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= April 27 =
= December 9 =


==Tribes and inceldom==
== Tucker Carlson ==
One common saying in [[incel]] subcultures is that women are "programmed" to only have relationships with the 20% top men. This appears to be consistent (o at least not contradicted by) this phrase in the [[polygamy]] article: "More recent genetic data has clarified that, in most regions throughout history, a smaller proportion of men contributed to human genetic history compared to women."


Then again, while I've heard of modern tribes with weird marriage practices (for example the [[Wodaabe]] or the [[Trobriand people]]) I've never heard of tribes where 70% of men die virgins. Is there any tribe/society where something like that happens? (I realize that modern tribes are by definition different to Paleolithic tribes)[[Special:Contributions/90.77.114.87|90.77.114.87]] ([[User talk:90.77.114.87|talk]]) 13:51, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
One of the accusations against Tucker Carlson, just fired anchor from the fox News was that he used c-word. What is the c-word?


:From what I've read in the past, it seems that hunter-gatherer cultures over the last 50,000 years ago probably tended to be mildly polygynous -- that is, certain men, due to their personalities and demonstrated skills, managed to attract more than one woman at a time into a relationship with them. (Usually a small number -- some men having large numbers of wives is associated more with agricultural civilizations, and women there could often have less freedom of choice than women in hunter-gatherer groups.) Everybody of both sexes is likely to be most attracted to high-status individuals, but under hunter-gatherer conditions, women also need help with child-rearing, which factors into their mating strategies. [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 14:19, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
[[Special:Contributions/107.191.2.20|107.191.2.20]] ([[User talk:107.191.2.20|talk]]) 00:57, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
::P.S. Under the classic anthropological band-tribe-chiefdom-state classification system (on Wikipedia, covered in the vaguely named [[Sociopolitical typology]] article), most historical hunter-gatherer cultures were "bands", while the Wodaabe and Trobriand people sound more like "tribes". [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 14:26, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
:See [["C" word]]. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/90.213.18.208|90.213.18.208]] ([[User talk:90.213.18.208|talk]]) 01:34, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
:<small> Over at Fox, conscientious, compassionate and competent are all c-words. [[User:Clarityfiend|Clarityfiend]] ([[User talk:Clarityfiend|talk]]) 08:38, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
::In case you haven't noticed, Clarityfiend is also a C-word. [[Special:Contributions/136.56.52.157|136.56.52.157]] ([[User talk:136.56.52.157|talk]]) 12:14, 27 April 2023 (UTC)</small>
I should have guessed, alas... next time.... Thanks, [[User:AboutFace 22|AboutFace 22]] ([[User talk:AboutFace 22|talk]]) 17:29, 27 April 2023 (UTC)


:: Worth remembering, though: who has "sanctioned" relationships is not necessarily equivalent to who actually has sex. - [[User:Jmabel|Jmabel]] &#124; [[User talk:Jmabel|Talk]] 19:15, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
== A Catholic Priest (And Biblical Scholar) In Rome (Or Somewhere In Italy) Who Was Active During The 1950's ==
:::It has been said (in mammals at least) that each 5% difference in mass for males means that their [[harem (zoology)]] has one more female. The [[sexual dimorphism#Humans]] article says that human males are 15% heavier that the females (previously I had heard 20%), suggesting that the harem-holder has three mates (or 4, if the 20% is correct). But this does not mean that 75% of human males never had sex. Firstly, holding a harem is a dangerous, short term job if other animals are any guide, with the harem master regularly killed or overthrown. Secondly, in current polygynous human cultures and in polygynous animals, there is a huge amount of cheating. Evidence from animals shows that when females cheat, they are statistically more likely to produce offspring from that mating than from a mating with their main male. <span style="font-family: Cambria;"> [[User:Abductive|<span style="color: teal;">'''Abductive'''</span>]] ([[User talk:Abductive|reasoning]])</span> 11:09, 11 December 2024 (UTC)


::::It's doubtful that there were commonly "harems" at any stage of human evolution which is very relevant to modern human behavior. Gorillas have moderate harems of often around 3 or 4 females (as opposed to elephant seals, which commonly have a harem size in the thirties). [[Paranthropus|Robust Australopithecines]] may have been similar, but modern humans are not descended from them. What we know about attested hunter-gatherer societies strongly suggests that during the last 50,000 years or so (since [[Behavioral modernity]]) the majority of men who had wives had one wife, but some exceptional men were able to attract 2 or 3 women at a time into relationships. Men having large numbers of wives (real harems) wasn't too feasible until the rise of social stratification which occurred with the development of agriculture. [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 16:50, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
Somewhere in the English-language Wikipedia I noticed a biographical article about a Roman Catholic priest in Rome (or somewhere in Italy) who was active during the 1950's. The article mentioned that part of his academic work was writing a large commentary (about 10,000 manuscript pages) on the Bible. His major topic in systematic theology (or dogmatics) was theology of sacrifice. Unfortunately, in his Biblical commentary work, he did not make clear distinctions between INTERPRETATIONS of Scripture (which are supposed to be consistent with official Catholic interpretations) and his own ideas about the APPLICATIONS OR IMPLICATIONS of Scripture (where there is more freedom for personal ideas). Therefore, the Catholic authorities in Rome did not approve of his commentary work and prevented him from publishing his commentary work (or maybe he did publish and then the authorities placed his writings on the Index Of Prohibited Books). If possible, I would like to find this article again because it exemplifies the importance of this distinction (interpretations versus applications or implications). Any ideas from anyone? Thank you. [[User:Aquinas2023|Aquinas2023]] ([[User talk:Aquinas2023|talk]]) 06:59, 27 April 2023 (UTC)


:::::How do we know that? Because the same evidence is that prior to 50,000 years ago, humans ''did'' have harems. <span style="font-family: Cambria;"> [[User:Abductive|<span style="color: teal;">'''Abductive'''</span>]] ([[User talk:Abductive|reasoning]])</span> 20:22, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
:There have been several controversies connected with the [[Pontifical Biblical Institute]]. The Index was abolished in 1966... [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 08:49, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
::::::Where can we find this evidence? &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 08:31, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::[https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00239-003-2458-x A Recent Shift from Polygyny to Monogamy in Humans Is Suggested by the Analysis of Worldwide Y-Chromosome Diversity]. <span style="font-family: Cambria;"> [[User:Abductive|<span style="color: teal;">'''Abductive'''</span>]] ([[User talk:Abductive|reasoning]])</span> 14:53, 13 December 2024 (UTC)


== Scattering in US elections ==
:Theology and philosophy aren't my strong points, so a lot of your clues don't mean a whole lot to me, but [[Yves Congar]]'s ''True and False Reform in the Church'' was banned by the Catholic Church in 1952, according to his article. [[User:Clarityfiend|Clarityfiend]] ([[User talk:Clarityfiend|talk]]) 08:52, 27 April 2023 (UTC)


What does scattering mean in the context of US elections? Examples: [[1944 United_States presidential election in California#Results]] [[1886 United States House of Representatives elections#Mississippi]]. Searching mostly produces [[Electron scattering]], which is not the same thing at all! Is there (or should there be) an article or section that could be linked? [[User:Cavrdg|Cavrdg]] ([[User talk:Cavrdg|talk]]) 14:32, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
::You might try looking through [[:Category:20th-century Italian Roman Catholic theologians]] - there's only 26 of them. [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 16:39, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
:If you click on the source for Frederick G. Berry in the 1886 election, then on Scattering on the following page, it says it's for those with "No Party Affiliation". [[User:Clarityfiend|Clarityfiend]] ([[User talk:Clarityfiend|talk]]) 14:44, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Of that list the most "problematic" ones are probably [[Raimondo Spiazzi]] and [[Giovanni Franzoni]]. --[[Special:Contributions/82.52.31.81|82.52.31.81]] ([[User talk:82.52.31.81|talk]]) 17:02, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
:I have not found the exact answer but I certainly appreciate the thoughtful replies that several people have posted concerning this question! I suppose that I could try contacting the Catholic Biblical Association or the Catholic Biblical Quarterly, but the question isn't really worth pursuing to that extent or degree. Thank you.[[User:Aquinas2023|Aquinas2023]] ([[User talk:Aquinas2023|talk]]) 18:51, 27 April 2023 (UTC)


:Presumably from the phrase "a scattering of votes" (i.e. for other candidates than those listed)... [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 15:52, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
== Fair use or copyright broke? ==
::I suspect that the intended word is "smattering". [[User:Cullen328|Cullen328]] ([[User talk:Cullen328|talk]]) 09:12, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
:::That's what I have of Spanish. [[User:Tamfang|—Tamfang]] ([[User talk:Tamfang|talk]]) 20:07, 21 December 2024 (UTC)


= December 11 =
In the last seconds of videos of this channel, there is iOS ringtone. It is fair use or copyright broke?


