Red Kev wrote: » So the biggest selling car of all time was actually almost a direct rip off of a Czech design.
Red Kev wrote: » The flag of the President of Finland has a Swastika on it.. The St Brigids Cross is a Swastika, which meant that RTE had a Swastika as a logo for several decades.
prinzeugen wrote: » During WW2 the Finnish air force roundel was a swastika.http://www.cbrnp.com/profiles/quarter2/blenheims.htm
Chancer3001 wrote: » Just googled it. Seems you might be totally wrong
RiderOnTheStorm wrote: » Ireland was the first (modern) country to leave the British Empire / Commonwealth. India was the 2nd. For their new republic, the Indians adopted the Irish flag, but turned it 90 degrees and added a mandala. They thought it could become a thing. Each country leaving would create a new flag of green, white, and orange and personalise it. It didn't catch on.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » And of course St Valentine down in Whitefriars
ForestFire wrote: Sm St Nicholas no (local folklore only)
RiderOnTheStorm wrote: » Wikipedia says different.
Gwynplaine wrote: » Weigh yourself before you go to bed. Then weigh yourself first thing in the morning. For me anyway I'm about 1.5kg lighter in the morning. Where has the weight gone? (I haven't gone to the toilet btw)
Gwynplaine wrote: » Where has the weight gone?
Skylinehead wrote: » The Finns were all over the place in WW2. First the Soviets invaded (didn't go particularly well for them, thank Stalins purges for that, as well as resolute defending), then they invaded the USSR back along with the Germans, as part of the siege of Leningrad. After the Russians pushed back, the Finns fought against the Germans in Lapland to try get them out of the country.
ForestFire wrote: I think Wikipedia agrees with me, i.e Local tradition, and not widly accepted"
ForestFire wrote: Where do you think I checked?
ForestFire wrote: "An Irish tradition states that the relics of Saint Nicholas are also reputed to have been stolen from Myra by local Norman crusading knights in the 12th century and buried near Thomastown, Co. Kilkenny, where a stone slab marks the site locally believed to be his grave.[38] This is not widely accepted beyond local tradition.
ForestFire wrote: Relics are in Bari and Venice according to the same site.
RiderOnTheStorm wrote: » Don't know where you checked, as those references are not on the Wiki page I checked, "Tomb of St Nicholas". There are a few reference sites at the bottom backing claim. And Wiki is not only site to make this claim. Why are you making a big deal out of this claim? Do you like to draw attention to people's mistakes (which this isn't). Or did you think Santa would live forever?
Cartouche wrote: Nobody knows for sure if William Shakespeare wrote those plays
Cartouche wrote: » How did a provincial commoner who had never gone to college or ventured outside Stratford become one of the most prolific, worldly and eloquent writers in history?
prinzeugen wrote: » The Firth of Forth in Scotland has some major claims to fame. ... ... In the river, the isle of Inchmickery was made to look like a battleship to fool U boats during WW1 It was again modified in WW2.. The result is convincing from a distance!https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Inchmickery_(4535494704).jpg
ForestFire wrote: » St. Patrick yes St Nicholas no (local folklore only) St Valentine, yes but only some very small pieces
Wibbs wrote: » Provincial commoner he may have been, but the family weren't poor and he attended a grammar school(and may have taught in one later on). Such schooling at the time was heavily weighted towards the classics and was quite extensive. This would have exposed him to Greek and Roman playwrights and writers generally, as well as the general political and geographical shape of the world as it was then. History was another subject. He also lived and worked in London and would have been exposed to all the intellectual life there. He was also a jobbing actor and writer in a hothouse of same, who needed to keep pushing to get bums on seats. Lennon-McCartney are among the greatest songwriters of the 20th century and they were lower middle class "provincials" far away from the centres of the music genre they originally emulated. They did it the same way oul Liam likely did; raw preternatural talent, mixed with exposure to ideas, outside competition and sheer hard work.
xper wrote: » Someone posts "Inchmickery" in an After Hours thread and there's no joke after nearly 24 hours? Seriously, you people are off your game.
prinzeugen wrote: » In 1990 my dad advised on the size of the rats they could expect on inchgarvie (under the Forth Rail Bridge) The experts said they were the size of cats.. My dad said " they will be the size of mice once the fireworks are lit.."