BBC History - UK (2022-01)

(EriveltonMoraes) #1
MYTHOLOGY

Hunting monsters


Basilisks and Beowulf:
Monsters in the
Anglo-Saxon World
by Tim Flight
Reaktion Books, 2 64 pages, £ 15 .9 5

Many people have heard
of the grotesque Grendel,
his mother and the dragon
with whom the hero Beowulf contends in
the great Old English epic poem. But the
imaginative world of the Anglo-Saxons was
populated by many more such creatures.
Tim Flight’s new book starts with ques-
tions and beliefs about monsters inherited
from earlier writers. What were they? What

were they for? Could some of them be human,
capable of salvation? Using illustrations from
Old English manuscripts and artefacts, he
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  • a dog-headed being who pretends to
    befriend the unwary traveller before devour-
    ing him and mourning over his detached head

  • and the Grendelkin themselves. (Two minor
    quibbles here: Grendel does not attack King
    Hrothgar’s hall, Heorot, every night, as Flight
    suggests. Nor can Hrothgar or Beowulf
    properly be described as Christians.)
    The Anglo-Saxons believed in many more
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    Some – such as the wolf – we would not now
    classify as monsters at all. Other creatures
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    the world – in the distant eastern lands, where
    Alexander encountered them in his expedition
    to conquer the globe.
    Closer to home, fens, forests and


ESPIONAGE

Out of the shadows


Spymaster: The Man
Who Saved MI6
by Helen Fry
Yale University Press,
36 0 pages, £20

When someone you
barely know invites you
to a party, you won’t
spend long questioning
their motives for doing so – if you have a good
time. This was, in essence, the thinking of
Thomas “Tommy” Kendrick who, between
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throwing cocktail parties.
In truth, South Africa-born Kendrick was
a spymaster for Britain’s Secret Intelligence
Service, commonly known as MI6. He ran
a network of agents across central Europe,
including Countess Marianne Szápáry, the
mother of Princess Michael of Kent. After the
1938 Anschluss – the annexation of Austria
by Nazi Germany – Kendrick also helped to
process thousands of visas that allowed
many Austrian Jews to escape.
This intriguing individual is the subject
of Helen Fry’s detailed and assiduously
researched biography, based on two of her
earlier self-published works. With so little
known about MI6 operations in central

Europe, this is a priceless addition to interwar
intelligence history.
Readers may come away with a limited
sense of Kendrick’s inner world, but this is
more than compensated for by the weight of
new material Fry has unearthed. Her real tri-
umph is in detailing the wartime eavesdrop-
ping operation run by Kendrick that targeted
German prisoners of war (PoWs) in Britain.
“Herrgott, was haben wir die verkackert!”
(roughly translated as “My God – what shit we
served them up!”) was a typical utterance by
a German PoW after questioning in one of
Kendrick’s centres – before a hidden micro-
phone picked up the PoW’s account of key
details he had held back in the interrogation.

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uncultivated lands harboured creatures
both corporeal and demonic, which Flight
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and claw to defend their territory from
encroaching Christian civilisation, and they
also made incursions into cultivated human
space, attacking warriors and men of God,
only to be repelled by heroes or saints.
Among these domains of the monstrous
is that most dangerous expanse: the sea.
Flight skilfully unpacks the evil ways of the
whale – both the marine mammal and the
cunning sea monster who pretends to be
an island in order to drown poor mariners.
Immensely readable, thought-provoking
and entertaining, this book is a splendid
introduction to the thought-world of the
early English.

Carolyne Larrington, professor in medieval
literature at the University of Oxford

Fry’s central argument is that Kendrick’s
eavesdropping work “saved” MI6 after set-
backs earlier in the war, notably the 1939
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though this might be an overstatement –
MI6 was not in danger of being shut down


  • her other argument is more convincing:
    that Kendrick should be seen as “the ‘Oskar
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    survival of up to 10,000 people, an epic feat
    for which he should be better known.


Henry Hemming, historian and author of
M: Maxwell Knight, MI5’s Greatest Spymaster
(Cornerstone, 2018)





Saviour spy
Thomas Kendrick in Latimer
House, a British intelligence
centre in Buckinghamshire, in the
later years of the Second World
War. The spymaster’s
eavesdropping work yielded
important information for MI6
Free download pdf