Friday, May 9, 2014

History Trivia - Lincoln Cathedral, one of the most important medieval cathedrals in England, is consecrated.

May 9

 1457 BC Battle of Megiddo between Thutmose III and a large Canaanite coalition under the King of Kadesh.  It was the first battle to have been recorded in what is accepted as relatively reliable detail. 

328 Athanasius was elected Patriarch bishop of Alexandria.

1092 Lincoln Cathedral, one of the most important medieval cathedrals in England, was consecrated.

1386 England and Portugal signed the Treaty of Windsor, the oldest alliance in Europe still in force.

1671 The crown jewels were briefly stolen from the Tower of London by Irish adventurer Colonel Thomas Blood.
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Thursday, May 8, 2014

History Trivia - Reccared summons the Third Council of Toledo.

May 8

 589 Reccared (reigned 586–601) was Visigothic King of Hispania, Septimania and Galicia summoned the Third Council of Toledo. The council enacted restrictions on Jews, and the conversion of the country to Christianity led to repeated persecutions of Jews.

1450 Jack Cade's Rebellion: Kentishmen revolt against King Henry VI.

1521 Parliament of Worms installed an Imperial edict against Marten Luther, which denounced the monk and commanded that all his works be burned.

1559 An act of supremacy defined Queen Elizabeth I as the supreme governor of the Church of England.

 1660 Parliament proclaimed Charles II king of England, restoring the monarchy after more than a decade.
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Wednesday, May 7, 2014

The Wizard of Notts Recommends: How Notts County Completed The Great Escape




A look back on Notts County's remarkable turnaround, which ended in an emotional final day draw with Oldham Athletic to keep the club in Sky Bet League 1.

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History Trivia - The Hagia Sophia (in Constantinople) collapses

May 7

558 The Hagia Sophia (in Constantinople) collapsed. Justinian I immediately ordered that the dome be rebuilt.

1274 in France, the Second Council of Lyons opened, which addressed the union of the Eastern and Western churches, regulating the election of the Pope and church reform.

1348 Charles University in Prague (Universitas Carolina/Univerzita Karlova) was established as the first university in Central Europe.

1429 English siege of Orleans broken by Joan of Arc.


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Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Mr. Chuckles has his paws in The Wizard's Cauldron, checking out children's author, Ngaire Elder


The Wizard says:

Long term Wizardwatchers will need no introduction to Ngaire Elder, children's author and occasional co-host here at the Cauldron. 

A resident of Spain and mother of four, Ngaire is extremely popular as a blogger and a writer. She's here to talk about the dark arts of Audio Books, which are exploding like spring flowers all over Indie. 

If you ever wanted to know how to set your own audio book up, then Ngaire is here to tell you. I picked up the Wizphone and called Ngaire as she herded her many Burros through the vast acreage of her Cadiz rancho. Here's what she had to say.
Read more:  http://greenwizard62.blogspot.com/2014/05/top-childrens-author-ngaire-elder-talks.html Follow on Bloglovin

Shipwreck off South Carolina gives up more gold

http://www.foxnews.com/science/2014/05/05/shipwreck-off-south-carolina-gives-up-more-gold/

By Kate Seamons


This Aug. 10, 2010 photo shows a gold ingot weighing more than 662 ounces recovered from the shipwreck of the SS Central America which sank in 1857.AP Photo/Steven Senne
The SS Central America's watery grave 160 miles off the South Carolina coast is indeed a golden one. Odyssey Marine Exploration last month explored the wreck of the ship, which went down in 1857 laden with so much gold that its sinking triggered a national financial panic, and the New York Times reports that the robot it sent to plumb the depths surfaced with quite the load: five gold bars clocking in at 66 pounds—or about $1.2 million.
As for what remains, Odyssey thinks there could be as much as $85 million in riches underwater. But in this case, what's come before is just as notable, and intriguing, as Odyssey has an unexpected partner in its search: a court-appointed receiver.
The wreck was first explored in 1988 by a team backed by investors and led by Ohioan Thomas Thompson, who recovered what would today be worth $76 million in gold, about two tons all told.
A wild legal battle followed after a range of claimants emerged from the woodwork, among them insurance companies who had paid out claims related to the gold more than 100 years prior.
In 2000, Thompson was finally able to sell the portion of the gold he was left with, for a reported $52 million—and gave none of the windfall to his 251 investors.
In 2012, Thompson skipped out on a court hearing; he and his female assistant vanished from their Florida mansion (leaving behind, among other things, a book on how to adopt a fresh identity) before he could be arrested.
In May, Columbus lawyer Ira Kane was named receiver and instructed to recover what gold he could on the investors' behalf; he selected Odyssey to help him do so.
Its Odyssey Explorer is now surveying the wreckage, and the Columbus Dispatch reports the entire operation could take as long as 150 days, with rotating crews working 24 hours a day during the recovery.
(Odyssey managed to make a major discovery in 2013 involving silver.)
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Older Than Nazca: Mysterious Rock Lines in Peru

by Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience

 
Intricate rock lines in the Peruvian desert probably advertised for ancient trade gatherings. Above, a marker points to the solstice sunset.
 
 
New rock lines discovered in Peru predate the famous Nazca Lines by centuries and likely once marked the site of ancient fairs, researchers say.
 
The lines were created by people of the Paracas, a civilization that arose around 800 B.C. in what is now Peru. The Paracas culture predated the Nazca culture, which came onto the scene around 100 B.C. The Nazca people are famous for their fantastic geoglyphs, or rock lines, built in the shapes of monkeys, birds and other animals.
 
The new lines date to around 300 B.C., making them at least 300 years older than the oldest Nazca lines, said Charles Stanish, the director of the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at the University of California, Los Angeles, who reported the new find today (May 5) in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
They used the lines in a different way than the Nazca," Stanish told Live Science. "They basically created these areas of highly ritualized processions and activities that were not settled permanently." [See Images of Ancient 'Nazca' Lines & Fair Site]
The closest European analog, Stanish said, would be the medieval fairs that brought visitors from far and wide.
Ancient fairs
Stanish and his team discovered the lines in the Chinca Valley, which is about 125 miles (200 kilometers) south of Lima, Peru. The area has a history of pre-European-contact settlements stretching from at least 800 B.C. to the 1500s A.D.
Archaeological surveys revealed large, ancient mounds in the valley. Over three field seasons, Stanish and his colleagues mapped these mounds, as well as nearby rock lines associated with each mound. They found 71 geoglyph lines or segments, 353 rock cairns, rocks forming circles or rectangles, and one point at which a series of lines converged in a circle of rays. The researchers also excavated one cluster of man-made mounds.
The excavations and mapping revealed a carefully built environment. Some long lines marked the spot where the sun would have set during the June solstice (the winter solstice in the Southern Hemisphere). Two U-shaped mounds also pointed toward the June solstice sunset, and the largest platform mound on the site lined up with the solstice as well. These lines and mounds probably served as a way to mark time during festivals, Stanish said.
"I don't think people needed the signposts, but it was more kind of a ritualized thing, where you come down and everything's prepared," he said.
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The Phil Naessens Show: San Antonio Spurs Portland Trailblazers & Miami Heat Brooklyn Nets NBA Playoff Previews!

On today’s Phil Naessens Show Dave Deckard joins Phil to preview the Portland Trailblazers San Antonio Spurs Western Conference Semi-Final, officiating and more Trailblazer news. Joe Mullinax joins Phil to preview the Eastern Conference Semi-Final matchup between the Miami Heat and Brooklyn Nets. Michael Erler joins Phil to preview the Western Conference Semi-Final matchup between the Spurs and the Trailblazers and more San Antonio Spurs news.

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2014/05/06/the-phil-naessens-show-san-antonio-spurs-portland-trailblazers-miami-heat-brooklyn-nets-nba-playoff-previews/

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History Trivia - Spanish and German troops sack Rome

May 6

973 Henry II (the Saint), the fifth and last Holy Roman Emperor of the Ottonian dynasty, was born.

1527 Spanish and German troops sacked Rome, ending the Renaissance.

 1536 King Henry VIII ordered English language Bibles to be placed in every church.
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Monday, May 5, 2014

The Wizard of Notts Recommends: Alan Sheehan Penalty Kick Notts County V's Oldham 2014 crowd mayhem !