== Shopping carts ==
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLGck6hIsj2Pmw8bzTSBACZM5wIAUOSzPm [[Special:Contributions/2001:B07:6442:8903:A436:296:5F80:2880|2001:B07:6442:8903:A436:296:5F80:2880]] ([[User talk:2001:B07:6442:8903:A436:296:5F80:2880|talk]]) 16:40, 27 April 2023 (UTC)


Where were the first shopping carts introduced?
:Well, it seems to be the same as the iOS "Classic" Bell Tower. [[Fair use]] is not a concept everywhere in the world (although most countries have some way to allow some use of copyrighted material in some way). The question is a) if this ring tone is sufficiently original to enjoy copyright protection and b) if so, if that use is covered by some exception. --[[User:Stephan Schulz|Stephan Schulz]] ([[User talk:Stephan Schulz|talk]]) 19:06, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
*[[shopping cart]] and [[Sylvan Goldman]] say the Humpty Dumpty chain
*[[Piggly Wiggly]] says the Piggly Wiggly chain and quotes the Harvard Business Review
Both articles agree it was in 1937 in Oklaholma. I believe that Humpty Dumpty is more likely, but some high quality sources would be useful. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 11:55, 11 December 2024 (UTC)


:It seems to be a matter of some dispute, but [https://sova.si.edu/record/nmah.ac.0739 ''Guide to the Telescoping Shopping Cart Collection, 1946-1983, 2000''] by the Smithsonian Institution has the complex details of the dispute between Sylvan Goldman [of Humpty Dumpty] and [[Orla Watson]]. No mention of Piggly Wiggly, but our article on Watson notes that in 1946, he donated the first models of his cart to 10 grocery stores in Kansas City.
I should have guessed, alas... next time.... Thanks, [[User:AboutFace 22|AboutFace 22]] ([[User talk:AboutFace 22|talk]]) 17:29, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
:[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=WBH3rhiWsm4C&pg=PA205 ''The Illustrated History of American Military Commissaries'' (p. 205)] has both Watson and Goldman introducing their carts in 1947 (this may refer to carts that telescope into each other for storage, a feature apparently lacking in Goldman's first model).
:[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=JCUwEQAAQBAJ&pg=PT17 ''Scalable Innovation: A Guide for Inventors, Entrepreneurs, and IP Professionals''] says that Goldman's first cart was introduced to Humpty Dumty in 1937.
:Make of that what you will. [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 13:30, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
::Absolutely. I remember that the power lift arrangement mentioned in the Smithsonian's link was still an object of analysis for would-be inventors in the mid-sixties, and possibly later, even though the soon to be ubiquituous checkout counter conveyor belt was very much ready making it unnecessary. Couldn't help curiously but think about those when learning about [[Bredt's rule]] at school later, see my user page, but it's true "Bredt" sounded rather like "Bread" in my imagination. --[[User:Askedonty|Askedonty]] ([[User talk:Askedonty|talk]]) 15:33, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
:On Newspapers.com (pay site), I'm seeing shopping carts referenced in Portland, Oregon in 1935 or earlier, and occasionally illustrated, at a store called the Public Market; and as far as the term itself is concerned, it goes back to at least the 1850s. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 15:18, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
::But perhaps referring to a cart brought by the shopper to carry goods home with, rather than one provided by the storekeeper for use in-store? [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 16:14, 11 December 2024 (UTC)


{{ping|Alansplodge|Askedonty|Baseball Bugs}} thank you for your help, it seems that the Harvard Business Review is mistaken and the Piggly Wiggly chain did not introduce the first shopping baskets, which answers my question. The shopping cart article references a [https://www.csi.minesparis.psl.eu/working-papers/WP/WP_CSI_006.pdf paper by Catherine Grandclément], which shows that several companies were selling early shopping carts in 1937, so crediting Sylvan Goldman alone is not the whole story. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 17:22, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
= April 29 =


== Lilacs/flowers re: Allies in Europe WWII ==
== Jesús Colón body cremated? ==


At 53:20 in [[Dunkirk (1958 film)]], British soldiers talk about [paraphrasing] 'flowers on the way into Belgium, raspberries on the way out', and specifically reference lilacs. I imagine this was very clear to 1958 audiences, but what is the significance of lilacs? Is it/was it a symbol of Belgium? [[User:Valereee|Valereee]] ([[User talk:Valereee|talk]]) 21:40, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
Our article on [[Jesús Colón]] says that his body was cremated, and ashes spread over a river in Puerto Rico. I can't find a very reliable source establishing that (I don't think our article's current source is great...). Can anyone? [[User:Eddie891|Eddie891]] <small>''<sup> [[User talk:Eddie891|Talk]]</sup> <sub>[[Special:Contributions/Eddie891|Work]]</sub>'' </small> 01:09, 29 April 2023 (UTC)
:I think it's just that the BEF [[Operation David|entered Belgium]] in the Spring, which is lilac time. [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 22:04, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
:There are contemporary reports of the streets being strewn with lilac blossom. See [https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/75930659/7411364 here] "Today the troops crossed the frontier along roads strewn with flowers. Belgian girls, wildly enthusiastic, plucked lilac from the wayside and scattered it along the road to be torn and twisted by the mighty wheels of the mechanised forces." [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 22:26, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
::Ah! That would explain it, thanks! [[User:Valereee|Valereee]] ([[User talk:Valereee|talk]]) 16:14, 13 December 2024 (UTC)


= December 12 =
:{{ping|Marine 69-71}} &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 18:23, 29 April 2023 (UTC)
:Sources:
:*<ref>[https://aalbc.com/authors/author.php?author_name=Jesus+Colon|Jesus+Colon]</ref>
:*<ref>[https://peoplesworld.org/article/jesus-colon-a-puerto-rican-in-new-york/ A Puerto Rican in New York]</ref>
:*<ref>[https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/people-african-american-history/jesus-colon-1901-1974/#:~:text=Jes%C3%BAs%20Col%C3%B3n%20died%20at%20the,Plata%20in%20Cayey%2C%20Puerto%20Rico.]</ref>
:[[User:Marine 69-71|Tony the Marine]] ([[User talk:Marine 69-71|talk]]) 02:08, 2 May 2023 (UTC)


== The USA adding a new state ==
::Thanks, @[[User:Marine 69-71|Marine 69-71]]. (FYI, Your first two links are dead.) I was hoping to find a source that predates the 2004 addition of this content to our article (the links you offered are from [https://web.archive.org/web/20161028082912/http://www.peoplesworld.org/article/jesus-colon-a-puerto-rican-in-new-york/ 2006] and [https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/people-african-american-history/jesus-colon-1901-1974/#:~:text=Jes%C3%BAs%20Col%C3%B3n%20died%20at%20the,Plata%20in%20Cayey%2C%20Puerto%20Rico. 2021], respectively) or is marginally higher reliability. The People's World source seems to be directly lifted from Wikipedia, while I can't find anything about cremation in the sources linked by the [[BlackPast]] article, and it uses the same image we use, suggesting the author at least looked at our wikipedia article (though it is by a [https://www.blackpast.org/author/guzmanwill/ reputable] author, I have seen a number of authors with PhDs make mistakes, particularly in scholarship on Colón). Can you or anyone find anything else? [[User:Eddie891|Eddie891]] <small>''<sup> [[User talk:Eddie891|Talk]]</sup> :<sub>[[Special:Contributions/Eddie891|Work]]</sub>'' </small> 15:23, 2 May 2023 (UTC)
:::{{small|I've fixed the second source link. &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 07:32, 3 May 2023 (UTC)}}


If my understanding is correct, the following numbers are valid at present: (a) number of Senators = 100; (b) number of Representatives = 435; (c) number of electors in the Electoral College = 538. If the USA were to add a new state, what would happen to these numbers? Thank you. [[Special:Contributions/32.209.69.24|32.209.69.24]] ([[User talk:32.209.69.24|talk]]) 06:30, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
{{talkref}}
:The number of senators would increase by 2, and the number of representatives would probably increase by at least 1. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 09:23, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
::Thus, to answer the final question, the minimum number of Electors would be 3… more if the new state has more Representatives (based on population). [[User:Blueboar|Blueboar]] ([[User talk:Blueboar|talk]]) 13:54, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
:In the short term, there would be extra people in congress. The [[86th United States Congress]] had 437 representatives, because Alaska and Hawaii were granted one upon entry regardless of the apportionment rules. Things were smoothed down to 435 at the next census, two congresses later. --[[User:Golbez|Golbez]] ([[User talk:Golbez|talk]]) 14:58, 12 December 2024 (UTC)


