Your Score As A Year

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rdsrds2120
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Your Score As A Year

Post by rdsrds2120 »

My score now is 1899, let's see what the CC point system can bring out in each of us :P --

[spoiler=Things in My Year]January–March


January 1: Cuba free.
January 1
Spanish rule ends in Cuba.
Queens and Staten Island merge with New York City.
January 6 – Lord Curzon becomes Viceroy of India.
January 8 – SK Rapid Wien is founded.
January 10 – The Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity is founded at Illinois Wesleyan University in Bloomington, Illinois.
January 17 – The United States takes possession of Wake Island.
January 19 – Anglo-Egyptian Sudan is formed.
January 20 – South University is founded.
January 21 – Opel Motors opens for business.


January 21: Opel car.
January 22 – The leaders of six Australian colonies meet in Melbourne to discuss the confederation of Australia as a whole.
February 2 – The Australian Premiers' Conference held in Melbourne agrees that Australia's capital (Canberra) should be located between Sydney and Melbourne.
February 4 – The Philippine-American War begins as hostilities break out in Manila.
February 6 – Spanish-American War: A peace treaty between the United States and Spain is ratified by the United States Senate.
February 12–February 14 – Great Blizzard of 1899: Freezing temperatures and snow extend well south into North America, including southern Florida. It is the latest in a series of disasters to Florida's citrus industry.
February 14 – Voting machines are approved by the U.S. Congress for use in federal elections.
February 16 – Knattspyrnufélag Reykjavíkur (the first football club in Iceland). is established.
February 25 – In an accident at Grove Hill, Harrow, London, England, Edwin Sewell becomes the world's first driver of a petrol-driven vehicle to be killed; his passenger, Maj. James Richer, dies of injuries three days later.[1]
March 1 – In Afghanistan, Capt. George Roos-Keppel makes a sudden attack on a predatory band of Chamkannis that have been raiding in the Kurram Valley, and captures 100 prisoners with 3,000 head of cattle.
March 2 – In Washington State, USA, Mount Rainier National Park is established.
March 4 – Cyclone Mahina sweeps in north of Cooktown, Queensland. A 12 m wave reaches up to 5 km inland, leaving over 400 dead.
March 6
Felix Hoffmann patents aspirin.
Bayer registers aspirin as a trademark.


March 6: Aspirin.
March 8 – The Frankfurter Fußball-Club Victoria von 1899 (prequel for Eintracht Frankfurt) is founded.
March 20 – At Sing Sing, Martha M. Place becomes the first woman executed in an electric chair.
March 24 – George Dewey is made Admiral of the US Navy.
[edit]April–June
April 15 – Students at the University of California, Berkeley steal the Stanford Axe from Stanford University yelling at leaders following a baseball game, thus establishing the Axe as a symbol of the rivalry between the schools.
May 3 – Ferencvarosi Torna Club is founded.
May 13 – Esporte Clube Vitória is founded in Salvador, Brazil.
May 14 – Three times world champion Nacional is founded.
May 18 – The First Hague Peace Conference was opened in The Hague by Willem de Beaufort, Minister of Foreign Affairs of The Netherlands.
May 30 – Female outlaw Pearl Hart robs a stage coach 30 miles (48 km) southeast of Globe, Arizona.
May 31 – The launch of the Harriman Alaska Expedition.
June 12 – A tornado completely destroys the town of New Richmond, Wisconsin, killing 117 and injuring more than 200.
June 22–June 27 – The highest ever recorded individual cricket score, 628 not out, is made by A. E. J. Collins.
June 25 – Three Denver, Colorado newspapers publish a story (later proved to be a fabrication) that the Chinese government under the Guangxu Emperor is going to demolish the Great Wall of China.
June 27 – The paperclip is patented by Johan Vaaler, a Norwegian inventor.[2]
June 30 – Mile-a-Minute Murphy earns his famous nickname this day, after he becomes the first man to ride a bicycle for one mile (1.6 km) in under a minute on Long Island.
[edit]July–September
July 17
America's first juvenile court is established in Chicago.
NEC Corporation is organized as the first Japanese joint venture with foreign capital.
Battle of Togbao: The French Bretonnet–Braun mission is destroyed in Chad, by the warlord Rabih az-Zubayr.
July 19 – The Newsboys Strike takes place when the Newsies of New York go on strike (strike lasts until August 2).
July 29 – The first Peace Conference ends with the signing of the Hague Convention.
July 30 – The Harriman Alaska Expedition ends successfully.
August 3 – The John Marshall Law School is founded in Chicago, Illinois.
August 17 – A hurricane makes landfall in North Carolina's Outer Banks, completely destroying the town of Diamond City.
August 28 – At least 512 are killed when a debris hill from the Sumitomo Besshi copper mine at Niihama, Shikoku, Japan, collapses after heavy rain; 122 houses, a smelting factory, hospital and many other facilities are destroyed.[citation needed]
September 6 – The White Star Line's transatlantic ocean liner RMS Oceanic sails on her maiden voyage. At 17,272 gross tons and 704 ft (215 m), she is the largest ship afloat, following scrapping of the SS Great Eastern a decade earlier.[3]
September 13 – Mackinder, Ollier and Brocherel make the first ascent of Batian (5,199m – 17,058 ft), the highest peak of Mount Kenya.
September 19 – Alfred Dreyfus is pardoned.


