Tuesday, May 12, 2026

NEETS: A Lost Generation

And who are the NEETS, you may ask? They are the 16-24 year olds not currently in education, employment or training. An astonishing, perhaps frightening, accompanying statistic to that description, is that around one in eight young people are currently NEETS with the overall figure in Britain reaching 957,000 earlier this year. Even more daunting is the related fact that researchers can now predict whether a child as young as three will end up as a Neet at the age of 16, once factors such as health, geography, parenting and socio-economic background are considered. Another shock to the system is to discover that the Neet demographic is not new, despite the considerable publicity being accorded them at present. The rate has not fallen below 10 per cent for three decades.

A New Statesman article [1-7 May] on NEETS which aroused my ignorance, suggests that the nature of Neet hood has changed: those included are now more likely to be men, rather than young women whose babies keep them out of work or education, and they are less likely to be looking for work. Indeed, 61% of NEETS are not looking for work at all because of personal problems or health-related issues such as mental illness, learning difficulties and neuro-divergence. Britain spends more now on health and disability benefits than it does on apprenticeships. The Labour Government has just announced that it will pay employers £3,000 per Neet hire while making it simultaneously more expensive to recruit young people by raising the minimum wage. Employers complain that the anticipated reduced rate of immigration [a Govt. goal] will contribute to skills shortages while one in eight of Britain’s teenagers represent nearly a million-strong missing workforce.

Alan Milburn; reviewing the NEETS problems.

Alan Milburn, a former Labour Health Secretary and a Blairite, has been recently appointed to review the NEETS problem.  Milburn feels that blaming the young people themselves is pointless and wrong; they are a consequence of the system itself, and he is sure that there something in life in contemporary society which is creating a more anxious generation. The Governmental response so far to NEET demands, has been to provide a rising benefits bill which is acknowledged as unsustainable. Milburn himself was a council estate boy brought up by a single mother in Newcastle, and he remembers his own early conviction that he would do better in life than his mother’s generation. And as Millburn’s example suggests, NEETS do not present a new problem; there have been 30 years of policy intervention, good intentions and public handwringing about it, but no remedy has emerged to deal effectively with it. Milburn believes a wide-ranging societal re-set is needed, beginning with the early years in school, through skills development into health and welfare. The approach must change, and society focus its intentions on investing in future generations. Controversially, Milburn would scrap the pension lock. Pensioners account for 55% of the welfare bill which Labour failed to reduce when it cut disability benefits in 2025. Thus, one section of society, pensioners over 65, have the guarantee of the triple lock while youngsters have no such luxury.

[Definition of the Triple Lock

Introduced in 2010, the State Pension Triple Lock is designed to protect pensioners’ income from losing value over time. Each April, the State Pension increases by whichever is highest among three measures: the Consumer Prices Index (CPI) rate of inflation; average earnings growth; or a minimum of 2.5%. This ensures that State Pensions keep pace with the cost of living and wage growth, providing financial security for retirees.]

The Triple Lock is an agreed political choice made on behalf of society. To modify the present system would be challenging; there are other significant possible changes awaiting in the queue, such as the reform of sickness and disability benefits again or perhaps reversing the commitment to bring the 18-20-year-old minimum wage rate up to adult levels. To affect such changes will require extensive, difficult public debate and Milburn is rooting for optimism in future goals with the brave intention of harmonising Governmental action with public demand even though public demand comes with many voices.

Dr Howard Williamson, who led the 1993 research on NEETS, focusing on 16- and 17-year-old boys ‘

Dr Howard Williamson led 1993 
research on NEETS. Advised Tony Blair's
Social Exclusion Unit.
doing nothing’ with their lives and who advised Tony Blair’s Social Exclusion Unit, asserts that the labour market is changing and reminds us that NEETS, in the past, classically got working class jobs which are no longer available. The future lies in a technologically-driven market with less room for such young people. Milburn focuses on employers who, in the past, have been easily able to import already trained, cheap foreign labour. Can’t NEETS simply take on jobs formerly farmed out to this foreign labour? The difficult answer lies chiefly in the cost. NEETS are simply more expensive than foreign labour and it is doubtful that the private sector has the resources or capacity to soak up the cost or the numbers involved.

