Thursday 4 October 2018

One hour's TV was enough to start with



On 2nd November 1936 the very first television broadcast by the BBC was made. It began at 3pm and lasted for exactly one hour. It was received by around 400 people in the London area who had been supplied with “Baird Televisors” and consisted of speeches, a news bulletin, and a variety show that included singing, jugglers, comedians and dancers. All very informative and entertaining!
The BBC had a problem from the outset because two rival transmission technologies were on offer – those offered by John Logie Baird – who had made the decisive breakthrough in the development of television in 1926 – and the Marconi-EMI joint venture. That first broadcast used the Baird system, with the choice being made by the traditional British method of tossing a coin! However, the rival system eventually prevailed.
But why only one hour of broadcasting to start with? There were several reasons, one being a lack of suitable material! Other reasons were the belief that viewers (who were referred to as “lookers-in” in the early days) would suffer from eye strain if they watched for too long, and a concern that too much television would disrupt family life. It could just be that they were right about this one!
© John Welford

The Shaftesbury Byzant



If you pay a visit to the Museum in the Dorset town of Shaftesbury you are quite likely to see a very strange exhibit that looks a bit like a cross between an open umbrella and a May garland. It is a metal structure that has been gilded to make it look like solid gold, although that is not the case. This is the Shaftesbury Byzant (which is a corruption of “besom”, a type of sweeping brush). It has a fascinating history.
Shaftesbury is a hill town – the only one of its kind in Dorset – that was founded by King Alfred in the year 880. It stands on a sandstone ridge several hundred feet above Blackmore Vale, which stretches away to the north. 
Although this was an excellent site for a settlement in terms of its defence, there was always a problem when it came to water supply. In the early days it was easy enough for the population to rely on rainwater collected in cisterns, but as the town got bigger, and thousands of pilgrims visited the Abbey to view the tomb of the martyred boy-king Edward, this was insufficient, and no well could be dug deep enough to reach an adequate supply.
The people of Shaftesbury had no choice but to go down the hill and take water from springs at Enmore Green. Although this is quite close to Shaftesbury, it was traditionally part of the parish of Gillingham, a small town four miles to the northwest. 
There was never any real objection to Shaftesbury people helping themselves to Gillingham’s water, but it was thought that some acknowledgment of the fact should be made, and that is where the Byzant comes in.
From the early 16th century it became the custom, on the Sunday after Holy Roode day in May, for the entire population of Shaftesbury, led by the Mayor and Burgesses, to walk in procession down the hill to arrive at Enmore Green at 1pm. An hour of dancing was followed by a ceremony in which the Mayor of Shaftesbury and the Lord of the Manor of Gillingham would engage in a formal ceremony.
At the heart of the ceremony was the Byzant, which had been made by a local craftsman and was usually adorned with precious stones and other treasures donated by the town’s wealthier citizens. This was then offered to the Lord of the Manor of Gillingham as payment for the water, and was duly handed over.
However, the Byzant was such a precious artefact – not to mention the attached jewels – that the Mayor of Shaftesbury immediately sought to buy it back. This he did by making gifts to his opposite number of a pair of white gloves, a calf’s head, two loaves, and a gallon of ale. The people of Gillingham then entertained the citizens of Shaftesbury to a further hour of dancing before the latter departed back up the hill, with the Byzant, and carried on with the merrymaking for the rest of the day.
This ceremony was observed for about 400 years but ended in 1830 at a time of agricultural depression when it was felt that the expense of the occasion could not be justified. 
However, the Byzant was retained in Gillingham at this juncture and did not return to Shaftesbury until 1924 when it was presented to Shaftesbury Town Council by the daughter of the 2nd Marquess of Westminster – whose father, as Lord of the Manor of Gillingham, had kept the Byzant back in 1830.
There would now seem little doubt that the Byzant will not leave Shaftesbury again, which these days has no fears about its water running dry!
© John Welford