Monday, 14 October 2013

Join us at this year's Magdalen Street Celebration



At 11am meet ex-county archaeologist Brian Ayers for a tour of the archaeology and history of Magdalen Street.
Meet at King of Hearts on Fye Bridge. First come first served, arrive early to guarantee a place!

At our Pop-Up Museum come and see a rotating digital display of old Magdalen Street photos from 1-5, Martineau Hall, Colegate.
At 1pm a chance to listen again to Ali Smith's UNESCO City commissioned lecture on Harriet Martineau, right next door to the chapel Harriet visited as a girl. An artful, funny and beautiful voyage of discovery through time and down Magdalen Street. Find out about one of the city's most fascinating and little known literary heroines, born right here near no.31. (With thanks to Writer's Centre Norwich)

From 2.30-5 Come and listen to community memories of the street and add your very own. Pop in and see on of our oral heritage recorders with your favourite recollections of your time on the street, past and present.

Wednesday, 19 June 2013

Get in to heritage this summer, from Suckling House to the Great Hospital



Join us this summer for a heritage extravaganza!


June 25th, The Intriguing Inhabitants of Suckling House and Cecily Steward's Tudor Norwich
Now a much loved cinema Suckling House has had a fascinating history of inhabitants since C13th. Come and hear about the building and its dwellers together with an adventure through the ups and downs of a Norwich known by one such dweller, Cecily Steward; merchant, scolder and independent lady indeed. With local historians Colin Howey, Jim Kavannagh and Roxanne Matthews.
Cinema City Education Space (meet at the side door on St Andrews Hill) 7-9pm. £8 Wine and nibbles included.


July 16th, The Delights of the Great Hospital with Professor Carole Rawcliffe 
A real treat on a summers evening; be taken around the spectacular Great Hospital by medieval scholar and specialist in the history of medicine professor Carole Rawcliffe. As if our speaker wasn't to dazzle us enough we'll have the delights of one of the best medieval wooden ceilings in Europe, a time capsule from the 70s and be swept through the smallest cloisters in England. A sell-out on Heritage Open Days don't miss this rare opportunity.
Great Hospital, Bishopsgate. 7-9pm £8 inc wine and nibbles 


camp reredos
August 21st, St Peter Parmetergate and a rare plaster tomb
With the best collection of churches in Europe it's no wonder that some are lesser known than others in the city. Nestled in the once bustling merchants' quarter of King Street is St Peter's, home now to a boxing club and to Michael Wingate, surveyor of the fabric for Norwich Historic Churches Trust. We'll sneak in through the side door after hours and marvel at one of the city's treasures with Michael as he guides he round.
St Peter Parmentergate, King Street. 7.30-9pm £8 inc wine and nibbles 

To book email roxanne@thefreelancecreative.com. Book all 3 for £20!

LivingNorwich apologise for any inconvenience caused by our website being temporarily out of action. It will be up again soon but check this blog for updates in the meantime.

Sunday, 16 December 2012

Medieval Graffiti at Norwich Cathedral

Into the magical surroundings of towering Caen stone piers, lit beautifully in the darkness we slipped through the heavy wooden west doors of Norwich Cathedral to meet Colin Howey. With a cohort of just 12, it was an enormous and special privilege to have the Cathedral to ourselves, after dark.


Colin is part of the Norfolk Medieval Grafitti Survey who are slowly gathering visual data and piecing together fragments of stories about how and why real people used our church spaces so many years ago. The wonderful thing about graffiti is that it was, in the most part, left by regular people like you and I. Standing in front of these little carvings you can get a real insight in to the thoughts and actions of people just like us, from the past. But they also encourage a very personal, imagined relationship between the viewer and the maker and can be very powerful as a result, once you know how to notice them of course.


Lucky for us, Colin knew just where to look and his knowledge, not just about this very specific topic but about the wider medieval church and the goings on in medieval Norwich painted us a very colourful and useful picture for the grafittos that came gleaming out of the hand-crafted stone as he shone his torch to illuminate them. One of the first grafittos we came across, and there is a definite element of precious discovery in graffiti hunting, was a daisy wheel. The making of daisy wheels, Colin believes, was a sacred act of prayer, a bit like the rosary. They appear, he told us, all over East Anglia and their regular occurrence at kneeling height persuades him that they have something to do with personal prayer. They are also very precise, appearing to have been made with some form of compass, not just doodles done quickly in the stone. This careful and thoughtful act only supports his supposition, he said, and we agreed.