Thanks. Hmmmmmmmmmmm. Let me re-phrase my question. (a) The number of Senators is always 2 per State, correct? (b) The number of Representatives is what? Is it "capped" at 435 ... or does it increase a little bit? (c) The number of Electors (per State) is simply a function of "a" + "b" (per State), correct? Thanks. [[Special:Contributions/32.209.69.24|32.209.69.24]] ([[User talk:32.209.69.24|talk]]) 21:12, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
= April 30 =
:As I understand it, it is indeed capped at 435, though Golbez brings up a point I hadn't taken into account -- apparently it can go up temporarily when states are added, until the next reapportionment. --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 21:21, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
:{{br}}I suggest that (b) would probably depend on whether the hypothetical new state was made up of territory previously part of one or more existing states, or territory not previously part of any existing state. And I suspect that the eventual result would not depend on any pre-calculable formula, but on cut-throat horsetrading between the two main parties and other interested bodies. {The poster formerly nown as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/94.1.211.243|94.1.211.243]] ([[User talk:94.1.211.243|talk]]) 21:21, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
::Nope, it's capped at 435. See [[Reapportionment Act of 1929]]. (I had thought it was fixed in the Constitution itself, but apparently not.) --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 21:23, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
:::The Constitution has a much higher cap, currently around eleven thousand. [[User:Tamfang|—Tamfang]] ([[User talk:Tamfang|talk]]) 20:09, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
:Oh, one other refinement. The formula you've given for number of electors is correct, for states. But it leaves out the [[District of Columbia]], which gets as many electors as it would get if it were a state, but never <s>less</s> <u>more</u> than those apportioned to the smallest state. In practice that means DC gets three electors. That's why the total is 538 instead of 535. --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 21:58, 12 December 2024 (UTC) <small>Oops; I remembered the bit about the smallest state wrong. It's actually never ''more'' than the smallest state. Doesn't matter in practice; still works out to 3 electors for the foreseeable future, either way, because DC would get 3 electors if it were a state, and the least populous state gets 3. --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 23:23, 12 December 2024 (UTC) </small>


= December 13 =
== Birth rate of developed countries and poor countries ==


== economics: coffee prices question ==
I always though people in developed countries have more money. I have seen that women in poor countries have more children that Europe, USA, Japan. Most parents in those developed countries struggle to raise two kids also. While many Sub Saharan rural women have 10 kids. How are poor people able to feed so many kids, while middle class American compain of rising costs? Some Italians are not having kids as they don't have money to feed extra family memeber.


in news report "On Tuesday, the price for Arabica beans, which account for most global production, topped $3.44 a pound (0.45kg), having jumped more than 80% this year. " [https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c36pgrrjllyo] how do they measure it? some other report mention it is a commodity price set for trading like gold silver etc. what is the original data source for this report? i checked a few other news stories and did not find any clarification about this point, they just know something that i don't. thank you in advance for your help. [[User:Gryllida|Gryllida]] ([[User talk:Gryllida|talk]], [[Special:EmailUser/Gryllida|e-mail]]) 01:32, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
In 1985, Niger had birth rate of 7.93 child per woman, Chad had birth rate of 7.04 child per woman. 1962, Zimbabwe had birth rate 7.25.


:[[User:Gryllida|Gryllida]], they seem to be talking about the "Coffee C" contract in the [[List of traded commodities]]. The price seems to have peaked and then fallen a day later
I checked Europe, USA never had such birth rate above 7 per women in past 200 years. Maximum 4.6 for European women 150 years ago. In twentieth century, no White country had birth rate above 5. Still, Europe has more population density than Africa.
:*explanation [https://www.ice.com/products/15/Coffee-C-Futures here]
:*I googled "coffee c futures price chart" and the first link was uk.investing.com which I can't link here
:*if you have detailed questions about [[futures contract]]s they will probably go over my head. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 01:54, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
::thanks. i see the chart which you cannot link here. why did it peak and then drop shortly after? [[User:Gryllida|Gryllida]] ([[User talk:Gryllida|talk]], [[Special:EmailUser/Gryllida|e-mail]]) 04:08, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Financial markets tend to have periods of increase followed by periods of decrease (bull and bear markets), see [[market trend]] for background. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 04:55, 13 December 2024 (UTC)


== source for an order of precedence for abbotts ==
Why people in rich countries say raising kids is costly, but people in poor countries have no problem raising many kids? [[User:CofeeGhana|CofeeGhana]] ([[User talk:CofeeGhana|talk]]) 06:50, 30 April 2023 (UTC)


Hi friends. The article for [[Ramsey Abbey]] in the UK refers to an "order of precedence for abbots in Parliament". (Sourced to an encyclopedia, which uses the wording "The abbot had a seat in Parliament and ranked next after Glastonbury and St. Alban's"). Did a ranking/order of precedence exist and if yes where can it be found? Presumably this would predate the dissolution of monasteries in england. Thanks.[[Special:Contributions/70.67.193.176|70.67.193.176]] ([[User talk:70.67.193.176|talk]]) 06:49, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
:The [[cost of living]] is much higher in rich countries than in poor countries, so it costs much more money to raise kids in rich countries, but parents there are generally rich enough to do so. In poor countries, it costs much less to raise each kid, although having fewer kids would mean more money available for raising each.
:BUT, there is another more important factor. In most rich countries, people usually receive [[unemployment benefits]] if they cannot find work and [[Disability benefits|other benefits]] if they are ill or disabled; they can often afford to save up money for their old age; they may earn [[occupational pensions]] from their employers, and they usually receive government-run [[Pension|old age pensions]]. By contrast, in poor countries some or all of these are unavailable, and unemployed, sick and old people are instead supported by their relatives, including their children. Because also infant and [[child mortality]] is higher in poor countries, parents have to have more children in order that enough of them live to adulthood to support those parents when old.
:This can cause problems in countries where health standards are rapidly improving, because people continue to have many children out of cultural habits, resulting in a surplus population of young adults who cannot find work. This is called the [[Demographic trap]], and is an important underlying reason behind, for example, recent unrest in various North African and Middle Eastern countries. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/90.213.18.208|90.213.18.208]] ([[User talk:90.213.18.208|talk]]) 10:37, 30 April 2023 (UTC)


:The abbots called to parliament were called "Mitred Abbots" although not all were entitled to wear a mitre. Our [[Mitre]] article has much the same information as you quote, and I suspect the same citations. The only other reference I could find, also from an encyclopedia;
::It's more than just cost of living -- in the conditions of many traditional agricultural societies, children were basically economic assets after about the age of 10, while in more economically-advanced societies, there's usually very little direct economic return for the time, effort, and expenses of child-rearing. In any case, the main article is [[demographic transition]]. -- [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 13:24, 30 April 2023 (UTC)
:{{xt|Of the abbots, the abbot of Glastonbury had the precedence till A.D. 1154, when [[Pope Adrian IV]], an Englishman, from the affection he entertained for the place of his education, assigned this precedence to the abbot of St. Alban's. In consequence, Glastonbury ranked next after him, and Reading had the third place.}}
:::{{no ping|CofeeGhana}} Don't be mislead by statistics. The birth rates you are quoting are averages and include couples who have difficulty conceiving, or the woman has difficulty carrying the pregnancy to term. A look at many family trees will show families of 0, 1, or 2 children alongside those of ten or a dozen. The next point where statistics can easily mislead is to equate live births to successful rearing, the rate of infant mortality has varied a lot over history. For many and complex reasons the "White countries" (your term) had safer drinking water, paved streets and sewage/rubbish removal before other countires. These were the major changes in public health which lead to northwest Europe entering [[Demographic_transition#Stage_two|stage 2]] of the demographic transition. If I remember correctly (from studying this at school 50 years ago) the UK entered stage 3 roughly at the start of WWI. [[User:Martin of Sheffield|Martin of Sheffield]] ([[User talk:Martin of Sheffield|talk]]) 09:14, 1 May 2023 (UTC)
:[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=GZnQtCA-a2kC&pg=PA2 ''A Church Dictionary: A Practical Manual of Reference for Clergymen and Students'' (p. 2)]
:The cost to raise a child varies by what parents deem necessary to provide for a child. In some parts of the world a $1000USD stroller is a reasonable need, in others a stroller is not necessary. Some parents plan to spend over $100,000 on education for their children while most parents across the globe do not and both groups see their choice as reasonable for properly raising a child. [[User:Of 19|Of 19]] ([[User talk:Of 19|talk]]) 21:46, 30 April 2023 (UTC)
:[[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 21:47, 16 December 2024 (UTC)