This NEET saga touches on so many of modern British compulsions and anxieties; the mental health and ADHD epidemic: welfare spending: intergenerational unfairness: the supposed social contract. There have been several Govt. promises, or publicly announced intentions, over the years, to ‘level up’, build a ‘Northern powerhouse’, or spark a ‘national renewal’. But there remain hugely deprived areas like Blackpool, Hartlepool and Redcar with families, not just NEETS, struggling to make good lives against all the odds. Against this backdrop, NEETS can be seen, less as a lost generation, more as representatives of families straining to make ends meet in a hostile world of neglected streets, and jobs, where entry-level vacancies are vanishing; opportunities in hospitality and retail are falling; and understaffed sectors like care are chronically underpaid.

Abandoned factory in deprived area.

 

 

A neglected street in Croydon where discarded trash
is a subtle inviitation for more to be added.
 

 

A symbol of a depressing social and educational problem
which could be solved with designated finance, technological education
and determination.

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

A Partial History of The Tulip

One view of countless others of the Keukenhof Gardens.

 I seem to be buying tulips almost every week.  I do love them and they appear to be increasingly ubiquitous and incredibly varied.  This has aroused in me a certain curiosity about their back story, their history, and in researching that story, I have uncovered a veritable flower garden of delightful tulip information. This is a partial history because the full history I suspect, would fill at least one book!

Fields of tulips in Lisse, Netherlands

Tulips were originally found, growing wild, in the landscape stretching from Southern Europe to Central Asia, and thus, in their natural state, they were at home on steppes and in mountainous areas in temperate climates. But, since the seventeenth century, they have become widely naturalized and cultivated.  Flowering in the Spring, they become dormant in the summer once the flowers and leaves have died back, emerging above ground as a shoot from the underground bulb in early Spring.

Semper Augustus
antique drawing.
See below.

The Persian and Turkish peoples were the first to cultivate tulips, as early as in tenth century Persia, and tulips were certainly growing in Iranian gardens by the late ninth century while, by the fifteenth century, they were among the most prized of flowers, becoming the national symbol of the later Ottomans. Although tulips were cultivated in Byzantine Constantinople as early as 1055, they did not come to the attention of Northern Europeans until the sixteenth century when diplomats to the Ottoman court observed,and reported on, them. Although it is unknown who first brought the tulip to North-western Europe, the most widely accepted story is that it was Oghier Ghislain de Busbecq,  an ambassador for Emperor Ferdinand 1 to Suleyman the Magnificent.  According to a letter, he saw "an abundance of flowers everywhere; Narcissus, hyacinths, and those in Turkish called Lale, much to our astonishment because it was almost midwinter, a season unfriendly to flowers."  

Keukenhof Gardens, Lisse, South Holland.
The Persian poet Omar Khayam’s 11th-century poetry frequently featured the tulip as a symbol of ideal feminine beauty. However, in 1559, there is an account by Conrad Gessner describes tulips flowering in Augsburg, Swabia in the garden of Councillor Heinrich Herwart. They were rapidly introduced to Northern Europe helping to create the eventual absurdity of an investment bubble, a speculative frenzy, during what has become known as the Dutch Tulip Mania of 1634-1637 and this, incidentally, led to the invention of the ceramic tulipiere,  devised for the display of cut flowers, stem by stem. (illustration below). Vases and bouquets including tulips often appeared in Dutch still life painting during the Dutch Golden Age, becoming strongly associated with the Netherlands, the major producer of tulips for world markets ever since. To this day, tulips are strongly associated with the Netherlands and the cultivated varieties are often called Dutch tulips with the Keukenhof Gardens boasting the world’s largest permanent display of tulips. 