Boer guerrillas during the Second Boer War
[edit]October–December
October 11 – The Second Boer War: In South Africa, a war between the United Kingdom and the Boers of the Transvaal and Orange Free State erupts.
October 30 – The Augusta High School Building is completed in Augusta, Kentucky; Augusta Methodist College shuts down.
November 4 – The Alpha Sigma Tau Sorority is founded in Ypsilanti, Michigan.
November 8 – The Bronx Zoo opens in New York City.
November 15 – The American Line's SS St. Paul becomes the first ocean liner to report her imminent arrival by wireless telegraphy when Marconi's station at The Needles contacts her 66 nautical miles off the coast of England.
November 29 – The F.C. Barcelona football club is founded.
December 2 –
Philippine-American War – Battle of Tirad Pass: ("The Filipino Thermopylae") General Gregorio del Pilar and his troops are able to guard the retreat of Philippine President Emilio Aguinaldo before being wiped out.
During the new moon, a near-grand conjunction of the classical planets and several binocular Solar System bodies occur. The Sun, Moon, Mercury, Mars and Saturn are all within 15° of each other, with Venus 5° ahead of this conjunction and Jupiter 15° behind. Accompanying the classical planets in this grand conjunction are Uranus (technically visible unaided in pollution-free skies), Ceres and Pallas.
December 16
The A.C. Milan is founded.
Augusta, KY: Augusta High School burns down due to a heating plant failure.
December 26 – Second Boer War – Battle of Mafeking: The British inflict a crushing defeat on the Boers.
December 31 – A large standing stone at Stonehenge falls over, the most recent time this has happened.[/spoiler]

Code: Select all

[spoiler=Things in My Year][/spoiler]
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Bruceswar
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Re: Your Score As A Year

Post by Bruceswar »

My score usually is in the future... Now what?
Highest Rank: 26 Highest Score: 3480
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Commander9
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Re: Your Score As A Year

Post by Commander9 »

Year 3150.

[spoiler=Things in My Year]The Robots finally rule the Earth. The humans are dead. The humans are dead...[/spoiler]
But... It was so artistically done.
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Victor Sullivan
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Re: Your Score As A Year

Post by Victor Sullivan »

Commander9 wrote:Year 3150.

[spoiler=Things in My Year]The Robots finally rule the Earth. The humans are dead. The humans are dead...[/spoiler]

We used poisonous gases... And we poisoned their asses...

-Hiphopopotamus
[player]Beckytheblondie[/player]: "Don't give us the dispatch, give us a mustache ride."

Scaling back on my CC involvement...
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Re: Your Score As A Year

Post by AndyDufresne »

My score is usually higher, but here is my current score:

[spoiler=things in my year]Year 1361 (MCCCLXI) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.
Events
January–December

July 27 – Battle of Visby: King Valdemar IV of Denmark defeats a peasant army.
October 10 – Edward, the Black Prince, marries Joan, the 'Fair Maid of Kent'.

Date unknown

The University of Pavia is founded in Italy.
In the Marinid Empire in present-day Morocco, Abu Salim Ibrahim is overthrown by Abu Umar, who is in turn overthrown by Abu Zayyan.
The Blue Horde descends into anarchy. Between 1361 and 1378, over 20 khans succeed each other in different parts of the Blue Horde's territory.
Chinese rebels capture the Koryo capital.

