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[spoiler=Things in My Year][/spoiler]
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[spoiler=Things in My Year][/spoiler]
Victor Sullivan wrote:We used poisonous gases... And we poisoned their asses...
-Hiphopopotamus
everywhere116 wrote:You da man! Well, not really, because we're colorful ponies, but you get the idea.
shieldgenerator7 wrote:1245... let me google it...
Feb 21st - Thomas, the first known Bishop of Finland, is granted resignation after having confessed to torture and forgery.
Jun 28th - 1st Council of Lyons (13th ecumenical council) opens
Jul 17th - Pope bans emperor Frederik II Hohenstaufen for 3rd time
...and that's it...
Bruceswar wrote:My score usually is in the future... Now what?
Bruceswar wrote:My score usually is in the future... Now what?
-- can't really blame them now, can you?January 15th -- Vermont declares its independence from New York
The code duello is adopted at the Clonmell Summer Assizes as the form for pistol duels in Ireland. It is quickly denounced but nevertheless widely adopted throughout the English-speaking world.
Wonder if they used the code duello rules? And would it have changed the outcome if they had?May 16 – Lachlan McIntosh and Button Gwinnett shoot each other during a duel near Savannah, Georgia. Gwinnett, a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence, dies 3 days later.
Some students had been lined up since 1735....May 13th - University library at Vienna opens
What, the American Revolution wasn't entertaining enough?Aug 4th - Retired British cavalry officer Philip Astley establishes 1st circus
Anti-social prick...Dec 8th - Capt Cook leaves Society Islands
You're just rebuilding from one disaster and along comes another....The death of King Joseph in 1777 forced the accession of Infanta Maria Francisca, his eldest daughter, to the throne of Portugal; she succeeded her father as the first Queen regnant of the 650-year-old country, which was still recovering from the 1755 Lisbon earthquake.
I wonder how Sophie died. Sure hope it wasn't a code duello thing...Augusta was one of the most beautiful women of her time. Her father commissioned the painter Johann Heinrich Tischbein a portrait of Augusta showed as Artemisia. Count Heinrich XXIV showed this painting during the Perpetual Diet so potential marriage candidates were aware of his beautiful daughter.
In Ebersdorf on 13 June 1777 Augusta married Franz Frederick Anton, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld. Duke Franz previously acquired the Artemisia painting four times his original price because he was deeply in love with Augusta, but he had to married with a relative, Princess Sophie of Saxe-Hildburghausen, who died seven months after the wedding, so let the Duke free to pursue the hand of his beloved.
Prior to 1777, Swedes had worn things like this:The Swedes are distinguislied from other people of Europe by a national dress, establislied in 1777, with the laudable design of repressing luxury in the article of clothes
Khoutche, Khoutche, Khoutche!The new description of central Asia, published at Pekin in 1777, contains the following notice: The territory of Khoutche produces copper, saltpetre, sulphur, and sal ammoniac.
As they put the torch to the pyre, Anastasios... screamed in vainAnastasios, son of Hatzigiovannis of Ankyra (Ankara), Asia Minor, was martyred for his Orthodox Christian faith and love of Jesus Christ, in the city of Ankyra , Asia Minor, in the year 1777.
drunkmonkey wrote:I'm filing a C&A report right now. Its nice because they have a drop-down for "jefjef".
TheFissk wrote:922-
The Khitan Empire, led by Abaoji, raids Hebei, China
Liutprand, Lombard historian is born (approximate date; d. 972) huh?
Deaths
March 26 – Mansur Al-Hallaj, Sufi writer
Al-Nayrizi, Persian mathematician and astronomer (b. 865)
Galindo II Aznárez of Aragon
a writer, a mathematician, and someone for the lord of the rings
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