:Sources differ on the order. There is a list published in 1842 of 26 abbots as "generally ... reckoned" in order here
:Another factor is time. In western countries, you need a lot of education to have any chance at a job. Then you have to find a job, then another job that actually pays well enough to afford cheap housing. In some poor countries you may be able to survive on €50 per month, but in western Europe the poorest quality apartment will already cost you €500 per month. Then you have to find a mate (not trivial in a society where you don't even know the name of your neighbour and only communicate with computers; most people still meet their colleagues, but many jobs have a strong gender bias, so that doesn't help), then a home that's big enough to have children. It's career first, then children. In my country, the average age of a woman when she has her first child is about 30. Starting at that age, 3 children is about the limit. [[User:PiusImpavidus|PiusImpavidus]] ([[User talk:PiusImpavidus|talk]]) 08:54, 1 May 2023 (UTC)
:[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=MBZjBKtuIQkC&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&printsec=frontcover&pg=PA182 ''The Church History of Britain Volume 2'' (p.182)] [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 22:15, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
:One aspect not mentioned is the wide and easy availability of contraception, and of the very idea of [[family planning]]. --[[User:Stephan Schulz|Stephan Schulz]] ([[User talk:Stephan Schulz|talk]]) 10:56, 1 May 2023 (UTC)
::"Mean lords" in that reference should presumably be [[Mesne lord]]s. [[Special:Contributions/194.73.48.66|194.73.48.66]] ([[User talk:194.73.48.66|talk]]) 14:25, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
:::"Mean lords" looks like an alternative spelling that was used in the 19th century, so it was probably a correct spelling in 1842. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 15:07, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
:Thank you everyone very much for your time and research, truly appreciated. all the best,[[Special:Contributions/70.67.193.176|70.67.193.176]] ([[User talk:70.67.193.176|talk]]) 23:44, 20 December 2024 (UTC)


== Are the proposed Trump tariffs a regressive tax in disguise? ==
*The thing the OP notes is called the [[Demographic economic paradox]]. That links to an article where you can read more about the phenomenon. --[[User:Jayron32|<span style="color:#009">Jayron</span>]][[User talk:Jayron32|<b style="color:#090">''32''</b>]] 11:53, 1 May 2023 (UTC)


I'm wondering if there has been analysis of this. The US government gets the tariff money(?) and biggest chunk will be on manufactured goods from China. Those in turn are primarily consumer goods, which means that the tariff is something like a sales tax, a type of tax well known to be regressive. Obviously there are leaks in the description above, so one would have to crunch a bunch of numbers to find out for sure. But that's what economists do, right? Has anyone weighed in on this issue? Thanks. [[Special:Contributions/2601:644:8581:75B0:0:0:0:327E|2601:644:8581:75B0:0:0:0:327E]] ([[User talk:2601:644:8581:75B0:0:0:0:327E|talk]]) 08:58, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
= May 1 =
:There have been many public comments about how this is a tax on American consumers. It's only "in disguise" to those who don't understand how tariffs work. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 11:34, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
::Thanks, I'll see what I can find. Do you remember if the revenue collected is supposed to be enough for the government to care about? I.e. enough to supposedly offset the inevitable tax cuts for people like Elon Musk? [[Special:Contributions/2601:644:8581:75B0:0:0:0:327E|2601:644:8581:75B0:0:0:0:327E]] ([[User talk:2601:644:8581:75B0:0:0:0:327E|talk]]) 22:36, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
Import duties are extremely recessive in that (a) they are charged at the same rate for any given level of income; and (b) those with less income tend to purchase far more imported goods than those with more income (define “more” and “less” any way you wish). Fiscally, they border on insignificant, running an average of 1.4% of federal revenue since 1962 (or, 0.2% of GDP), compared to 47.1% (8.0%) for individual income tax and 9.9% (1.7%) for corporate tax receipts.[[User:DOR (HK)|DOR (ex-HK)]] ([[User talk:DOR (HK)|talk]]) 22:52, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
:Curious about your point (b); why would this be? It seems to me that as my income has risen I have probably bought more stuff from abroad, at least directly. It could well be that I've bought less indirectly, but I'm not sure why that would be. --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 00:02, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
::More like, those with less income spend a larger fraction of their income on imported goods, instead of services. [[User:PiusImpavidus|PiusImpavidus]] ([[User talk:PiusImpavidus|talk]]) 10:48, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
Trovatore, most daily use items are imported: toothbrushes, combs, kitchenware, shopping bags. Most durable goods are imported: phones, TVs, cars, furniture, sporting goods, clothes. These items are more likely to be imported because it is MUCH cheaper / more profitable to make them abroad. Wander through Target, Sam's Club, or Wal-Mart and you'll be hard pressed to find "Made in America" goods. But, in a hand-crafted shop, where prices have to reflect the cost of living HERE, rather than in Bangladesh, prices soar. [[User:DOR (HK)|DOR (ex-HK)]] ([[User talk:DOR (HK)|talk]]) 19:13, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
::::Um, sure, but surely it's a fairly rare person of any income level who spends a significant portion of his/her income on artisanal goods. --[[User:Trovatore|Trovatore]] ([[User talk:Trovatore|talk]]) 06:03, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
:::PiusImpavidus, Every income strata (in America) spends far more on services than on goods. Services tend to be more of a repeated purchase: laundry (vs. washing machine), Uber (vs. car), rent (vs. purchase), internet (vs. books), etc. [[User:DOR (HK)|DOR (ex-HK)]] ([[User talk:DOR (HK)|talk]]) 19:17, 15 December 2024 (UTC)


== Ron A. Dunn: Australian arachnologist ==
== Weh Antiok Khusrau ==


For {{q|Q109827858}} I have given names of "Ron. A.", an address in 1958 of 60 Mimosa Road, Carnegie, {{nowrap|Victoria, Australia S.E. 9}} (he was also in Carnegie in 1948) and an ''uncited'' death date of 25 June 1972.
The article [[spite house]] says: ''In 541, after the conquest of Antioch, Sassan Emperor Khosrau I built a new city near Ctesiphon for the 30,000 inhabitants he captured, he modelled this city after the original Antioch and was said to have forced the inhabitants to live in their old homes/old workplaces.'' There’s no source. Where can I read more about this? [[User:Amisom|Amisom]] ([[User talk:Amisom|talk]]) 20:46, 1 May 2023 (UTC)


He was an Australian arachnologist with the honorifics AAA AAIS.
:Our [[Ctesiphon#Sasanian period]] article has a mysterious reference, "Dingas, Winter 2007, 109" which isn't listed in the Bibliography section.
:[https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_History_of_Ancient_Iran/0y1jeSqbHLwC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=%22Weh+Antiok+Khusrau%22&pg=PA327&printsec=frontcover ''The History of Ancient Iran'' p. 327] has a brief mention.
:A less reliable source is [https://historyfortoday108135307.wordpress.com/2019/02/06/ancient-anecdotes-khosraus-better-antioch/ this blog]. If this is correct, it seems that the spite was against the Byzantine emperor rather than the Antiochians, who apparently did rather well out of the deal.
:Hopefully another editor can do better. [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 21:49, 1 May 2023 (UTC)
::The Dingas, Winter reference is to {{cite book|last1=Dignas |first1=Beate |last2=Winter |first2=Engelbert |title=Rome and Persia in Late Antiquity |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2007 |url=https://archive.org/details/RomeAndPersiaInLateAntiquityVahidddd/page/n125/mode/2up |page=109 }} Following it up, I find they tell us that "Not far from the Sasanian capital Ktēsiphōn he [Xusrō] built a new city that was modelled upon the conquered city; he named the new foundation Veh-Antiok-Xusrō (='Xusrō made this city better than Antioch') and settled Antioch's deported population here." --[[User:Antiquary|Antiquary]] ([[User talk:Antiquary|talk]]) 11:22, 2 May 2023 (UTC) And I've added that ref in full to the Spite house and Ctesiphon articles. --[[User:Antiquary|Antiquary]] ([[User talk:Antiquary|talk]]) 11:32, 2 May 2023 (UTC) Ah yes, I now see the IP below was pointing to that ref. --[[User:Antiquary|Antiquary]] ([[User talk:Antiquary|talk]]) 11:53, 2 May 2023 (UTC)