Births

February 26 – Wenceslaus, King of the Romans, King of Bohemia (d. 1419)
date unknown
John Beaumont, 4th Baron Beaumont, Constable of Dover Castle (d. 1396)
King Charles III of Navarre (d. 1425)

Deaths

January 7 – Gerlach I of Nassau-Wiesbaden
March 24 – Henry of Grosmont, Duke of Lancaster, English soldier and diplomat
June 9 – Philippe de Vitry, French composer (b. 1291)
June 15 – Johannes Tauler, German mystic theologian
September 18 – Louis V, Duke of Bavaria (b. 1315)
November 21 – Philip I, Duke of Burgundy (plague) (b. 1346)
date unknown
Giovanni, son of Francesco Petrarch (plague)
Ingeborg of Norway, princess consort and regent of Sweden (b. 1301)
Richard Badew, Chancellor of Cambridge University
John Beauchamp, 3rd Baron Beauchamp, Warden of the Cinque Ports
Reginald de Cobham, 1st Baron Cobham (b. 1295)
Hajji Beg, Barlas leader[/spoiler]
Not much.


--Andy
Commander9
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Re: Your Score As A Year

Post by Commander9 »

Victor Sullivan wrote:We used poisonous gases... And we poisoned their asses...

-Hiphopopotamus


Affirmative, I've poked one - it was dead.

-Rhymenosaurus
But... It was so artistically done.
KingOfGods
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Re: Your Score As A Year

Post by KingOfGods »

Year 2567 BC +/- 100 years
[spoiler=Things in My Year]c. 2600 BC: The Harappan civilization rises to become a powerful civilization.
c. 2600 BC: Pre-Palace Period, phase I, in Crete (Mellersh 1970)
c. 2600 BC – 2500 BC: Wild horses still provide hunting feasts in Denmark. (Clutton-Brock)
c. 2600 BC – 1900 BC: Large water tank, possibly a public or ritual bathing area, Mohenjo-Daro, Indus Valley Civilization, Harappan, is made.
c. 2589 BC: Pharaoh Khufu starts to rule (other date is 2601 BC).
c. 2578 BC: Khufu died.
c. 2575 BC: Old Kingdom in Egypt 4th Dynasty Snofru is Pharaoh. (Atlas of Egypt 1989)
c. 2570 BC: Khafra started to rule in Ancient Egypt.
c. 2566 BC: Pharaoh Khufu dies (other date is 2578 BC).
c. 2558 BC: Pharaoh Khafra starts to rule (other date is 2570 BC).
c. 2550 BC: Estimated date of completion of the Great Pyramid of Giza.
c. 2550 BC: Egyptian rulers contact Western Desert oases, such as Dakhla Oasis.
c. 2550 BC: About this time, Mesannepada is king of Ur (followed by his son, A-annepadda) who founds the First dynasty of Ur and overthrows the last king of Uruk, as well as Mesalim of Kish. [Roux 1980]
c. 2550 BC – 2400 BC: Great Lyre with bull's head, from the tomb of King Meskalamdug, Ur (modern Muqaiyir, Iraq, is made. It is now kept at University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Philadelphia.
c. 2544 BC: Khafra died.
c. 2533 BC: Menkaura started to rule in Ancient Egypt.
c. 2532 BC: Pharaoh Khafra dies (other date is 2544 BC).
c. 2532 BC: Pharaoh Menkaura starts to rule (other date is 2533 BC).
c. 2515 BC: Menkaura died.
c. 2510 BC – 2460 BC: Ti watching a hippopotamus hunt, tomb of Ti, Saqqara, Fifth dynasty of Egypt, is made. Discovered by French archeologist Auguste Mariette in 1865.
c. 2503 BC: Pharaoh Menkaura dies (other date is 2515 BC).
c. 2500 BC: The legendary line of Sanhuangwudi rulers of China is founded by Huang Di.
c. 2500 BC: the construction of the stone circle at Stonehenge begins and continues for the next five hundred years.
c. 2500 BC: "Menkaura and a Queen, perhaps his wife, Queen Khamerernebty II" sculpture, later found at Giza. Fourth Dynasty. It is now in Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.[/spoiler]
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shieldgenerator7
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Re: Your Score As A Year

Post by shieldgenerator7 »

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...
Above all, taking the shield of faith, wherewith ye shall be able to defeat all evil. -Ephesians 6 KJV

My Smiley: ( :) ) --- it's got SHIELDS!

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Leehar
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Re: Your Score As A Year

Post by Leehar »

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...

[spoiler=Things in your year]Year 1245 (MCCXLV) was a common year starting on Sunday of the Julian calendar.
Events

A rebellion occurs against King Sancho II of Portugal in favour of his brother Afonso.
Witness of the toll taken by war and fiscal pressure in the kingdom of Castile, the region of Segovia is described this year as depopulated and sterile.[1]
The rebuilding of Westminster Abbey is started.
Pope Innocent IV sends Giovanni da Pian del Carpine to the Mongol court, suggesting (amongst other things) that the Mongols convert to Christianity.
First Council of Lyon: Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II is excommunicated and deposed, and the Seventh Crusade is proclaimed.

