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https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/curious-histories-festival-special-2025-tickets-1532711604669We are delighted that the Curious Histories lecture programme is returning to the city's vibrant Ageing Well Festival. But do please note that you don't have to be over 50 to attend our show: we're open to all!
This double-bill of unusual talks features Professor René Weis and Dr Janet Pennington, two terrific speakers who are returning to our programme. The show will be held at St. John's church, by the floral clock in Hove. Ample refreshment will be provided at our bar, serving both alcoholic and soft drinks, which takes cash and cards. Doors and bar open at 7pm and the talks begin at 7.15pm. There will be an interval between the talks.
OUR TALKS:
Ill Met By Moonlight - Professor René Weis
One hot August night in deepest Provence a British family settles down to sleep beside their car in a lay-by. Before daybreak all three of them, a father, a mother, and their ten-year-old daughter, have been brutally murdered. The year is 1952. The British family are pioneering scientists and cosmopolitan; the French family accused of the crime are farmers defined by their land and Mafia-like codes of conduct which struck outsiders as primitive, if not feral.
René Weis’s talk stems from his recent book, Ill Met By Moonlight. In it, he revisits the story of the most contested murder in France since the Second World War, which proved the inspiration for films and tales of espionage, hit squads, wartime bullion treasure, and chemical weapons research.
Professor Weis is steeped in the topography and culture of a Provence which, at the time of the murders, had changed little since the days of Daudet or Pagnol’s Jean de Florette. His account of the history of the Drummond murders is combined with his personal experiences of following the tragedy's lingering trail in a far-flung corner of the province.
Cakes and Ale: A ‘full English’ in your seventeenth century local? - Dr Janet Pennington
Are we still enjoying what our ancestors ate in the morning in alehouses and inns? What were they breakfasting on in the time of the Stuarts?
In her richly illustrated talk, Dr Janet Pennington examines the differences between types of drinking establishments from 1550 to 1750, using documentary and other sources to provide evidence for the food and drink sold and consumed within them, and showing how these provisions were supplied. You will hear the reactions from travellers (not always good!) and local customers to what was on offer, together with insights into the lifestyles of innkeepers, both male and female. The talk will cover much of Sussex, as well as surrounding counties.
OUR SPEAKERS:
Professor René Weis is Emeritus Professor of English Literature at University College London and an internationally renowned scholar of Shakespeare and early modern literary history. His interests are exceptionally broad, however, and he has also published works on the Cathars, the tragic case of Edith Thompson, and on the Drummond murders, the subject of this talk for Curious Histories.
Dr Janet Pennington is a well-known Sussex historian and a vibrant public speaker. She taught local history and palaeography for the Centre for Continuing Education at the University of Sussex for many years, and was archivist at Lancing College. Amongst other things, she is a life member of the Sussex Archaeological Society, member of the Sussex Family History Group, and Hon. President of the Brighton & Hove Archaeological Society. Her work is showcased at Sussex History Talks.
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Event Venue & Nearby Stays
St John the Baptist's Church, Hove, St John's Centre & Cafe, Church Road, Hove, BN3 2, United Kingdom, Brighton
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