Loudon's Hortus Botanicus
Catalogue of all plants indigenous,
cultivated in, or introduced to Britain.
Carolus Clusius is largely responsible for the spread of tulip bulbs in the final years of the 16th century; he planted tulips at the Vienna Imperial Botanical Gardens in 1573 and finished the first major planting of tulips in 1592 making extensive notes of the colour variations. After he was appointed the Director of the Leiden University’s newly established Hortus Botanicus, he planted both a teaching garden and his private garden with tulips in late 1593. Thus, 1594 is considered the date of the tulip's first flowering in the Netherlands, despite reports of the cultivation of tulips in private gardens in Antwerp and Amsterdam two or three decades earlier. These tulip plants at Leiden would eventually contribute to both the Tulip Mania and to the establishment of the tulip industry in the Netherlands. During the time of Tulip Mania, a viral infection of tulip bulbs had the happy side effect of creating variegated patterns in tulip flowers which were much admired, valued and propogated.  Tulip specimens of the variegated type currently available, are part of the group known as Rembrandts, so named because Rembrandt painted some of the most flamboyant blooms of his time.

Tulips spread rapidly across Europe during the sixteenth century, and more opulent varieties such as double tulips, were already known in Europe by the early 17th century. These curiosities fitted well in an age when natural oddities in many fields, were cherished especially in the Netherlands, France, Germany and England, where the spice trade with the East Indies had made many people wealthy. Nouveaux riches seeking status through wealthy tulip displays, embraced the exotic plant market, especially in the Low Countries where gardens had become expensively fashionable. 

Srinagar Tulip Gardens in Pakistan;
Asia's largest display of tulips.
The craze for tulip bulbs soon grew in France, where in the early 17th century, entire properties were exchanged as payment for a single tulip bulb. Tulip bulbs had become so expensive that they were treated as a form of currency, or rather, as futures, forcing the Dutch government to introduce trading restrictions on the bulbs. The value of the flower gave it an aura of mystique, and numerous publications describing varieties in lavish garden manuals were published, cashing in on the value of the flower. An export business was built up in France, which became an important European tulip hub supplying Dutch, Flemish, German and English buyers.

 Iran.

The word for tulip in Persian is ‘laleh’ and this has become popular as a girl’s name and is also used to name commercial enterprises such as the Laleh International Hotel and in public facilities such as Laleh Park and Laleh Hospital. 

Persian tulip fields.
The celebration of the Persian New Year, or Nowruz, dating back over 3,000 years, marks the advent of Spring and tulips are used as a decorative feature during these festivities. The twelfth century Persian tragic romance, Khosrow and Shirin, similar to the story of Romeo and Juliet, tells of tulips sprouting where the blood of the young prince Farhad had spilt after he had killed himself upon hearing that his true love had died; a false story, discovered too late. The tulip was also a topic for Persian poets from the 13th century and one famous poem, Gulistan, by Musharrifu’d-din Saadi, described a visionary garden paradise: “The murmur of a cool stream/bird song, ripe fruit in plenty/bright multicoloured tulips and fragrant roses …..”

Ayatollah Ruhollah Khameni
In addition, the tulip is the national symbol for martyrdom in Iran and in Shi’ite Islam generally, and has been widely depicted on coins and postage stamps. It was a common symbol during the1979 Islamic Revolution, and a red tulip adorns the national Iranian flag redesigned in 1980. The sword in the centre, with four crescent-shaped petals around it, create the word ‘Allah’ as well as symbolising the five pillars of Islam. The tomb of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khameini is decorated with 72 stained glass tulips, representing the 72 martyrs who died at the Battle of Karbala in 680 CE, and the ubiquitous tulip is also used as a symbol on billboards celebrating casualties of the 1980-1988 war with Iraq. The tulip also became a symbol of protest against the Iranian Govt. after the Presidential election in June 2009 when millions turned out on the streets to protest the election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. These legitimate protests were harshly suppressed and subsequently the Iranian Green Movement adopted the tulip as a symbol of their struggle. 

Iranian flag.
The current flag was adopted in 1979 when the Shah was overthrown.
The stylised Arabic inscription, 'Allahu akbar' [God is great]is repeated
22 times in honour of the date of the 1979 revolution.
The words 'Allahu akbar' are used by the muezzin to call faithful Muslims
to prayer five times a day. They are also an Islamic battle cry.


Ottowa Tulip Festival

  Introduction to Canada.

