadian forces stationed here, is in stark contrast to the Liphook area in the Roman era, however, as our lecturer Peter explains.
Two thousand years ago, he tells us, Liphook was a very peaceful place, with the local Ancient Britons just trading and making a comfortable living for themselves.
And when the Romans invaded Britain in 43 AD, landing at Richborough, Kent, and Chichester, Hampshire, the invaders were pretty much welcomed in by the local tribes, the Regnenses and the Cantiaci, enthusiastic that this "reverse Brexit" would mean lots more trading opportunities with the Continent.
The downside to this "peaceful invasion", however, means that today's archaeologists don't have much in the way of big military installations, fortresses or camps, to excavate and "get their teeth into". The Romans in our area didn't bother to build any of those, because, essentially, "the natives were friendly", which is nice, in a way!
Contrast with that the situation in the west and north of Britain, where the natives gave the Romans a pretty hard time, to put it mildly, necessitating the building of walls and elaborate fortresses etc ever half mile or so in some places - what madness !!!!
"Hadrian's Wall" and one of the many forts along its route,
built in the north of England to keep out the Picts and Scots etc
Here in the peaceful south-east, however, the Romans did build a sort of post-office near Liphook, to handle mail, a so-called "posting station", dubbed a "mansio" in those crazy, far-off times - and presumably there was lot of mail going back and forth to places like Rome and the like, and other places on the continent.
The building's remains have been discovered near the present-day villages of Iping and Milland, a few miles south of Liphook, on the route of the old Roman road between Chichester and Silchester.
our map of the area with (ringed) (a) Liphook, and (b) the "Roman Station"
at Iping, a few miles south, which served as a post office 2000 years ago
(left) the "Roman Station" or "mansio" as it looks today near the village of Iping, nexto
to the old Roman road between Chichester and Silchester, and (right) as
the building might have looked 2000 years ago, back in Roman times
There was even first-class mail and second-class mail in those far-off days apparently, which is mad! The first-class went by horseman, and the second class by some awful horse-and-cart "combo" (!).
What madness !!!!
So to sum up, on the whole, this area was pretty peaceful and prosperous in Roman times, with the Ancient Britons quietly just getting on with their lives, and doing a lot of lucrative trade over a very long period. And as our lecturer Peter reminds us today, the Romans were here in Britain for 400 years or so, or like the interval between Elizabeth I (1558-1603) and Elizabeth II (1952-2022), which is mad!
There was one exception to the 400 years of peace around here in Roman times, and that was a big battle, the Battle of Woolmer, fought near the present-day village of Blackmoor, just a few miles west of Liphook, back in 276 AD. The Roman Emperor of the time, Constantius Chlorus sent an army to Britain to crush a revolt by a Romano-Briton leader, Allectus who had seized power and taken over the country, in effect trying to achieve what was possibly the first ever attempt at a "Brexit" (!).
(left) Romano-British rebel Allectus, and (centre, right) two sides of one of his coins
Could Allectus be described as a prototype Nigel Farage model NF.001 ?
I wonder.....!
our map of this area, with (ringed) Liphook on the right, and, on the left, the site of
the Battle of Woolmer in 276 AD, near the present-day village of Blackmoor
And near the battle site, in 1873, an enormous hoard of Roman coins was discovered, thought to be the money that the rebel leader, Allectus, had collected to pay his men and mercenaries etc after the battle.
So Allectus's rebel army never got paid for their part in the battle, although, on the plus side, the Emperor's forces didn't find the money either, so it lay in the ground for almost two millennia, before being chanced upon by Victorian archaeologists in 1873. And if you're lucky you may even be able to pick up a coin or two from the hoard at your local historic coin market - who knows!
What a crazy world we live in !!!!!
But fascinating stuff !!!!
Will this do?
[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]
22:00 We go to bed - zzzzzzzz!!!!!!