Can anyone find the full given names, and a source or the death date, please? What did the honorifics stand for? Do we know how he earned his living? <span class="vcard"><span class="fn">[[User:Pigsonthewing|Andy Mabbett]]</span> (<span class="nickname">Pigsonthewing</span>); [[User talk:Pigsonthewing|Talk to Andy]]; [[Special:Contributions/Pigsonthewing|Andy's edits]]</span> 12:54, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
:See also: [[Weh Antiok Khosrow]] (and sources therein). [[Special:Contributions/136.56.52.157|136.56.52.157]] ([[User talk:136.56.52.157|talk]]) 05:38, 2 May 2023 (UTC)
::That article doesn’t repeat the claim though. [[User:Amisom|Amisom]] ([[User talk:Amisom|talk]]) 06:09, 2 May 2023 (UTC)
:::Not directly, but some of it can be implied from the name meaning {{tq| "better than Antioch, Khosrow built this"}} and {{tq|prisoners-of-war from the cities of Sura, Beroea, Antioch, Apamea, Callinicum, and Batnai in Osrhoene were deported to this new city.}} Perhaps source(s) can provide more details. [[Special:Contributions/136.56.52.157|136.56.52.157]] ([[User talk:136.56.52.157|talk]]) 13:00, 2 May 2023 (UTC)


:[[User:Pigsonthewing|Pigsonthewing]] Have you tried ancestry.com? For a start
== Countries that recognized the old Republic of China ==
:A scan of the 1954 Carnegie electoral roll has
:*Dunn, Ronald Albert, 60 Mimosa Road, S.E. 9, accountant
:*Dunn, Gladys Harriet I, 60 Mimosa Road, S.E. 9, home duties
:I can't check newspapers.com, but The Age apparently had a report about Ronald Albert Dunn on 27 Jun 1972 [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 14:49, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
::Thank you. I don't have access to the former, but that's great. AAA seems to be (member of the) Association of Accountants of Australia: [https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/206190746]. <span class="vcard"><span class="fn">[[User:Pigsonthewing|Andy Mabbett]]</span> (<span class="nickname">Pigsonthewing</span>); [[User talk:Pigsonthewing|Talk to Andy]]; [[Special:Contributions/Pigsonthewing|Andy's edits]]</span> 16:18, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
:::I accessed Ancestry.com via the Wikipedia Library, so you should have access. Newspapers.com is also available via the library if you register, which I haven't. An editor with a Newspapers.com account would be able to make a clipping which anyone could access online.
:::I agree AAA is probably the Australian Society of Accountants, a predecessor of [[CPA Australia]]. They merged in 1953 ([https://trove.nla.gov.au/people/458467 source]) so the information would have been outdated in 1958. AAIS could be Associate [of the] Amalgamated Institute of Secretaries (source [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=vxQ6AQAAIAAJ Who's Who in Australia, Volume 16, 1959] Abbreviations page 9). [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 16:48, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
::::Last time I tried, Ancestry wasn't working for WP-Lib users. Thank you again. <span class="vcard"><span class="fn">[[User:Pigsonthewing|Andy Mabbett]]</span> (<span class="nickname">Pigsonthewing</span>); [[User talk:Pigsonthewing|Talk to Andy]]; [[Special:Contributions/Pigsonthewing|Andy's edits]]</span> 20:50, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::There is a phabricator problem about loading a second page of results. My workaround is to try to add more information to the search to get more relevant results on the first page of results. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 21:03, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::Or perhaps someone at [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Resource Exchange/Resource Request]] could help? [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 12:35, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::They already have at [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Resource Exchange/Resource Request#The Age (Melbourne) 27 June 1972]]. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 12:42, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
:Given his specialty, I suggest the honorific stands for "Aaaaaaaaagh It's (a) Spider!" [[User:Chuntuk|Chuntuk]] ([[User talk:Chuntuk|talk]]) 12:33, 18 December 2024 (UTC)


= December 15 =
Is there an [[WP:RS|RS]] with a full list of countries that diplomatically recognized the 1912-1949 Republic of China? [[Republic_of_China_(1912-1949)#Foreign_relations]] mentions some, saying there were 59 countries, but without a reference, [[History of foreign relations of China]] appears useless in that regard and elsewhere I had a difficulty with finding (possibly there are Taiwanese sources too, but I don't speak Chinese). Thanks. [[Special:Contributions/212.180.235.46|212.180.235.46]] ([[User talk:212.180.235.46|talk]]) 23:02, 1 May 2023 (UTC)
:Uff, I difficult to find a single source with a full listing. I think we have to narrow the question somewhat, are we speaking about cumulative for the entire period 1912-1949 or do we speak about a number of countries at a certain juncture (say 1949)? Considering 1912-1949 spans both WWI and WWII the list of countries available would differ greatly. --[[User:Soman|Soman]] ([[User talk:Soman|talk]]) 01:10, 2 May 2023 (UTC)
::[https://books.google.at/books?id=avd-EAAAQBAJ&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&printsec=frontcover&pg=PA415] (pp. 415-416) has a list of Westeners in Nanjing 1937-1938, it mentions American Embassy, French Embassy, Dutch Legation, Italian Embassy, British Embassy, German Embassy. Page 351 mentions a Belgian Embassy in Nanjing. Page 88 mentions Japanese Embassy in Shanghai. Page 338 mentions that a house on 4, Chibi Road had been rented to the Mexican Embassy. Page 104 mentions diplomatic relations between China and Germany were suspended in 1942. Page 328 mentions a "Swedish envoy" (to China? can't say for sure due to snippet view). Page 365 mentions that China had a legation in Mexico in 1917, and an embassy in Portugal in 1926. And so forth. --[[User:Soman|Soman]] ([[User talk:Soman|talk]]) 01:31, 2 May 2023 (UTC)
:::The Swedish envoy was Johan Hugo Beck-Friis, Swedish Minister to China.<sup>[https://books.google.com/books?id=avd-EAAAQBAJ&pg=PA54&dq=%22Swedish+Minister+to+China,+Johan+Hugo+Beck-Friis%22&hl=en]</sup> &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 16:58, 2 May 2023 (UTC)


== Schisms and Byzantine Roman self-perception ==
:Recognitions might have been highest in the [[Nanjing decade]] (after the Northern Expedition and before the Japanese invasion of China). Of course, there were a lot fewer independent nations in the world than there are today... [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 02:53, 2 May 2023 (UTC)


Did the [[Rome-Constantinople schism|three schisms between Rome and Constantinople]] tarnish Rome's reputation to the degree that it affected the Byzantine self-perception as the "Roman Empire" and as "Romans"? Including Constantinople's vision of succession to the Roman Empire and its notion of [[Second Rome]]. [[User:Brandmeister|Brandmeister]]<sup>[[User talk:Brandmeister|talk]]</sup> 15:34, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
:A couple of thoughts - did the [[League of Nations]] require mutual recognition of members? and presumably recognition by the United Kingdom would imply recognition by the [[Dominions]]? [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 17:40, 2 May 2023 (UTC)


:Various maneuverings in the middle ages (including the infamous Fourth Crusade) certainly gave many Byzantines a negative view of western Catholics, so that toward the end some frankly preferred conquest by Muslims to a Christian alliance which would involve Byzantine religious and political subordination to the European West (see discussion at [[Loukas Notaras]]). But the Byzantines generally considered themselves to be the real Romans, and called themselves "Romaioi" much more often than they called themselves Greek (of course, "Byzantine" is a later retroactive term). [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 17:09, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
In 1920, The Republic of China (hereafter, “China”) was one of 42 founding members of the [[League of Nations]], which over time had a total of 63 member states; it is highly unlikely that any one member would not recognize another. However, Foreign Minister [[Wellington Koo]] refused to sign the [[Treaty of Versailles]] because the document handed German concessions in China to Japan, rather than return them to China. 34 nations were party to those peace talks. China also was one of the 50 founding members of the United Nations.
[[User:DOR (HK)|DOR (ex-HK)]] ([[User talk:DOR (HK)|talk]]) 20:33, 3 May 2023 (UTC)


:I think these religious schisms had nothing to do with the secular political situation. In 330, before Christianity became an established religion that could experience schisms, [[Constantine the Great]] moved the capital of the unitary Roman Empire from Rome to the city of [[Byzantium]] and dubbed it the [[New Rome]] – later renamed to Constantinople. During the later periods in which the [[Western Roman Empire|Western]] and [[Eastern Roman Empire]] were administered separately, this was not considered a political split but an expedient way of administering a large polity, of which Constantinople remained the capital. So when the Western wing of the Roman Empire fell to the [[Ostrogoths]] and even the later [[Exarchate of Ravenna]] disappeared, the Roman Empire, now only administered by the Constantinopolitan court, continued in an unbroken succession from the [[Roman Kingdom]] and subsequent [[Roman Republic|Republic]]. &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 10:48, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
= May 2 =
::In Ottoman Turkish, the term {{large|[[wikt:روم#Ottoman Turkish|روم]]}} (''Rum''), ultimately derived from Latin ''Roma'', was used to designate the Byzantine Empire, or, as a geographic term, its former lands. Fun fact: After the conquest of Constantinople in 1453, [[Mehmet the Conqueror]] and his successors claimed the title of [[Caesar of Rome]], with the Ottoman Empire being the successor of the [[Byzantine Empire]]. IMO this claim has merit; Mehmet II was the first ruler of yet another dynasty, but rather than replacing the existing Byzantine administrative apparatus, he simply continued its use for the empire he had become the ruler of. If you recognize the claim, the [[Republic of Turkey]] is today's successor of the Roman Kingdom. &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 12:01, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
:::The Ottomans basically continued the Byzantine tax-collection system, for a while. [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 23:13, 17 December 2024 (UTC)