During WW2, from 1941-1943, Seymour Cobley of the Royal Horticultural Society, donated 83,000 tulip bulbs to Canada to honour Canadian involvement in the war. In 1945, the Dutch Royal Family sent 100,000 bulbs to Ottawa in gratitude for Canadians having sheltered the future Queen Juliana and her family for the preceding three years during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands. In 1946 Juliana sent another 20,500 bulbs for a major hospital display with a promise to send 10,000 more tulip bulbs each year. These generous tulip donations triggered the establishment of the Ottowa Tulip Festival which, by 1963, featured the inclusion of more than 2 million tulips, rising to nearly 3 million by 1995.

                                                             Addendum.

Semper Augustus tulip

 The Semper Augustus tulip could lay claim to a certain fame during the early seventeenth century. The beginning of the Dutch Golden Age saw unprecedented levels of prosperity through trade, and with strong disposable incomes, merchants and other nouveaux riches, in particular, sought ways to display their wealth but strictly within the Protestant value of modesty. Tulips, relatively recent arrivals, were much sought after for their novelty and beauty with the added charm for the elite, that the rarest, were expensive. The discreet Semper Augustus with its small scale flamboyance in petals and its high cost, presented a perfect but discreet example.  

Vintage tulipiere vase. 
One of many designed specifically for
exhibiting tulips to advantage.

  

 




   

 

. …

 

 

 

Friday, May 1, 2026

Cambridge Days

 

 Cambridge Backs

A weekend in Cambridge for the Literary Festival [ 22-26 April] sounds intellectually ideal, and it was!  But beyond the intellectual, there were the College gardens and the riverbanks full of daffodils and;
narcissi; indeed, all was picturesque along the River Cam and the Backs to welcome Cait, Niamh and me as we arrived  on a perfect Saturday morning to catch the first talk which promised us enlightenment on The World in A Phrase, being A Brief History of the Aphorism. James Geary, the speaker and author, gave us a quick tour through an impressive list of practioners, in
James Geary: writer, professor, aphorism-collector.
 learned, while entertaining, style, his
impact undoubtedly helped by his own attractive appearance, so welcome to the shallower students present. I am presently reading his book which echoes his talk both of which celebrate the delight of the short, witty and philosophical phrases which are indeed aphorisms. Geary’s book is virtually an entertaining tour through the wisest and wittiest sayings over the centuries, exploring the history of aphorisms from ancient China to contemporary ‘clever practice’ featuring brief biographies of some of the greatest practitioners including ancient sages like Lao-tzu and the Buddha, philosophers like Schopenhauer and Nietzsche, writers like George Eliot and Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach; humorists like Mark Twain and Dorothy Parker; activists like James Baldwin and Audre Lorde; poets like Langston Hughes and Kay Ryan and artists like Jenny Holzer and David Byrne. The book, like the talk, is for lovers of words and seekers of wisdom and Geary manages to explore the aphorism in what amounts                                                                             to a love letter-cum-memoir disguised as a reference                                                                                   book. Fellow aphorists, one might say, fellow fanatics,                                                                               will love his script. 

Gary Stevenson; Ex-Citibank trader turned
inequality activist.

It was a disappointment to learn that the Sunday Room of One’s Own Lecture by Deborah Levy had had, perforce, to be cancelled due to illness though will be delivered at the Winter Festival [Nov 22-26] But we gratefully caught the excellent New Statesman debate that ‘This house believes that Britain’s best days are behind it.’ The basis of the debate was the assertion that there is a widespread mood of public despair at how difficult life has begun and these hard times are seen, not in terms of politically left and right, but through the prism of optimism and pessimism. Among the six first-class debaters was Gary Stevenson, a British You-Tuber, author, economist and former financial trader and we will look at him as he was previously unknown to me, no doubt betraying my limited inner landscape, and he did look interesting! He mentioned en passant, that he was independently wealthy [a self-made millionaire by 21] though frankly through my eyes of relative innocence, he resembled a potentially menacing graduate of a rough inner-city neighbourhood who could ‘take care of himself’ and was signalling that the passer-by should keep his distance. Presumably the ‘independently wealthy’ referred to his own effective financial trading and not to aristocratic parents; indeed, his parents were Mormon.working class AND it was encouraging to read that he was/is an activist against economic equality. I quietly urged my daughter, a college lecturer in Social Sciences to try to get him to give a talk to her students [16-18]. Gary would go down a storm with that age group both for his incipiently threatening appearance and his barely controlled subversive language. He could also quietly let them know he had been expelled at 16 for ‘drug-related transgressions’ and thus win even more plaudits. 