Births

January 16 – Edmund Crouchback, 1st Earl of Lancaster, son of Henry III of England (d. 1296)
April 3 – King Philip III of France (d. 1285)
Boniface of Savoy

Deaths

August 19 – Ramon Berenguer IV, Count of Provence (b. 1195)
August 21 – Alexander of Hales, English theologian[/spoiler]

Nice idea btw KoG

[spoiler=Things in my century]Events
c. 2800 BC – 2700 BC: Seated Harp Player, from Keros, Cyclades, is made. It is now at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
2775 BC – 2650 BC: Second Dynasty wars in Ancient Egypt.
Around 2773 - the 365-day calendar is introduced in Egypt.
2750 BC: End of the Early Dynastic I Period, and the beginning of the Early Dynastic II Period in Mesopotamia.
c. 2750 BC: Estimated ending of the Cucuteni-Trypillian culture in the region of modern-day Romania, Moldova, and southwestern Ukraine
c. 2715 BC: Old Kingdom starts in Ancient Egypt (another date is 2660 BC).
2700 BC: Early Dynastic (Archaic) period ended in Ancient Egypt (according to French Egyptologist Nicolas Grimol). This period includes 1st and 2nd Dyasties.
c. 2700 BC: Old Kingdom started in Ancient Egypt. 3rd–6th Dynasties.
2700 BC: Mesoamericans begin to plant and domesticate corn.

Inventions, discoveries, introductions
circa 2750 BC—Silbury Hill begun
The Neolithic monument Stonehenge is built in England near Salisbury, Wiltshire, comprising a circular earthwork 97.5 m/320 ft in diameter with 56 small pits around the circumference (later known as the Aubrey holes). The position of the ‘heel stone’ outside the circle suggests a connection with Sun worship and observation. It is probably an astronomical observatory with religious functions; the motions of the Sun and Moon are followed with the aid of carefully aligned rocks.
According to Herodotus, somewhere around 2750 BC, the city of Tyre was founded.[/spoiler]

Bruceswar wrote:My score usually is in the future... Now what?

It isn't now though, so let us know
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ParadiceCity9
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Re: Your Score As A Year

Post by ParadiceCity9 »

I tried to lose exactly 10 points to have any sort of obvious significance in my year, but CC wouldn't let me, so here's 1502:

[spoiler=Things in My Year]Events
January–June
January 1 – Portuguese explorers, led by Pedro Álvares Cabral, sail into Guanabara Bay, Brazil, mistaking it for the mouth of a river, which they name Rio de Janeiro.
May 11 – Christopher Columbus leaves Cadiz, Spain for his fourth and final trip to the 'New World'. He explores Central America, and discovers St. Lucia (possibly),[1] the Isthmus of Panama, Honduras, and Costa Rica.
May 21 – Portuguese navigator João da Nova discovers the island of Saint Helena.
July–December
August 14 – Christopher Columbus lands at Trujillo and names the country 'Honduras'.
September 18 – Christopher Columbus lands at Costa Rica.
November 7 – Columbus reaches the coast of Honduras and passes south to Panama.
December 26 – Cesare Borgia kills Ramiro D'Orco; this incident is referenced in Machiavelli's The Prince
December 31 – Cesare Borgia (son of Pope Alexander VI) occupies Urbino, where he imprisons two potentially treacherous allies, Vitellozzo and Oliveretto; he executes them the next morning.
Date unknownThe first African slaves brought to the New World arrive at the island of Hispaniola (present-day Haiti and Dominican Republic).
Ivan III of Russia and Meñli I Giray of Crimea attack the Grand Duchy of Lithuania without much success.
Meñli I Giray of Crimea destroys Saray, capital of the Big Horde.
Aztec ruler Auitzotl dies; Moctezuma II is elected emperor.
'Newfoundland' gets its name from a letter.
Wittenberg University is founded.
In Germany, Peter Henlein of Nuremberg uses iron parts and coiled springs to build a portable timepiece.
In Italy, Asher Lämmlein declares that the Jewish Messiah will arrive in the next 6 months, resulting in the 'year of penance.'
Ismail I starts to rule.
The King's School in Macclesfield is founded by Sir John Percyvale.
Births
January 7 – Pope Gregory XIII (d. 1585)
February 2 – Damião de Góis, Portuguese philosopher (d. 1574)
March 20 – Pierino Belli, Italian soldier and jurist (d. 1575)
April 25 – Georg Major, German Lutheran theologian (d. 1574)
June 6 – King John III of Portugal (d. 1557)
September 13 – John Leland, English antiquarian (d. 1552)
Date Unknown
St. Anthony Maria Zaccaria, founder of the Barnabite Order (d. 1539)
Takeno Joou, Japanese tea practicer of the Sengoku period (d. 1555)
Miguel López de Legazpi, Spanish conquistador (d. 1572)
Pedro Nunes, Portuguese mathematician (d. 1578)
Henry Percy, 6th Earl of Northumberland, English courtier (d. 1537)
Francesco Spiera, Protestant Italian jurist (d. 1543)
probable
Elizabeth Blount, mistress of King Henry VIII (d. 1540)
Cuauhtémoc, last Aztec ruler (Tlatoani) of Tenochtitlán and the last "Aztec Emperor" (d. 1525)
Stephen Hawes, English poet (d. c. 1521)
Blaise de Lasseran-Massencôme, seigneur de Montluc, marshal of France (approximate date; d. 1577)
DeathsApril 2 – Arthur, Prince of Wales, eldest son of Henry VII of England (b. 1486)
May 6 – James Tyrrell, alleged murderer of the princes in the Tower (executed) (b. c. 1450)
September 1 – Sōgi, Buddhist priest and Japanese poet (b. 1421)
November 13 – Annio da Viterbo, Dominican friar and scholar
December 31 – Vitellozzo Vitelli, condottiero
date unknown
Auitzotl, Aztec ruler of Tenochtitlan
Margaret Drummond, mistress of James IV of Scotland (b. c. 1475)
Francesco Laurana, sculptor
Octavien de Saint-Gelais, poet and translator (b. 1468)
Alvise Vivarini, Italian painter (b. c. 1446)
Matthias of Geatland, the Waffle Knight of legend[/spoiler]
danryan
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Re: Your Score As A Year

