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Yorkshire and York

 

As mentioned above we had a 'shopping call' to make in the Yorkshire Dales to buy birthday shoes.   This required us finding our way to Grassington North Yorkshire, not a fast, direct or easy drive.  Having abandoned, as geographically impossible, the already booked and paid for 'bed and breakfast' on the coast, and arriving rather late, we had to find something 'on spec'.   In compensation, Grassington House was a picturesque hotel that, fortuitously, had a room and was very comfortable. 

  

 

Grassington House
Grassington House

 

While Wendy shopped I toured the village;

 

Grassington Village
Grassington Village

 

 

then took the car out into the Dales for a closer look at the miles of dry stone walls. 

 

The Dales
The Dales

 

 

 Addendum:

When watching the latest TV version (2020 to present) of: 'All Creatures Great and Small', during the Covid pandemic, one of us remarked: "that place looks very familiar" and the other agreed.
Indeed, Grassington is now regularly transformed back to the 1937 village in which the stories are set.
And, we were there years before, thanks to Wendy's shoes. Though not her ruby slippers - we came home by Qantas.

 

 

From Grassington we drove to York; stopping in Harrogate to visit the historic Pump Room where people once 'took the waters' and submitted themselves to incredible quackeries in an attempt to cure a range of chronic and/or psychosomatic medical conditions.  It now serves as a museum with some interesting old bikes; in addition to a wide range of medical equipment that would better be located in a torture chamber; but that I was not allowed to photograph.

 

Pump Room
Pump Room at Harrogate

 

York has a number of highlights that make it well worth a visit and would have been nicer if it wasn't cold and often raining.  In particular; York Minster is a spectacular Gothic Cathedral and the National Rail Museum is very impressive and informative.  The Shambles in the old town is quaint and picturesque with, thankfully, some good snug coffee shops; against the weather.

 

A City Gate
A City Gate - York

 

We booked a B&B that was a short walking distance to both the Minster and the Museum; fortuitous because it is virtually impossible to drive in York. Just a few blocks can take half an hour. 

The Rail museum has examples of almost every steam locomotive ever made in the UK as well as examples of diesel-electric locos and, more modern, very fast electric trains. 

 

Rail Museum
An impressive steam loco in the Rail Museum

 

The collection includes several Royal trains. 

Royal Train
Royal Train - Honi soit qui mal y pence (shame be to him who thinks evil of it) seems appropriate

 

I particularly liked one Royal carriage with a bathroom, complete with a conventional bath oriented lengthways along the carriage.  I imagined the water swilling back and forth as the train slowed or speeded up or as they went up or down a grade.   I imagined that if there was a sudden stop 'the King would be thrown out with the bathwater'.   I smiled inwardly for the rest of the day. 

In Roman times York, Eboracum, was capital of the province of Britannia Secunda and home to a large military contingent commanded by Constantius, father of Constantine the Great. 

Before becoming Roman Emperor in 324 Constantine escaped his political enemies in Rome by joining his father in York from where they jointly engaged in a campaign against the Picts in the north (Scotland).  Constantius held the title of Caesar and died in York in 306.  His son was first acknowledged Caesar in his place then proclaimed 'Augustus' in the same year. 

Adjacent to the Cathedral there is a Roman column dating from this period and a Bronze statue of Constantine stands adjacent to where he was proclaimed 'Augustus'.

 

Bronze statue of Constantine
Bronze statue of Constantine I

 

As a young man Constantine had studied Christianity, along with other religions, and was fluent in Greek and several other languages.  He was probably aware that Christianity had already reached Britain because Saint Alban, the first British martyr, was executed around the time that he arrived.   

In the Edict of Milan, in 311, Constantine (and Licinius) agreed that the Empire would stop persecuting Christians if they agreed to stop behaving unlawfully. 

Presumably they complied because in 325 he convened the First (ecumenical) Council of Nicaea charged with achieving Christian consensus; and eliminating dissent within the religion.  This Council is particularly important to Christians as it was when Christianity became a unified religion; and when it was finally decided that Jesus was one with God and the Holy Ghost; the original formulation of The Trinity.  It is the origin of the first Nicene Creed that thereafter defined a Christian.

Constantine's support for this unified version of Christianity resulted in it later being adopted as the official religion of the Empire; and the rest is history.  

Constantine is also remembered for moving the imperial centre to Byzantium; that thus came to be renamed New Rome then Constantinople.  In due course Constantinople would become the capital of the Christian Byzantine Empire that dominated the Mediterranean for over a thousand years; until the Muslims came along. 

For these reasons events in York were as important as those in Rome to the initial success and longevity of Christianity. 