Ancient sage, Lao-Tzu.
 

Punting on the River Cam.

October 1844-August 1900.
Fanous philosopher,
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche.

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Garden Trail

One view of my sunny Wye garden.
I have recently seen some of the David Attenborough’s T.V. series on Gardens and it has brought on a little rush of some of my own garden memories, beginning with the very first garden I had on the so-called ‘sidepiece’; the empty strip of green, grassy space adjacent to our long narrow back garden in Nottinghamshire which my mother worked to hard to beautify and where her huge admiration for dahlias really took hold. The appeal of my own first garden did not last, perhaps when it dawned on me that having a garden did not simply signify transient beauty and satisfaction;  it meant hard work on an activity which was never completed!

A wonderful acer in my little garden in Wye, Kent

Cherry Star. A recent newcomer to the word
of dahlias. This would have caused limitless joy
for my mother.
After watching my mother’s enthusiastic gardening, I did eventually realise that she must have had the proverbial ‘green fingers’ lacked by me. but inherited by my youngest sister. Mum took the hard work in her stride and adored her garden which brought immense pleasure to a toilsome life of relatively few pleasures. She could only rarely afford to buy plants and in that, she was typical of many working-class women who instinctively took to beautifying their surroundings but with little more than enthusiasm and perhaps the remembered gardens of their parents, usually produced by their fathers who seemed to have been keen on growing chrysanthemums and potatoes. My Mum was just not interested in growing salad or vegetables; mystifying considering our poverty and baffling from the current perspective that freshly grown salads and veg are considered ‘a good thing’ for health. What she had, or rather, what our rented semi had, was a very long, quite narrow, stretch of land behind the house, bordered on the left by a small wood, and with a parallel stretch of land on the other side, belonging to the old lady next door whose family seemed to ignore their patch. As a result, the garden next-door was a low-level shambles cowering behind a privet
Cafe au lait collection.
A dahlia armful which would have produced
maternal delight!
 hedge, so no competitive element ever entered the equation. 

What remained in Mum's mind’s eye was a picture of the remembered girlhood garden produced by her miner father’s passion for gardening. Apparently, in addition to producing abundant vegetables, he had grown flowers too and his floral garden had been beautiful. I think these memories perhaps unconsciously, had provided a goal for her, for our back garden, and though money was scarce, she could buy, at the right time, reasonably-priced dahlia bulbs from the Co-op grocer, on her weekly order, and somehow, this gave her permission, as it were, to buy dahlia bulbs, and other plants for sale, which might have appeared. I cannot remember if other garden delights were available from the same source, but she had a brisk additional custom of swapping plants and sometimes seeds, with neighbours and friends in what appeared to my childish observation, frequent, almost never-ending botanical traffic which seemed to afford her immense pleasure. I am not now sure where her particular passion for dahlias came from, but they became of real importance to her. Thinking back now, I can see the huge variety available but even more important to my mother, I suspect, was that many varieties of dahlia were not only large and beautifully colourful; they were showy and arresting to the eye and added a flamboyance to the mosaic of pattern and palate of our back garden which ALWAYS, to her quiet satisfaction, elicited appreciative expressions of delight and approval from visitors and neighbours.  Dahlias had impact! And they were easy and cheap to grow while impossible to ignore!  And they continue to wield a similar power with me inasmuch as,when I notice them in a display, I inevitably think of her.

Potted trees in Kent.

My next garden, if that is the right word, was the two acres of ‘grounds’ of a Derbyshire hall which coincided with, or perhaps added to, a period when life seemed to be lived in a state of perpetual, low level frenzy! The thirty years there, initially with Mum’s help when she joined us for around ten years, saw my gardening somehow squeezed into the myriad pile of chores and duties and responsibilities; enjoyed insufficiently it is true, though visually appreciated. I tended the borders diligently, but the grounds of Waingroves Hall in Derbyshire, with very little effort save the perpetual grass-cutting undertaken by a less-than-keen husband, were a long, perpetual delight of shade and light. It was where I occasionally sought the solace of silence among the trees and where a furtive, anonymous fox regularly checked the pond hoping for a careless duck paddling unawares. 

