Wool sacks return to cathedral
By Tanya O'Rourke (Bradford Telegraph and Argus)
Woolsacks are hanging from the Bradford [England] Cathedral bell tower once again - more than 350 years after they were strung up around the outside to protect it from cannon fire.
During the English Civil War, the sacks were used in the 1642 Bradford Siege to prevent damage being caused by Royalist cannonballs.
And this month - as part of an exhibition by Bradford-based artist network CART - hessian sacks are adorning the inside of the tower with fragments of Aramaic script, the ancient language of the time of Christ, also featuring.
The piece, called Blessed, hangs 30 feet from the bell tower into the cathedral.
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Tuesday, May 06, 2008
ARAMAIC WATCH: This is a novel use of Aramaic, although I'm not sure what it has to do with the sacks.