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Site of first purpose-built prisoner of war camp saved by Historic England funding

4 days ago
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The French Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars saw thousands of enemy prisoners incarcerated in the UK; so many that the Admiralty, with responsibility for their welfare, had to devise swift solutions to cope with rocketing numbers.One was the construction of what was reputedly the first purpose-built prisoner of war camp, sited on the Great North Road in Cambridgeshire – far from the sea so prisoners could not easily escape back to France.Assembled in four months using 500 carpenters and labourers, the camp, south-west of Peterborough near the village of Yaxley, housed 7,000 mainly French prisoners – mostly low-ranking soldiers and sailors, with some privateers – at its peak between 1797 and 1814.Now the historic Napoleonic Norman Cross prison depot site, which contains the remains of the camp, has been saved for the nation after being bought by Nene Park Trust with £200,000 grant funding from Historic England and £50,000 from The National Lottery Heritage Fund.The Norman Cross site became the prototype for the further development of military prisons.

Functioning as a self-contained town – with barracks, offices, a hospital, school, marketplace and banking system – the prison element measured about 250m by 270m and was designed around four quadrangles.Each had four two-storey wooden accommodation blocks for prisoners, as well as latrines, an exercise yard, two turnkeys’ lodges, a store-house and cooking house.There was also a prison hospital.Battles were being fought in Europe, the Caribbean, north Africa and the Indian Ocean.An estimated 200,000 soldiers and sailors were captured and brought to the UK, the majority French, but also Dutch and other nationalities.

Their welfare was the responsibility of the Transport Board of the Admiralty, and they were held in a network of prisons, prison ships, parole depots and land prisons,Norman Cross was the first of three purpose built inland “depots”, with the others at Dartmoor and Perth,Prisoners were allowed to make products – including artefacts such as toys, model ships and dominos sets carved from wood or animal bone – to sell at a regular market,Many such items were excavated during a visit by the Time Team TV show in July 2009,The last prisoners left in 1814 and the camp was dismantled two years later.

A memorial to the 1,770 prisoners who died there, mainly due to disease including Typhus, was erected in 1914.There is no public access to the site, but there are plans to enable visitors to explore the area, while ensuring that the land is farmed sympathetically to preserve the archaeological remains beneath.Paul Chamberlain, an author and historian, said: “This acquisition will enable more of the story to be told for future generations and provide us with a better understanding of a lost town that had a significant impact on the region over 200 years ago.”The heritage minister, Baroness Twycross, said: “The remarkable stories of those held in what was the first purpose-built prisoner of war camp should be remembered now and in the future.”
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AI could lead to more job cuts at BT, says chief executive

The chief executive of BT has said that advances in artificial intelligence could presage deeper jobs cuts at the FTSE 100 telecoms company, which has already outlined plans to shed up to 55,000 workers.Two years ago, the company said that between 40,000 and 55,000 jobs would be axed as it set out to become a “leaner” business by the end of the decade.However, in a weekend interview, its chief executive, Allison Kirkby, said the plan, which includes stripping out £3bn of costs, “did not reflect the full potential of AI”.“Depending on what we learn from AI … there may be an opportunity for BT to be even smaller by the end of the decade,” Kirkby said in an interview with the Financial Times.BT, which is the biggest broadband provider in the country, laid out plans in 2023 to cut the size of its workforce, including contractors, by 2030

about 7 hours ago
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Policymakers who think AI can help rescue flagging UK economy should take heed | Heather Stewart

From helping consultants diagnose cancer, to aiding teachers in drawing up lesson plans – and flooding social media with derivative slop – generative artificial intelligence is being adopted across the economy at breakneck speed.Yet a growing number of voices are starting to ask how much of an asset the technology can be to the UK’s sluggish economy. Not least because there is no escaping a persistent flaw: large language models (LLMs) remain prone to casually making things up.It’s a phenomenon known as “hallucination”. In a recent blogpost, the barrister Tahir Khan cited three cases in which lawyers had used large language models to formulate legal filings or arguments – only to find they slipped in fictitious supreme court cases, and made up regulations, or nonexistent laws

about 10 hours ago
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UK government rollout of Humphrey AI tool raises fears about reliance on big tech

The government’s artificial intelligence (AI) tool known as Humphrey is based on models from OpenAI, Anthropic and Google, it can be revealed, raising questions about Whitehall’s increasing reliance on big tech.Ministers have staked the future of civil service reform on rolling out AI across the public sector to improve efficiency, with all officials in England and Wales to receive training in the toolkit.However, it is understood the government does not have overarching commercial agreements with the big tech companies on AI and uses a pay-as-you-go model through its existing cloud contracts, allowing it to swap through tools as they improve and become competitive.Critics are concerned about the speed and scale of embedding AI from big tech into the heart of government, especially when there is huge public debate about the technology’s use of copyrighted material.Ministers have been locked in a battle with critics in the House of Lords over whether AI is unfairly being trained on creative material without credit of compensation

about 15 hours ago
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Hey AI! Can ChatGPT help you to manage your money?

Artificial intelligence seems to have touched every part of our lives. But can it help us manage our money? We put some common personal finance questions to the free version of ChatGPT, one of the most well-known AI chatbots, and asked for its help.Then we gave the answers to some – human – experts and asked them what they thought.We asked: I am 35 years old and want to ensure I have a comfortable retirement. I earn about £35,000 a year and have a workplace pension, in which I have saved £20,000

1 day ago
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Bailey Smith hits the right note at Geelong but he is no showstopper | Jonathan Horn

Bailey Smith could easily have coasted along against Essendon on the weekend. He could have racked up a few dozen disposals for Geelong and saved his hamstrings for the far more onerous challenge of Brisbane this Friday. But that’s not how he’s wired. Everything is at full throttle. There is not a lot of craft or guile to how he plays

about 6 hours ago
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Tatjana Maria shocks Amanda Anisimova to win Queen’s Club women’s singles final – as it happened

Righto, that is us. Check back here and on sight for Tumaini Carayol’s match report which’ll be live shortly, but otherwise, thanks for your company – peace out.Maria tells BBC that her daughter liked the look of the trophy so she said “Let’s try to win it”.“Everything is possible if you believe in it,”she says, and that she’s trying to show that to the kids, who she knows are proud of her anyway. She was meant to be going to Nottingham tonight, but these things don’t happen often so they need to celebrate; doubtless her kids will want to “eat some crap with Nutella”

about 7 hours ago
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Vodafone terminates contracts of 12 franchisees who joined £120m lawsuit

1 day ago
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Letting banks loose is back on the agenda as UK politicians chase growth at any cost

1 day ago
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Grilled cheese shop offers Minnesotans a second chance after prison

1 day ago
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There hasn’t been a ‘big chancellor’ since Osborne: IFS chief gives final mark

1 day ago
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‘Grenfell was caused by corporate greed’: report calls for far stronger penalties over unsafe cladding

1 day ago
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M&S ‘praying for sun’ but full recovery from cyber-attack unlikely this summer

1 day ago