The 'garden' draping the front door of my sister's house
in Bulmer at least ten years ago.
My sister was a Very Keen and Knowledgeable Gardener
who created two enchanting
new gardens from the wilderness.

A move to Kent, alone, for the next thirty years, was when I fell in love with a small, period house, half of a former hall house, with a tiny garden and a brick courtyard, in an historic village, where, for the first time for me, gardening in pots began. I developed a gradually growing tiny expertise in this special botanical branch which proved useful when I moved to an apartment with a lovely terrace in Florence for around 7/8 years. And so now to Bury St Edmunds with a second-floor flat, a baby terrace off the kitchen and long roof terrace off the small study. Needless to say, both terraces feature pots and hanging baskets which adorn my surroundings but which now combine to challenge my fading energy!!

View of a friend's garden in Bruges which I loved.
The much admired Waterperry Gardens near Oxford.
Family lived near these 8 acres of botanical Heaven.

A friend in Firenze in a wild garden.




This has been an interesting, if unexpected, memory trip! Having had these Jardin Jingles sounded out briefly above, I realise that following my life’s garden trail in memory does, in fact, trace the outline of my actual 91+ preceding years.

A fine shot of part of the splendid Abbey Gardens, 
provided for the grateful community in Bury and beyond,
and where I love to wander most days.


Thursday, April 16, 2026

Multiple Selves

A youthful Jan Morris

This blog looks at the life of Catharine Jan Morris, born James Humphry Morris, [2nd Oct 1926 to 20th November 2020]. She had an extraordinary life, and her public description as a Welsh historian, author and travel writer, seems somewhat underwhelming! Her best-known work was the Pax Britannica trilogy, a history of the British Empire, published between 1968 and 1978, and her portraits of cities such as Venice, Oxford, Trieste, Hong Kong and New York City, were highly praised. Her Last Letters from Hav was a Booker Prize short-listed novel in 1985. She published under her birth name, James, until 1972 when she had gender reassignment surgery after transitioning from male to female.

An even more youthful James.
As James, he was a member of the 1953 British Mount Everest expedition led by Colonel John Hunt and including Edmund Hillary which achieved the first ever confirmed ascent of the mountain. He was the only journalist to accompany that expedition, impressively climbing with the team to a camp at 22,000 feet where he used a pre-arranged code to send news of their successful ascent. His coded message, “Snow conditions bad stop advanced base abandoned yesterday stop awaiting improvement.” reached The Times by coincidence, on the morning of the coronation of Elizabeth 11. It was quite an achievement to get the news of the 29 May ascent to London by Coronation Day on 2 June as it had to be sent by runner to Namche Bazaar en route! And a further triumph to combine the two disparate events in such eye-catching synchronicity. The global publicity from these two monumental events was enormous and the name of James Morris became famous. Publishers begged him to write more books and when The Times repeatedly refused him permission to do so, he eventually left the paper.
The boy, James, during the Everest triumph, 1953.

Morris was born in Clevedon, Somerset, the youngest of the three children of Walter Henry Morris, (died 1938), an engineer from Monmouth in Wales who never fully recovered from being gassed in WW1. Her mother, nee Enid Payne, was an English church organist who trained as a concert pianist at the Leipzig Conservatoire and became a well-known recitalist in the early days of broadcasting in south Wales and the west of England. Jan Morris’s elder brothers, Gareth and Christopher, both achieved distinction, as a flautist, (Gareth) and as an organist and music publisher for the Oxford University Press, (Christopher). James had been a member of the choir of Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford, while boarding at Christ Church Cathedral School then went on to study at Lancing College before returning to Christ Church, Oxford, as an undergraduate, taking a second-class honours BA in 1951 which was promoted to the customary Oxford MA in 1961. While at Lancing, he made a start in Journalism reporting for the Western Daily Press; and during his time at Oxford, contributed to Cherwell, the university student newspaper.