== Foreign Presidents/Heads of State CURRENTLY Buried in the USA ==
== Where is "Yew Court" in Trinity College, Cambridge? ==


How many foreign presidents are CURRENTLY buried in the USA? (I am aware of previous burials that have since been repatriated)
http://gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/the-private-dining-room-at-yew-court-trinity-college-news-photo/462700316
For example, In Woodlawn Cemetery in Miami, FL, there are two Cuban presidents and a Nicaraguan president.
,
http://gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/the-interior-of-prince-charles-room-at-yew-court-trinity-news-photo/462700372
and
http://dailymail.co.uk/news/royals/article-12027449/Photo-taken-King-Charles-University-Cambridge-1967-released-time.html
have photographs captioned "Yew Court" at Trinity College, Cambridge.


Are there any other foreign presidents, heads of state, that are buried in the USA? [[User:Exeter6|Exeter6]] ([[User talk:Exeter6|talk]]) 17:54, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
''[[Trinity College, Cambridge]]'' does not list a "Yew Court". Is it a misspelling of "New Court", and if not, should it be added to the article? Thanks, '''[[User:cmglee|cm&#610;&#671;ee]]'''&#9094;[[User_Talk:cmglee|&#964;a&#671;&#954;]] 06:31, 2 May 2023 (UTC)


:Prince Charles [https://www.cambridge-colleges.co.uk/trinity-college/ stayed in the New Court]. [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 06:49, 2 May 2023 (UTC)
:As far as I know, all 4 of the presidents of the [[Republic of Texas]] are buried in Texas, which is currently in the US. [[User:Blueboar|Blueboar]] ([[User talk:Blueboar|talk]]) 18:04, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
:My guess it that it was a typo on the source material, that has been carried through on those few pictures. There's ''no reference'' to Yew Court anywhere in any information on Cambridge, excepting that specific yew trees are occasionally mentioned. I'm pretty certain, as with the above speculation, that this is supposed to be New Court. Someone mislabeled (or wrote with sloppy handwriting) back in the 1960s, and those mistakes were carried through. --[[User:Jayron32|<span style="color:#009">Jayron</span>]][[User talk:Jayron32|<b style="color:#090">''32''</b>]] 18:20, 2 May 2023 (UTC)
::Thanks for your explanations, @[[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] and @[[User:Jayron32|Jayron32]]. Cheers, '''[[User:cmglee|cm&#610;&#671;ee]]'''&#9094;[[User_Talk:cmglee|&#964;a&#671;&#954;]] 01:56, 4 May 2023 (UTC)


::[[Andrés Domingo y Morales del Castillo]] was President of Cuba in 1954-55 and died in Miami. Not sure where he's buried though.
== A book called 'Seera' ==
::Also [[Anselmo Alliegro y Milá]] (President of Cuba for a few hours on January 1, 1959) similarly went to Florida and died there.
::And [[Arnulfo Arias]], ousted as President of Panama in the [[1968 Panamanian coup d'état]], died in Florida (a pattern emerging here...)
::[[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 19:28, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
:For ease of reference, the Woodlawn Cemetery in question is [[Caballero Rivero Woodlawn Park North Cemetery and Mausoleum]], housing:
:# [[Gerardo Machado]], president of Cuba from 1925 to 1933
:# [[Carlos Prío Socarrás]], president of Cuba from 1948 to 1952
:# [[Anastasio Somoza Debayle]], president of Nicaragua from 1967 to 1972, and from 1974 to 1979 (not to be confused with his father [[Anastasio Somoza García]] and brother [[Luis Somoza Debayle]], both former presidents of Nicaragua, buried together in Nicaragua)
:[[User:GalacticShoe|GalacticShoe]] ([[User talk:GalacticShoe|talk]]) 20:09, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
::Searching Findagrave could be fruitful. Machado's entry:[https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/6881438/gerardo-machado_y_morales] ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 21:45, 15 December 2024 (UTC)


:Polish prime minister and famous musician Ignacy Paderewski had his grave in the United States until 1992. [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 07:32, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
According to our article on [[Joseph Wolff]] he wrote that the Arabs of Yemen are in possession of a book called 'Seera,' which gives notice of the coming of Christ and His reign in glory, and they expect great events to take place in the year 1840. Do we know anything more about the book called ''Seera''? Thank you, [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 15:16, 2 May 2023 (UTC)
::I guess not current, though... [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 01:12, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
:We have an article on [[prophetic biography]] which tells us that ''Sīrah'' is the generic name for such biographies of the Prophet Muhammad. Wolff has perhaps abbreviated the title of this particular example too much to make it easy to identify. --[[User:Antiquary|Antiquary]] ([[User talk:Antiquary|talk]]) 15:38, 2 May 2023 (UTC)
::Thank you. Having now had the opportunity of reading the source given in our article, Wolff specifically says it is the Arabs of [[Hodeyda]], and he says the information came from "Muhamed Johar, late Governor of Hodeydah, a gentleman very learned in the Arabic literature". Perhaps this further detail will help someone narrow things down. [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 16:03, 2 May 2023 (UTC)
:::More context (but still not the book name, sorry) in Chapter 3 of [https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=CW-C4yivlqwC&oi=fnd&pg=PP17&dq=Al-Hudaydah+prophecy+%2B1840&ots=zkQPYnzwG6&sig=4XBBqZJVXqvuPeXrD0rds4-73oU&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=1840&f=false The Jews of Yemen in the Nineteenth Century: A Portrait of a Messianic Community By B. Z. Eraqi Klorman]. Mostly about a Faqih Sa'id who claimed to fulfil this prophecy - unfortunately such a common name is also hard to search. [[Special:Contributions/70.67.193.176|70.67.193.176]] ([[User talk:70.67.193.176|talk]]) 17:15, 3 May 2023 (UTC)


:You can find some with the following Wikidata query: [https://query.wikidata.org/#SELECT%20%3Fperson%20%3Flabel%0AWHERE%0A%7B%0A%20%20%3Fperson%20wdt%3AP39%20%3Foffice%20.%20%23%20held%20office%0A%20%20%3Foffice%20wdt%3AP279%2a%20wd%3AQ48352%20.%20%23%20office%20is%20head%20of%20state%0A%20%20%3Fperson%20wdt%3AP119%20%3Flocation%20.%20%23%20burial%20location%0A%20%20%3Flocation%20wdt%3AP17%20wd%3AQ30%20.%20%23%20burial%20location%20in%20the%20USA%0A%20%20FILTER%28%3Foffice%20%21%3D%20wd%3AQ11696%29%20.%20%23%20Office%20is%20not%20POTUS%0A%20%20%3Fperson%20rdfs%3Alabel%20%3Flabel%20.%0A%20%20FILTER%28LANG%28%3Flabel%29%20%3D%20%22en%22%29%20.%0A%7D%0AGROUP%20BY%20%3Fperson%20%3Flabel%0ALIMIT%20100]. Some notable examples are [[Liliʻuokalani]], [[Pierre Nord Alexis]], [[Dương Văn Minh]], [[Lon Nol]], [[Bruno Carranza]], [[Victoriano Huerta]], and [[Mykola Livytskyi]]. Note that [[Alexander Kerensky]] died in the US but was buried in the UK. Unfortunately, the query also returns others who were presidents, governors, etc. of other than sovereign states. --[[User:Amble|Amble]] ([[User talk:Amble|talk]]) 19:09, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
= May 3 =
:I suppose we should also consider [[Jefferson Davis]] as a debatable case. And [[Peter II of Yugoslavia]] was initially buried in the USA but later reburied in Serbia. He seems to have been the only European monarch who was at one point buried in the USA. --[[User:Amble|Amble]] ([[User talk:Amble|talk]]) 00:13, 17 December 2024 (UTC)