We crept around the nave and in to the east end of the church, noting all sorts of script and images on the way, including a short name or word scribed upside down and what looked like musical notation. In the east end, just before we all unwittingly walked past it, Colin pointed out his most important find; the figure of someone resembling a clergyman or saint, a very unusual and unique grafitto he told us. Before we knew it an hour had passed and it was time to leave the enchantment we had all encountered and retreat for a glass of wine and an insight in to some of Colin's other findings around the county at Farmer Browns in Tombland.

It was an amazing evening all round and a great end to 2012 for Secret Norwich. With thanks to the Cathedral Verger for letting us in and to Farmer Browns for having us, and of course to the wonderful Colin Howey for his ragged rambling around so many sights to bring us these findings and his inexhaustible enthusiasm and charm when sharing them.

And thanks to all of you who have supported us since we began in June this year. Your presence helps us survive and support the other projects we do. Secret Norwich will be back in full swing in January for more special and exclusive adventures of the city's fascinating past, after dark. Why not buy our first quarter for Christmas presents!




Friday, 23 November 2012

Suckling and city monuments

The musicians atop Sir John and Martha Suckling's Monument
Rather belatedly, and with our next Secret Norwich: Heritage After Dark Talk imminent (Cathedral graffiti next Thursday 29th Nov), here's the low down on our most excellent October introduction to Suckling and other city monuments by Richard Cocke. 

Now that the nights have firmly drawn in it really was heritage after dark as we entered the chilly nave of St Andrews Church with arcades up-lit beautifully. It was a real privilege to slip through the creaky wooden doors after hours. 

Richard Cocke, retired senior lecturer of art history at UEA and trustee of local charity Sculpture for Norwich, was awaiting us. In the north east chapel of the church we crowded in to admire no less than 3 remarkable monuments. Our focus was on the wonderful two commissioned by Sir John Suckling, whose father was the former inhabitant of Cinema City, or Suckling House, just next door. 

John lies, commemorated in marble and very much alert, looking over the resting body of his first wife, Martha. The work was commissioned while John was married to his second partner and Richard mused about some pangs of guilt he perhaps felt for his deceased-wife. The pair rest on a bed of expensive black marble which in turn is, unbelievably, supported by two small skulls which somehow remain un-crushed by the hefty weight of the enormous monument towering above them. Peak in to the small space the skulls create and an enshrouded figure representing the dead body of Martha is just visible. The tomb does not hold her actual remains, or John's. The monument is inscribed in several different languages, Latin, French, Spanish, English and Italian, showing off the family's international connections and scholarly attributes. It also has some rather lovely iconography: a set of 4 musicians at the top, a rather unusual choice, a bird - probably a dove - flying from its cage, a woodland scene and a sailing ship being tossed by the winds. 

                  fully rigged sailing ship ploughing into the waves        dove flying from cage       Woodland Scene on side of monument

The ship perhaps alludes to Sir John's trading activities or is a metaphorical vessel for the soul blown by the winds of God to a resting place. The dove flying to freedom is accompanied by the Italian word 'sciolta', meaning free, perhaps also a reference to the freed soul of Martha or at least the family's hopes for the destiny of their mother's spirit. The woodland scene is in-keeping with this story of life and death. It represents living as well as fallen trees which nod to the human cycle of life. 

The monument to the east was also commissioned by Sir John, this time for his parents. It is typical of monuments of its time, and a tad earlier here in the city. A similar one commemorates the Sotherton's in St Johns Maddermarket, just up the road. This one also has some lovely iconography, on the upper level is honeysuckle, used here as a rebus for the family name since it was locally known as 'suckling'. What look like pomegranates, apples and vines weave around the base of 2 skulls, look closely and worm also wriggles form an apple. This is an allegory of life and death, of decomposition following ripeness, similar to the message in the woodland image made later. 

After examining the stones we also heard about the colourful life of Sir John's son who was an entertaining poet and man of court, described in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography as 

"a poet, playwright, and belletrist, but he was a writer mainly by avocation, and by second nature. He was first and last a wit and a courtier to Charles I, being occupied mainly as a gentleman officer, socio-political observer, gamester, amorist, and marital fortune seeker—often impetuously and not always successfully".

We then moved on to the equally wonderful, this time terracotta tomb in St Geroge's Colegate, a work that should be of national importance. But if you want the full story of these packed and fascinating events, you're going to have to start coming along! If we told you everything, they wouldn't be secret, would they!?

Come to the next...
-Medieval Graffitti by Torch Light, expert Matthew Champion will guide us around our well known Cathedral in a new light, illuminating the marks and statements left by city folk hundreds of years ago. Thurs 29th Nov, Norwich Cathedral, Tombland at 7pm and afterwards for slides and wine at Farmer Browns, Tombland until 9.