Morris initially, hoped to join the Royal Navy but was prevented because of colour blindness, instead joining a Cavalry regiment during the closing stages of WW2, and being posted to the Free Territory of Trieste in 1945, during the British -American occupation. He eventually went on to serve as a Regimental Intelligence Officer. At 21, he left the army, enrolled on an Arabic course in London, found a reporting job in Cairo and while there proposed marriage to Elizabeth Tuckniss whom he had met in a London boarding house. As they settled into wedded bliss, Morris won a place in Oxford which eventually led to a reporting job with The Times..The editor who signed him up, said, "He is quite out of the run of normal candidates."  and Morris took the opportunity to return to Cairo as the Times correspondent. While there, he became friends with Peregrine Worsthorne who wrote that, " At no point was James ever one of the boys." He wrote for years for The Times which august publication published his original Mount Everest/Coronation Day scoop though he managed to land other journalistic firsts too leading to an impressive career and life. Reporting on the Suez Crisis for the Manchester Guardian in 1956, he produced the first ‘irrefutable proof’ of collusion between France and Israel in the invasion of Egyptian territory, interviewing French Air Force pilots who confirmed that they had been in action in support of Israeli forces. He also reported on the 1961 trial of Adolf Eichmann in Jerusalem and later, publicly opposed the Falklands War.

James with wife, Elisabetth, and young family

But chiefly, it was the personal life of James Morris which aroused public interest. In 1949 he married Elizabeth, daughter of a Ceylon tea planter, Austen Cecil Tuckniss and they had five children, including the poet/musician, Twm Morys; one child died in infancy. Morris's children regarded her/him as an aloof and unhelpful parent and looked back on their upbringing with anger. The family lived in the village of  Llanystumdwy in North Wales for over 50 years until Morris’s death in November 2020. He began transitioning to live as a woman in 1964 and travelled to Morocco in 1972 to undergo gender-affirming surgery performed by Georges Burou when doctors in England refused such treatment unless Morris divorced his wife, [the former Elizabeth Tuckniss] something he refused to do. They did divorce later but remained together and on May 14th 2008 were legally reunited when they formally entered a civil partnership. Jan detailed her transition in Conundrum in 1974, her first book under her other name, Jan Morris. Both feminists and her publishers, were dismayed by Conundrum in which she wrote, "the urge to change sex has been the most compelling instinct of my life" though she added, "it was not important."

Morris died on November 20th, 2020 in Bryn Beryl Hospital in Pwllheli in North Wales at the age of 94, survived by Elizabeth and their four children. Elizabeth died at 99 on June 17th, 2024. After Jan's death, the Guardian opined that she had been an outrageously successful journalist and travel writer, adding that, however, the greatest distance travelled by Jan Morris was not across the Earth's surface, but between extraordinary identities: from being the golden boy newspaper reporter, James, to the 
Jan Morris at 93.
transgender historian and explorer, Jan.  

Awards

Despite being born and chiefly raised in England, Morris always identified as Welsh so that it seems appropriate that she received early honorary doctorates from the University of Wales and the University of Glamorgan. She was also an honorary fellow of Christ Church, Oxford and a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. She was elected to the Gorsedd Cymru in 1992 and received the Glyndwr Award for Outstanding Contribution to the Arts in Wales in 1996. After some mature consideration, for Morris was a Welsh Nationalist at heart, she accepted her appointment as Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 1999 Birthday Honours List for services to literature. In 2005 she was awarded the Golden Pen Award by English Pen, for a "Lifetime's Distinguished Service to Literature." In January 2008, The Times named her the 15th greatest British writer since WW2. She has also featured in the Pinc List of leading Welsh LGBT figures in 2017 and in 2018 won the Edward Stanford Outstanding Contribution to Travel Writing Award. Hers was an extraordinary and fascinating life, well lived! Before she died, she spoke of her 1970s transition and the love of her wife [Elizabeth] which had never wavered. " I was born a man but only achieved serenity as a woman."

James Morris congratulates Edmund Hillary as he returns from his successful attempt to reach the summit of Mount Everest
James Morris congratulates Edmund Hillary as he returns from his successful attempt to reach the summit of Mount Everest.
From James to Jan.
As a soldier, his fellow officers felt he was "
rather better-looking
than any young man is entitled to be." 