Alan Sheehan's penalty equalises and (ultimately) sends Tranmere down to the fourth tier. Pandemonium ensues!



Want more football?  Read Mark Barry's Ultra Violence and Violent Disorder for an insight into violence in sports.


http://www.amazon.com/Ultra-Violence-Mark-Barry-ebook/dp/B00EA82L5A/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1399300862&sr=1-1&keywords=ultra+violence+by+mark+barry



http://www.amazon.com/Violent-Disorder-Mark-Barry/dp/149123945X/ref=sr_1_1_bnp_1_pap?ie=UTF8&qid=1399300610&sr=8-1&keywords=violent+disorder+by+mark+barry



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The Ritual by Mark Barry is now available on Wattpad


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The Phil Naessens Show: Indiana Pacers Washington Wizards & Oklahoma City Thunder Los Angeles Clippers Semi Final Preview!

On today’s Phil Naessens Show Tom Lewis joins Phil to preview the Indiana Pacers Washington Wizards Eastern Conference Semi-Final matchup and more Pacers talk. Craig Brenner joins Phil to preview the Oklahoma City Thunder Los Angeles Clippers Western Conference Semi-Final matchup and more Thunder talk. Kevin Lipe joins Phil to discuss the Memphis Grizzlies and what’s next after their first round loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder and more Grizzlies talk.

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/author/phillyflash/ Follow on Bloglovin

History Trivia - King Charles I of England dissolves the Short Parliament.

May 5

311 Gaius VM Galerius, emperor of Rome, died.

553 The Second Council of Constantinople began.

984 Gerberga of Saxony, Queen of Western Francia died.

1215 Rebel barons renounced their allegiance to King John of England, which led to the signing of the Magna Carta.

1640 King Charles I of England dissolved the Short Parliament.
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Sunday, May 4, 2014

Jesus Married? New Documentary Highlights Controversial Gospel

By Stephanie Pappas, Senior Writer  

papyrus fragment of the Gospel of Jesus's wife
This papyrus, said to be from ancient times, says that Jesus had a wife. Its discovery was announced in 2012 and new information uncovered by Live Science casts doubt on its origins.
Credit: Karen L. King, 2012

A controversial scrap of parchment no bigger than a business card seems to suggest that Jesus Christ was married. A new documentary gives the full story of this so-called "Gospel of Jesus's Wife."
Revealed in 2012, the papyrus, written in the ancient Egpytian language Coptic, includes a line that says, "Jesus said to them, 'My wife...'" Karen King, a professor of divinity at Harvard Divinity School, made the announcement; the owner of the papyrus remains anonymous.
However, a recent Live Science investigation traces the papyrus to its previous owner, a man named Hans-Ulrich Laukamp who supposedly bought the scrap along with five others in 1963 in East Germany. René Ernest, representative of Laukamp's estate after his death in 2002, told Live Science that Laukamp was not a collector of antiquities and that he lived in West Berlin in 1963, separated from East Germany by the Berlin Wall. Another acquaintance of Laukamp's confirmed that he was not an antiquities collector or dealer. [Religious Mysteries: 8 Alleged Relics of Jesus]

