- Examining the heritage and history of Brighton through the lens of its oldest burial ground. Providing a Gazeteer of St Nicholas Gardens, tomb by tomb.
Twitter Updates
- "The only thing worse than being talked about, is not being talked about" Wilde. #thoughtfortheday That is all. 1 month ago
- those attending to MISTER SCANLON and his historie of Health in #Brighton may find diversion at this place mortiquarian.com/divers-perambu… #ccbtn 2 months ago
- RT @lukelewis: People were better at swearing in the old days. This is from 1653 pic.twitter.com/9v6t4MiRp5 2 months ago
- @GreenBenali Another door closes. *adopts byronic air and contemplates things that will never be* 2 months ago
- RT @Travel_Nick: Gravestones in St Andrew's Church, Church Road #Hove made an interesting picture. This one with flash. http://t.co/ZVQV ... 2 months ago
-
Recent Posts
- Resting in Peace
- Martha Gunn and the Kings Evil
- A & AH Wilds and the Ups and Downs of Life
- Hanover Chapel Vault: Enough to Wake the Dead
- The Lady Eldona At Her Tower
- A Life Too Full To Fit – Sake Dean Mahomet
- Coded Mortiquaria
- Hilbers the Blood Royal Homeopath
- Laurentia Dorothea and the penniless portrait painter
- From revolution to nobility – the Baronesses Erskine
- Within the Vaults – Outlaws and Others
- Henry Smithers: Our most recent deceased.
- James Justinian Morier and the Adventures of Hajji Baba
- Sir Matthew Tierney: ‘The Bloody Baron of Brighthelmstone’
- Ghosts of the stones: if not the bones
- How to Empty a Graveyard
- How to Fill a Graveyard
- Smoaker Miles: Phantasmagoria, Swimming with Dr Johnson and other stories
- Stanley Stokes and the Lynch Mob – East Street 1836
- Captain Custard and the Northern Extension
- Henry Tuppen and how giving to the Poor at Christmastime set him up before the Beak.
- Lord Byron, Class War and the price of a Decent Send Off
- Buried ‘neath the snow
- Sir Richard Phillips and the skull of Cardinal Wolsey
- The Deathly Pyramid
- ‘The Log of a Jack Tar’; James Choyce 1777 – 1836
- John Rowles and the Battle of Tar Tub
- The Honest Hairdresser
- Conversation with the dead
- Graveyard Hauntings
- A Rest Garden Factuary
- Into the Labyrinth
- The Double Death of Anna Maria Crouch
- Mr Weiss and his Instrument of Certain Death
- Corporal Staines
- Martin Archer Shee (1789 – 1850)
- Funerary Violin and the Forgotten Vault
- Historical disorder
- The Great Clearances
- The Bound Man
Monthly Archives: September 2011
A Life Too Full To Fit – Sake Dean Mahomet
Sake Dene Mahomet is remembered by a monment in the enclosed area at the rear of the church. He was the first Indian to write and publish a book in English, opened the first indian restaurant in London and invented … Continue reading
Posted in Author, Churchyard, Doctor, Military, Novelist, Royal connection
Leave a comment
Coded Mortiquaria
Those who plan to visit the ancient St Nicholas Ground in the month of September may wonder at the odd motifs which adorn divers monuments and inscripted pieces. It is not unknown for strange symbols to appear in this place … Continue reading
Posted in Tour Guide
3 Comments