Tuesday, 16 October 2012

Norwich Talks

Off to St Benedicts Street this morning to record the second Norwich Talks episode with Ray, who remembers wandering amid the rubble down there in 1942....coming soon on Future Radio...107.8FM. Listen to last month's episode with 3 year old Issy Lemon.

Monday, 15 October 2012

Celebrating Magdalen Memories

Photo: Memoires cafe



And what a celebration it was, we had about 150 people through the doors of our first ever pop-up museum - The Magdalen Memories Cafe. You flooded in to peruse the old photos of the street, watch videos from the 60s, make your own blue plaques, share your marvelous and fascinating memories of the street, chat to our historians, visit our doll doctors in memory of the old Doll's Hospital, and of course eat cake and warm your souls!

The Doll Doctor at Work
We were flooded with memories about the old Doll Hospital, once at no.62, where the flyover is today:
Judy spent time with our historians on Saturday and we learnt so much about the street through her memories. Among other things, she remembered walking to Magdalen Street from the bus station, a long journey for her little 6 year old legs at the time. Her mum was a dress maker and used to make her dolls' clothes but she had to come and get new hair for her dolls at the hospital, having lovingly combed it all out! She remembers buying an auburn wig with her mum.
Miranda recalled tearfully taking her doll to the hospital having poked her eyes back in to her head! She left her with the kindly doll doctor who fixed her up nicely.
And Marilyn described the inside of the hospital for us, painting a picture of shelves upon shelves of old dolls with name labels on, waiting for their owners to collect them. She remembered the lovely man who ran the shop, he wore a long khaki overall, buttoned through. "He used to take your doll in his arms and say 'Don't worry, I'll look after her'". Marilyn's doll, she told us, was a 'bride doll' wearing a long wedding gown, she had broken her arm, hence her trip to the hospital to get it fixed.

Other stories tumbled through the doors and had us enthralled: a postponed marriage in 1909, when the church which is now the Puppet Theatre was under threat of demolition; work at the Plasterer's Arms in the 1980s; the painting of the colour pencils which make up Magdalen Gate School's railing; ten pin bowling on the site at Epic, which cost Mike 2/6d (12.5 pence); the luxurious wooden floors of Wollies (Woolworths), where you were sure to find anything you'd ever want to buy; the first Star Wars movie showing at the old Odeon; a run away child who wanted to live under the fly over; a lady who crashed through the window of the Dolls Hospital after skidding on ice on her boyfriend's motorbike and so many people discovering new things about their relatives who lived locally with the help of our historians, Glynn from Norfolk Tours and Nick Bowen.

To get a flavour of the day listen to the wonderful podcast by Richard Fair. 

                 With warm thanks to Epic for having us, to Jane for supplying cake and coffee, to the Norfolk Records Office for gathering documents and presenting them so professionally, to Nick at Heart for printing some of Plunkett's photos, to Art 1821 for lending us their John Thirtle painting, to Issy who was our Doll Doctor, to Pat at Looses who lent us the furniture and especially to Nick Bowen and Glynn Burrows for making everyone feel so welcome, for listening to so many memories and assisting in the exploration of others. We loved being a part of the Magdalen and Augustine Celebration, well done to all our fellow organisers!

If you're running a community event and would like a pop-up museum to explore the past and present of your area say hello@livingnorwich.co.uk. Join us at our next Secret Norwich: Heritage After Dark event, this Thursday 18th October, with a talk by Dr Richard Cocke at St Andrews Church and then St George's Colegate. 7-9pm. See our website for details.

Friday, 5 October 2012

Magdalen Memories Cafe


The Magdalen Memories Cafe is part of MAC (Magdalen and St Augustone Street Celebration) on 13th October 2012 from 11-5 at Epic Studios 112-114 Magdalen Street.
It's like a pop-up museum....we’ll be taking over the cafe at Epic Studios with digital and traditional displays of old Magdalen Street, a 1-day-only chance to view a John Thirtle painting from Gallery 1821 – one of the Norwich School of Artists who had a framing workshop on Magdalen Street at No. 26 (Now the Big C charity shop)-, a chance to locate yourself in the story of Magdalen Street by making your very own blue plaque, historians on hand to help you research your own past and engage with the exhibitions, and finally, make sure kids to bring your poorly dolls and teddies to our Doll Doctor in memory of the Doll’s Hospital once at no.62. Oooo it's going to be great. See you there!
With thanks to the Plunkett family via Heart who have supplied photos, to the Records Office who have supplied copies of some fascinating documents, to Art 1821 for the amazing chance to have a real, live Thirtle painting and to Epic for having us.