Post by danryan »

Bruceswar wrote:My score usually is in the future... Now what?


Only if the future is the 1900s.
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Dukasaur
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Re: Your Score As A Year

Post by Dukasaur »

Hmmm... trying to search 1777, I get pages and pages and pages of American Revolution stuff. The only interesting item in the whole bag is
January 15th -- Vermont declares its independence from New York
-- can't really blame them now, can you?

Can we find something non-Yankee-Doodlish? Oh, here we go:
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.


But of course,
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.
Wonder if they used the code duello rules? And would it have changed the outcome if they had?

May 13th - University library at Vienna opens
Some students had been lined up since 1735....

Aug 4th - Retired British cavalry officer Philip Astley establishes 1st circus
What, the American Revolution wasn't entertaining enough?

Dec 8th - Capt Cook leaves Society Islands
Anti-social prick...:-)

In Portugal,
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.
You're just rebuilding from one disaster and along comes another....:-)

A heart-rending love story:
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.
I wonder how Sophie died. Sure hope it wasn't a code duello thing...

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
Prior to 1777, Swedes had worn things like this:
Image

The British, not to be outdone, established DENTS

In Asia,
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.
Khoutche, Khoutche, Khoutche!

And finally,
Anastasios, 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.
As they put the torch to the pyre, Anastasios... screamed in vain
“‎Life is a shipwreck, but we must not forget to sing in the lifeboats.”
― Voltaire
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jefjef
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Re: Your Score As A Year

Post by jefjef »

Year 2797:

CC busts it's 1,000,000,000,000 multi.
This post was made by jefjef who should be on your ignore list.
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drunkmonkey wrote:I'm filing a C&A report right now. Its nice because they have a drop-down for "jefjef".
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TheFissk
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Re: Your Score As A Year

Post by TheFissk »

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 ring
i'm not lost just exploring alternate destinations

Optimist invented the airplane, pessimists invented the parachute

I'm to good for victory
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TheFissk
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Re: Your Score As A Year

Post by TheFissk »

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
i'm not lost just exploring alternate destinations

Optimist invented the airplane, pessimists invented the parachute

I'm to good for victory
jammyjames
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Re: Your Score As A Year

Post by jammyjames »

Okay, mine doesn't make that much sense ... EXCEPT THE END OF THE GOD-DAMN WORLD!!

2444 AD ( 2444 + 4 / 144 = " 17 " )..... spiritual perfection.

:shock: Not quite sure though... :?

taken from
http://www.davidjayjordan.com/MathematicaldatesofEndTime.html
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