:[[Manuel Quezon]] was initially buried at Arlington. [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 00:20, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
== Did Gandhi observe a strict vow of silence every Monday? ==
:And of course I should rather think that most monarchs of Hawaii are buried in the USA. [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 00:27, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
::If burial was the custom there. (I'd guess it was, but I certainly don't know.) --[[Special:Contributions/142.112.149.206|142.112.149.206]] ([[User talk:142.112.149.206|talk]]) 02:50, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
:::[[Royal Mausoleum (Mauna ʻAla)]] answers that question with a definitive "yes, it was". [[User:Cullen328|Cullen328]] ([[User talk:Cullen328|talk]]) 22:04, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
:[[Antanas Smetona]] was initially buried in Cleveland, but then reburied elsewhere in Ohio. --[[User:Amble|Amble]] ([[User talk:Amble|talk]]) 06:36, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
::To be specific, All Souls Cemetery in [[Chardon, Ohio|Chardon]] according to Smetona's article. [[User:GalacticShoe|GalacticShoe]] ([[User talk:GalacticShoe|talk]]) 06:51, 17 December 2024 (UTC)


:There are a number of Egyptian mummies in US museums ([[List of museums with Egyptian mummies in their collections]]), but I can't find any that are currently known to be the mummy of a pharaoh. The mummy of [[Ramesses I]] was formerly in the US, but was returned to Egypt in 2003. --[[User:Amble|Amble]] ([[User talk:Amble|talk]]) 22:47, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
If so, why isn't this in the article [[Mahatma Gandhi]]? Being 1/7 of his life, it seems very significant if true. —[[User:Lights and freedom|Lights and freedom]] ([[User talk:Lights and freedom|''talk'']] ~ [[Special:Contributions/Lights and freedom|'''contribs''']]) 04:45, 3 May 2023 (UTC)
:[https://www.mkgandhi.org/gandhiji/12dayofsilence.htm Yes.] --[[Special:Contributions/136.56.52.157|136.56.52.157]] ([[User talk:136.56.52.157|talk]]) 07:11, 3 May 2023 (UTC)
:<small>Maybe he [[Monday#Cultural_references|just didn't like of Mondays]].</small> [[User:Shantavira|Shantavira]]|[[User talk:Shantavira|<sup>feed me</sup>]] 10:57, 3 May 2023 (UTC)
:The reason it isn't in the article is because [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia is a work in progress|Wikipedia is a work in progress]]. When you find that a Wikipedia article is lacking some necessary information, vanishingly close to 100% of the time, it's because no one thought to add it yet. [[WP:SOFIXIT|That person can be you]]. --[[User:Jayron32|<span style="color:#009">Jayron</span>]][[User talk:Jayron32|<b style="color:#090">''32''</b>]] 11:13, 3 May 2023 (UTC)
::Also, this sounds like at best an oversimplification to me. Gandhi studied law and became a barrister in London, a job hardly compatible with silent Mondays. He then went to South Africa for over 20 years. I suspect this vow was made much later, when he was back in India. --[[User:Stephan Schulz|Stephan Schulz]] ([[User talk:Stephan Schulz|talk]]) 14:50, 3 May 2023 (UTC)
:::He doesn’t mention it in [http://online.kottakkalfarookcollege.edu.in:8001/jspui/bitstream/123456789/1714/1/Gandhi-Truth.pdf An autobiography: The story of my experiments with truth], published in 1927, but he was observing it by 1936 [https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Autobiography_of_a_Yogi/Chapter_44 “It was a Monday, his weekly day of silence.”] [[Special:Contributions/70.67.193.176|70.67.193.176]] ([[User talk:70.67.193.176|talk]]) 18:12, 3 May 2023 (UTC)
::::According to the diary of Manu Gandhi, the practice of Monday as a day of silence began on Monday 17 January 1921.<sup>[https://books.google.com/books?id=EsrhDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT154&dq=%22Gandhiji's+day+of+silence%22&hl=en]</sup> &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 20:21, 3 May 2023 (UTC)
::It is not in our article on Gandhi, but it is mentioned in [[Vow of silence]]. &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 20:16, 3 May 2023 (UTC)
* Looking through ''[[Gandhi: The Years That Changed the World]]'', Guha talks about:
** Gandhi adopting Monday as the day of silence sometime before 1926 ({{tq|By now [September 1926], Gandhi had also decided to observe a weekly day of silence. Every Monday, he would not speak at all, communicating through signs or, if necessary, through writing notes on chits of paper.}})
** There are continuing mentions of Gandhi continuing the practice during the [[Salt March]] ({{tq|The next day [17th March 1930] was Monday, Gandhi’s designated day of silence, and also now of rest.}}).
** And in 1934 ({{tq|[[Agatha Harrison|Harrison]] read the article on a Monday, the Mahatma’s day of silence. She marked the passages praising and promoting Gandhi, and handed it over to him. He read it through, twice, asked for a pencil and piece of paper, on which he wrote: ‘Do you know of a Dreamer who won attention by “Adventitious Aid”?’ Asked by Agatha Harrison if he wished to comment further, he shook his head, with (as she recalled) ‘an amused smile’.}})
** Sometime in 1947 he shifted the day of silence to Sunday ({{tq|For many years now, Gandhi had observed his weekly day of silence on Monday. This was now [Feb 1947] changed to Sunday, as that was the day the weekly bazaar was held in this part of eastern Bengal. Gandhi adjusted his schedule to the local rhythms, staying silent on the day when the villagers had to buy or sell their wares, while holding prayer meetings on Monday and through the rest of the week.}})
** But it was back to Mondays by the period of his assassination ({{tq|Monday the 19th [January 1948] was a day of silence for Gandhi. He spent it attending to his correspondence and writing articles for ''[[Harijan (newspaper)|Harijan]]''.}})
:[[User:Abecedare|Abecedare]] ([[User talk:Abecedare|talk]]) 20:51, 3 May 2023 (UTC)


= December 17 =
== The sum of all human knowledge before 300 AD? ==


I have recently started the article '''[[Ancient text corpora]]''', which is intended to describe and quantify all known writing prior to 300 AD. It was built mostly using the estimates of German scholar Carsten Peust. Peust stated that he didn’t know enough about South Asian or East Asian corpora, so he left them out. I would like to make the article comprehensive, so it gives a full picture of all the ancient knowledge passed down to us.


== Geographic extent of an English parish c. 1800 ==
Would anyone be willing to help find secondary sources which could fill the gaps of estimating the word-count of the East Asian and South Asian ancient corpuses? I have been looking but it isn’t easy to find.


What would have been the typical extent (in square miles or square kilometers) of an English parish, circa 1800 or so? Let's say the median rather than the mean. With more interest in rural than urban parishes. -- [[User:Avocado|Avocado]] ([[User talk:Avocado|talk]]) 00:05, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
[[User:Onceinawhile|Onceinawhile]] ([[User talk:Onceinawhile|talk]]) 19:31, 3 May 2023 (UTC)


:@[[User:Onceinawhile|Onceinawhile]] That's an ambitious project! I happen to live in [[Seoul]] but don't know if I can help. I might try the National Library here. [[User:BorgQueen|BorgQueen]] ([[User talk:BorgQueen|talk]]) 20:02, 3 May 2023 (UTC)
:There were tensions involved in a unit based on the placement of churches being tasked to administer the poor law; that was why "civil parishes" were split off a little bit later... [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 01:11, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
::Hi {{u|BorgQueen}}, it certainly is. I figure it is a topic of wide interest, particularly to us wikipedians. I previously believed the topic was too difficult, but Peust's article changed that, and cross-referencing with our pre-existing [[List of languages by first written account]], we have already covered the significant majority of ancient languages.
::Part of the reason for that is that the [[logogram]]-based ancient languages, Egyptian and Chinese, are counted as single languages, as the ancient spoken dialects can not be known. [[Old Korean]] is a good example of that.
::Anything you can find to help would be greatly appreciated. [[User:Onceinawhile|Onceinawhile]] ([[User talk:Onceinawhile|talk]]) 20:50, 3 May 2023 (UTC)
:In that article there appears to be a considerable confusion between the notions of ''[[Writing system|script]]'' and ''[[language]]''. [[Egyptian language|Egyptian]] is not a script but a language; [[Demotic (Egyptian)|Demotic]] is not a language but a script. &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 20:30, 3 May 2023 (UTC)
::Thanks - I had noticed that but hadn't got round to fixing it. I have fixed it now. Thanks for the prompt. [[User:Onceinawhile|Onceinawhile]] ([[User talk:Onceinawhile|talk]]) 20:36, 3 May 2023 (UTC)