Forged fragment?
The authenticity of the scrap remains in dispute. Test results released in April 2014 suggest that the papyrus is not a recent forgery, but those tests have not convinced all critics. One cause for skepticism is the style of the message: There are mistakes in the Coptic that seem very unlikely to have been made by a native scribe, according to a 2013 article in the journal Harvard Theological Review. The controversial phrase "my wife" is also written in heavier letters than the surrounding text, which strikes some as suspicious.
"If the forger had used italics in addition, one might be in danger of losing one's composure," Brown University Egyptologist Leo Depuydt wrote drily in the Harvard Theological Review.
The new documentary, which premiers on the Smithsonian Channel on Monday (May 8) at 8 p.m. ET/PT, follows the story from the first email King received from an anonymous collector asking her to look at the papyrus to the ensuing media storm, which included disavowals of the papyrus from the Vatican.
History and the gospels
The documentary is careful to explain that by calling the fragment a "gospel," King and her colleagues don't intend to say the contents are true. Even if the text is authentic and refers to Jesus's wife, that doesn't mean it is accurate; instead, the text might reflect debates in the early Christian church about the role of women. Another segment of the text refers to the possibility of a female disciple.
The text also refers to a woman named Mary, which could refer to Mary Magdalene, a woman mentioned in the Bible in the story of Jesus' death and resurrection, though King warns that Mary was a very common name at the time. The implications for the church could be far-reaching, said the Rev. Robin Griffiths-Jones, an Anglican priest and theologon from the Temple Church in London. [Read Translation of Papyrus]
"If evidence were to be taken seriously that Jesus was married, vast branches of Christian thought and discipline and life and observance would just evaporate," Griffiths-Jones said in the new documentary.
The documentary delves into church history in explaining the potential importance of the tiny papyrus scrap. Other fragments of the scrap are also translated: The phrase "my mother," and later, "deny Mary is worthy." King sees the scraps as part of a larger story in which Jesus might be defending his female follower — who is perhaps also his wife.
Other texts showing Jesus as a husband may have been destroyed as the early Christian church took on celibacy as a requirement for priesthood, King said.
Still, a single documentary can't resolve the real burning question: Is the papyrus fake or not? Given the focus on King and her colleagues, viewers might come away from the Smithsonian's documentary feeling more confident in the fragment than some researchers would prefer. For now, however, the question of whether Jesus really had a wife remains a mystery.
http://www.livescience.com/45325-gospel-jesus-wife-documentary.html
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Replica King Tut Tomb Unveiled in Egypt

By Megan Gannon, News Editor

BBC presenter Rajan Datar stands inside a replica of King Tut's tomb.
Credit: BBC World News

King Tutankhamun's tomb in Egypt went undisturbed for 3,000 years. But in the 90 years since its discovery, the ancient burial chamber has been ravaged by tourism.
To prevent further damage and deterioration, conservationists hope a newly unveiled, life-size replica of the tomb will ease the flow of traffic to the original. To coincide with the public opening, BBC World News is set to air a 30-minute documentary on the mock tomb this weekend, titled "A New Tomb for Tutankhamun: A Travel Show Special," hosted by broadcaster Rajan Datar.
Often referred to as the "boy king," Tut lived between roughly 1343 and 1323 B.C., during a period known as Egypt's New Kingdom. When he died at 19, Tut was buried in the Valley of the Kings, a sprawling necropolis for pharaohs, along the Nile opposite Luxor. The tomb was lost to history until 1922, when British archaeologist Howard Carter first opened it, finding the linen-wrapped mummy of Tutankhamun in a grand sarcophagus. [Photos: The Life and Death of King Tut]
The discovery was sensational. Tutankhamun became the world's most famous pharaoh. But the influx of tourists who flocked to his tomb took its toll. Because of constant changes in humidity, as well as the breath and body oils of people, the walls are crumbling.
The prospect of sealing Tut's tomb to the public has been thought to be "commercial suicide for Luxor," Datar says in the documentary. But in an attempt to mitigate the damage from tourism, conservationists began making a replica in 2009. They painstakingly laser-scanned each tiny speck of sand and paint crack inside the tomb and used technology like 3D printing to make facsimile as close to the original as possible.
Political upheaval in Egypt stalled initial plans to install the replica in 2011. In December 2013, the components of the mock tomb were finally pulled out of storage in a basement in Cairo and moved to Luxor. It officially opened on Wednesday (April 30).
On camera, tourists as well as guides and locals expressed doubt that many people would come all the way to the Valley of the Kings and choose to see the facsimile over the real thing. The replica's creators, however, are adamant that a facsimile is, for now, the most sustainable way for visitors to enjoy the tomb, since there is no restoration technology that can undo the damage to the original.
"People want to puts screens of glass. People want to put in air conditioning systems," Adam Lowe, a technical artist with the Factum Foundation, said in the documentary. "But the tomb was never meant to be visited … the simple truth is the tombs can't take that number of visitors."
The Factum Foundation created the replica with the Society of the Friends of the Royal Tombs in Egypt and the Egyptian Tourism and Antiquities ministries.
http://www.livescience.com/45327-replica-king-tut-tomb-unveiled.html Follow on Bloglovin