 

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Blue and White Porcelain

Chinese junk of yesteryear

Qing Republic Five Fish bowl.
 A 14th century shipwreck, the ‘Temasek Wreck’, was discovered in shallow, but dangerous, waters in the eastern entrance to the Singapore Strait and excavated intermittently between 2016 and 2019. The marine archaeologists who located the site took four years to sift through the remains for, despite the shallowness of the water, there were strong currents and shocking visibility. The ship, probably a Chinese junk of the type widely used in the Middle Ages, had completely vanished in the intervening centuries, but the remains of its cargo of porcelain and stoneware were there in the form of 3.5 tonnes of chiefly shards though some intact examples were also discovered. Stoneware bowls and storage jars formed most of the cargo, but, impressive to see now, is the extensive repertoire of rare Yuan dynasty blue and white porcelain, more than has ever been discovered from a documented wreck before. A record haul indeed. The recovered blue and white weighed approximately 136 kg and comprised over 2350 shards plus a 
Yang Dynasty four gourd bottle.

few intact vessels. Archaeologists concluded that the cargo had included fourteen differently shaped vessels of which the majority had been bowls closely followed by vases and then jars. They also eventually decided that there had been over 300 blue and white bowls of varying sizes on board, and the evidence suggests that the quality of the ceramics was, in many cases, superlative. It is concluded that the junk, loaded in Quanzhou in the mid-fourteenth century, was bound for the thriving duty-free commercial hub of Temasek (early Singapore). Historians suggest that the shipwreck hints at the extent of local consumption and demonstrates the wealth of the settlement. Unlike sites that have accumulated items over time, because the shipment can be dated so closely, it provides a reliable reference for identifying similar Yuan dynasty wares, found elsewhere without a clear archaeological context.

Mandarin ducks in a lotus pool.
Very early bottle, probably 14th century. 
The small number of intact objects enabled archaeologists to identify from the ornate designs, the identity of the intended owner and even the date of the shipwreck. One of the designs featured a four-clawed dragon; another depicted a phoenix surrounded by a band of chrysanthemums. One design recurred frequently; mandarin ducks in a lotus pond and this had been the signature motif of Emperor Wenzong who restricted it to his personal use during his reign from 1328 to 1332. This restriction almost certainly ceased soon after he was deposed though commercial kilns probably continued to produce many more ceramics featuring this motif for some time, intended for export and not the home market. The Imperial kilns were shut down around 20 years later when a peasant rebellion movement, the Red Turbans, arose, which further narrows the period in which the ship could have sunk. Even if some kilns had continued producing ceramics, the Yuan Dynasty nonetheless, fell in 1368 and the first Ming Emperor                                                                                    who followed, banned commercial trade around 1371 

During the time that Yuan porcelain was produced, it became coveted by the wealthy elites across Eurasia, only a little less prized than gold, calligraphy or exemplary architecture, but as ceramics, it had a translucency and hardness which seemed almost miraculous to the cognoscenti.  Professor Shane McCausland of SOAS University of London [School
    Flower vase pattern, 1638.

of Oriental and African Studies] says, “There’s even a belief that Yuan blue and white had magical properties so that if you put poison on it, it would crack……. That partly explains why paranoid rulers did like to have a bit of blue and white around.” Yuan pottery also illustrates the extent of the trade networks which existed at the time. Made by Chinese craftsmen, utilizing cobalt originating in Persia [modern Iran] before being exported along the maritime silk routes dominated by the Mongols. Prof. McCausland suggests that Yuan porcelain represented a major technological breakthrough in Chinese art under Mongol rule. As soon as the Mongols retreated from China in 1368, the knowledge of that breakthrough gradually faded and was eventually lost.  As late as the 1930s, scholars would misidentify blue and white porcelain as produced by other dynasties. It was said, “What could the Mongols have had to do with this? They pillaged, they raped, they destroyed.”  

Blue and white porcelain is the most splendid variety in the history of Chinese ceramics. Its charm lies in the pure white body, vibrant blue colour, (cobalt), various patterns and decorations and exquisite craftsmanship. Those examples that have been passed down as heirlooms through generations, also reflect the social cultures of different eras. Not only has Blue and White become a treasure of traditional Chinese culture, but it also occupies an important position in world art.    

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   


  




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