After the Romans left in 410, York returned to polytheism under the Angles and then the Danes, the 'Great Heathen Army' who built the the Viking city of Jorvík on the site in the late 9th century and first half of the 10th century; giving the City its present name.  But it remained partially Christian and by the time of the Norman Invasion in 1066 Christianity was still practiced.  After the Norman invasion Christianity was fully reinstated; and the older religious practices became associated with witchcraft.

Then on March 16th 1190 the incident that is called 'the darkest chapter in York's history' occurred when angry Christians, fired up by the Crusades, massacred the city's entire Jewish community.

York Minster is now one of the largest Cathedrals in Europe but it has a long history.  After the Danes destroyed a church on the site in 1075 a new Minster was built in the Norman style, with additions and modifications, from 1080 until 1215.  

In 1215 a new Bishop was appointed and set about rebuilding substantial parts of the Minster in the Gothic style; to make it the equal of Canterbury.  After many trials and tribulations this work was eventually completed over two and a half centuries later in 1472.  

 

York Minster
York Minster

 

During the English Civil War York was besieged; and fell to Cromwell in 1644.  Protestant iconoclasts had already done substantial damage to the building; and due to the enormous cost, and further damage, it was not restored to the present condition until 1858. 

 

York Minster Interior
York Minster Interior

 

Since that time it has become famous for its magnificent stained glass windows; that require ongoing restoration. 

 

York Minster Interior
Interior at the Transept

 

 

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Travel

Canada and the United States - Part2

 

 

In Part1, in July 2023, Wendy and I travelled north from Los Angeles to Seattle, Washington, and then Vancouver, in Canada, from where we made our way east to Montreal.

In Part2, in August 2023, we flew from Montreal, Quebec, Canada, down to Miami, Florida, then Ubered to Fort Lauderdale, where we joined a western Caribbean cruise.

At the end of the cruise, we flew all the way back up to Boston.

From Boston we hired another car to drive, down the coast, to New York.

After New York we flew to Salt Lake City, Nevada, then on to Los Angeles, California, before returning to Sydney.

Read more: Canada and the United States - Part2

Fiction, Recollections & News

Australia Day according to ChatGPT

 

I've long been interested in the advent of artificial intelligence (AI). It's a central theme in my fictional writing (The Cloud and The Craft) and is discussed in my essay to my children 'The Meaning of Life' (1997-2017). So, I've recently been exploring the capabilities of ChatGPT.

As today, 26 January 2024, is Australia Day, I asked ChatGPT to: 'write 1000 words about Australia Day date'.  In a few minutes (I read each as it arrived) I had four, quite different, versions. Each took around 18 seconds to generate. This is the result:

Read more: Australia Day according to ChatGPT

Opinions and Philosophy

Climate Emergency

 

 

 

emergency
/uh'merrjuhnsee, ee-/.
noun, plural emergencies.
1. an unforeseen occurrence; a sudden and urgent occasion for action.

 

 

Recent calls for action on climate change have taken to declaring that we are facing a 'Climate Emergency'.

This concerns me on a couple of levels.

The first seems obvious. There's nothing unforseen or sudden about our present predicament. 

My second concern is that 'emergency' implies something short lived.  It gives the impression that by 'fire fighting against carbon dioxide' or revolutionary action against governments, or commuters, activists can resolve the climate crisis and go back to 'normal' - whatever that is. Would it not be better to press for considered, incremental changes that might avoid the catastrophic collapse of civilisation and our collective 'human project' or at least give it a few more years sometime in the future?

Back in 1990, concluding my paper: Issues Arising from the Greenhouse Hypothesis I wrote:

We need to focus on the possible.

An appropriate response is to ensure that resource and transport efficiency is optimised and energy waste is reduced. Another is to explore less polluting energy sources. This needs to be explored more critically. Each so-called green power option should be carefully analysed for whole of life energy and greenhouse gas production, against the benchmark of present technology, before going beyond the demonstration or experimental stage.

Much more important are the cultural and technological changes needed to minimise World overpopulation. We desperately need to remove the socio-economic drivers to larger families, young motherhood and excessive personal consumption (from resource inefficiencies to long journeys to work).

Climate change may be inevitable. We should be working to climate “harden” the production of food, ensure that public infrastructure (roads, bridges, dams, hospitals, utilities and so) on are designed to accommodate change and that the places people live are not excessively vulnerable to drought, flood or storm. [I didn't mention fire]

Only by solving these problems will we have any hope of finding solutions to the other pressures human expansion is imposing on the planet. It is time to start looking for creative answers for NSW and Australia  now.

 

Read more: Climate Emergency

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