CHOPPED HERRINGOn the great Jewish dish, chopped herring or forshmak, a contested history and a range of possibilities
AQUINAS, ST THOMASSaint Thomas Aquinas and the Miracle of the Fresh Herrings, a tale to confound all doubters, in particular Franciscans and radical Aristotelians
MARTYRED SAINTThe irreverently wonderful C15th northern French poem, The Life of Saint Herring, glorious martyr, introduced and translated into English
A IS FOR A BEGINNINGOn the fossil origins of herring in the Sea of Tethys, on the geographical spread of the Clupeidae and, in particular, our hero Clupea harengus
AQUINAS, ST THOMASSaint Thomas Aquinas and the Miracle of the Fresh Herrings, a tale to confound all doubters, in particular Franciscans and radical Aristotelians
ARCHAEOLOGYThe earliest kitchen middens archaeological record of herring eating and why no earlier herring bones have been found
BALDIEOn the C19th Scottish origins and naming of the herring drifter known as the Baldie, including a photograph of two at Pittenweem
BALTIC HERRINGOn the Baltic herring, Clupea harengus membras, found in the eastern and northern Baltic and in the Gulf of Bothnia
BATTLE OF THE HERRINGS (1429)On the connection between Sir John Fastolf, victor at the Battle of Herrings, and Sir John Falstaff, a large Shakespearean character
BEUCKEL, WillemOn the semi-mythical C14th Dutch fisherman who may have come up with an improved method of gutting and salting herring
BLACK HERRINGOn the ultra smoked and salted herring, a version of red herring, produced more for its preservation qualities than for taste or nutrition
BLOATEROn the original bloater, which may have evolved in the C17th, and the Yarmouth bloater, which was first produced there in 1835
BOHUSLÄN FISHERYA brief history of the sporadic 'herring periods' on Sweden's Bohuslän coast and whether they're caused by sunspots or food availability
BRITISH FISHERYAn account of early underachievement, overdue triumph and eventual decline in both England and Scotland, featuring kings, economists and fishermen
BRITTENOn the Lowestoft-born, English composer's creative relationship with herrings, possibly spurious, certainly little commented upon