:[[User:Avocado|Avocado]] As a start the mean area of a parish in England and Wales in around 1832 seems to have been around 5.6 square miles.
:Source [https://books.google.com/books?id=pJZGAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA494 The Edinburgh Encyclopædia Volume 8]. It also has figures by county if you are interested.
::Care needs to be taken in counting "words," which is a European notion of writing. Chinese characters, for example, are more akin to syllables than words, and works are sometimes refereed to by the total number of characters (e.g., "a 6,000 character essay"). [[User:DOR (HK)|DOR (ex-HK)]] ([[User talk:DOR (HK)|talk]]) 20:37, 3 May 2023 (UTC)
:*p.494 38,498,572 acres, i.e. 60,154 square miles
:::Agreed. Peust has been careful on that in his scholarly article, for example with Egyptian, writing: "Daraus ergibt sich, dass die Edfu-Inschriften insgesamt annähernd 1,2 Millionen Hieroglyphen umfassen. Da in den Edfu­-Texten ein Wort im Mittel mit etwa 2,1 Hieroglyphen geschrieben wird (bei einer Wortsegmentierung ent­ sprechend der im Wb zugrundegelegten, Suffixpronomina u.a. nicht als eigene Wörter gezählt), kann man festhalten, dass die Texte zwischen fünf­ und sechshunderttausend Wortformen umfassen." ''(As a result, the Edfu inscriptions total approximately 1.2 million hieroglyphs. Since a word in the Edfu texts is written with an average of around 2.1 hieroglyphs (in a word segmentation according to the Wb basis, suffix pronouns etc. are not counted as separate words), one can state that the texts contain between five and six hundred thousand word forms.)'' [[User:Onceinawhile|Onceinawhile]] ([[User talk:Onceinawhile|talk]]) 20:59, 3 May 2023 (UTC)
:*p.497 10,674 parishes and parochial chapelries
:*Average 3,607 acres, i.e. 5.64 square miles [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 02:33, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
::Thank you -- that's a starting point, at least! -- [[User:Avocado|Avocado]] ([[User talk:Avocado|talk]]) 13:14, 17 December 2024 (UTC)


:::But regionally variable:
:I was drawn here by the hubris shown in the use of the word "all" in the title of the section. Then I saw it was perhaps ONLY about knowledge recorded in written words or texts. Obviously some well evolved and well structured human societies had plenty of knowledge before 300 AD without having written language. Is such knowledge outside the scope of this discussion? [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 23:54, 3 May 2023 (UTC)
:::{{xt|By the early nineteenth century the north-west of England, including the expanding cities of Manchester and Liverpool, had just over 150 parishes, each of them covering an average of almost 12,000 acres, whereas the more rural east of the country had more than 1,600 parishes, each with an average size of approximately 2,000 acres.}}
:::[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=grdvBQAAQBAJ&pg=PT34 ''OCR A Level History: Britain 1603-1760'']
:::[[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 21:46, 17 December 2024 (UTC)


::::{{xt|On the contrary , in England , which contains 38,500,000 statute acres, the parishes or [[Benefice|living]]s comprehend about 3,850 acres the average; and if similar allowance be made for those livings in cities and towns , perhaps about 4,000.}}
::Hi {{ping|HiLo48}} isn’t that roughly consistent with how we use the phrase in [[WP:OBJECTIVE]]? We don’t use this wording in the article by the way. [[User:Onceinawhile|Onceinawhile]] ([[User talk:Onceinawhile|talk]]) 06:24, 4 May 2023 (UTC)
::::[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=fCtdAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA165 ''An Essay on the Revenues of the Church of England'' (1816) p. 165]
:::There is a parallel, because we cannot get direct sources for knowledge that was not written down, but there are now written interpretations of at least some of that knowledge. [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 07:15, 4 May 2023 (UTC)
::::The point about urban parishes distorting the overall average is supported by [[St Ethelburga's Bishopsgate]] for instance, that had a parish of only 3 acres (or two football pitches of 110 yards by 70 yards placed side by side). [https://www.londonparishclerks.com/Parishes-Churches/Individual-Parish-Info/St-Ethelburga-Bishopsgate] [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 21:46, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
::::Neolithic peoples knew how to make stone tools, for example. That's ''knowledge'' clearly, but it isn't written down anywhere. --[[User:Jayron32|<span style="color:#009">Jayron</span>]][[User talk:Jayron32|<b style="color:#090">''32''</b>]] 11:55, 4 May 2023 (UTC)
::::Oh, that's great info -- ty! I can't seem to get a look at the content of the book. Does it say anything else about other regions? -- [[User:Avocado|Avocado]] ([[User talk:Avocado|talk]]) 23:24, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::Many cavemen would have kept that knowledge to themselves – a [[trade secret]].
:::::The OCR book doesn't mention other regions. I have found where the figure of 10,674 came from: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=fCtdAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA112 page 112 of the 1816 essay] has a note that {{tq|Preliminary Observations ( p . 13. and 15. ) to the Popu-lation Returns in 1811 ; where the Parishes and Parochial Chapelries are stated at 10,674 .}} The text of page 112 says that {{tq|churches are contained in be-tween 10 , and 11,000 parishes † ; and probably after a due allowance for consolidations , & c . they constitute the Churches of about 10,000 Parochial Benefices}}, so the calculation on p.165 of the 1816 essay is based on around 10,000 parishes in England (and Wales) in 1800 (38,500,000 divided by 3,850). [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 01:40, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::Even today trade secrets are often not written down, and certainly will never find their way to wikipedia.
::::: The primary source is [https://books.google.com/books?id=6wUSAAAAYAAJ ''Abstract of the Answers and Returns Made Pursuant to an Act Passed in the Fifty-first Year of His Majesty King George III, Intituled, "An Act for Taking an Account of the Population of Great Britain, and of the Increase Or Diminution Thereof" : Preliminary Observations, Enumeration Abstract, Parish Register Abstract, 1811''] and the table of parishes by county is on page xxix. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 01:46, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::[[User:Onceinawhile|Onceinawhile]] ([[User talk:Onceinawhile|talk]]) 12:42, 4 May 2023 (UTC)
::::::'Cavemen' had trade secrets? I'd like to see a source for that... [[User:AndyTheGrump|AndyTheGrump]] ([[User talk:AndyTheGrump|talk]]) 12:48, 4 May 2023 (UTC)
::::::Thank you! -- [[User:Avocado|Avocado]] ([[User talk:Avocado|talk]]) 17:19, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
:Parishes, like political constituencies etc, were in theory decided by the number of inhabitants, not the area covered. What the average was at particular points, I don't know. No doubt it rose over recent centuries as the population expanded, but rural parishes generally did not. [[User:Johnbod|Johnbod]] ([[User talk:Johnbod|talk]]) 03:09, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Tongue-in-cheek or not, Harvard Business School would like to have a word: {{cite web | title=Trade Secrets: Intellectual Piracy and the Origins of American Industrial Power | website=HBS Working Knowledge | date=2023-05-03 | url=http://hbswk.hbs.edu/archive/4211.html | ref=none|quote=We tend to think of intellectual piracy as a recent phenomenon, but of course humans have been stealing from each other since the first caveman to harness fire saw his or her IP spread without credit like, well, wildfire.}} [[User:Onceinawhile|Onceinawhile]] ([[User talk:Onceinawhile|talk]]) 14:48, 4 May 2023 (UTC)
::But whatever the population changes, the parish boundaries in England (whether urban or rural) remained largely fixed between the 12th and mid-19th centuries. [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 13:53, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::::But in what sense was any "caveman" in "competition" with other humans he was in regular contact with (without killing, eating, or fleeing from them)? Up to the Neolithic (I have always imagined) humans mostly lived in relatively small and related groups and co-operated with regular contacts because they were all living on a knife's edge and could help each other. In such circumstances any -lithic age specialists would have wanted their knowledge spread as widely as possible because it might in future benefit them or their relatives. Anyone know of any papers on the lines of Paleo/Meso/Neolithic social cooperation (or competition)? {The poster formerly known as 87.821.230.195}
::Right, I'm not asking because I thought parish boundaries had been drawn to equalize the geographic area covered or I wanted to know how those boundaries came about. I'm asking because I'm curious what would have been typical in terms of geographic area in order to better understand certain aspects of the society of the time.
::For instance, how far (and thus how long) would people have to travel to get to their church? How far might they live from other people who attended the same church? How far would the rector/vicar/curate have to range to attend to his parishioners in their homes?
::Questions like that. Does that make the reason for this particular inquiry make more sense? -- [[User:Avocado|Avocado]] ([[User talk:Avocado|talk]]) 15:04, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
:::[https://www.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/pdwhr8/how_widespread_were_priests_and_churches_in_the/ Someone on Reddit] had a similar question and the answer there suggested [[Christopher N. L. Brooke|C. N. L. Brooke]]’s ''Churches and Churchmen in Medieval Europe'' (1999) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=q8rBaGKeWbgC on Google books]. You may find the first chapter, '' Rural Ecclesiastical Institutions in England : The Search for their Origins'' interesting. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 15:44, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
::::Thanks for the link!
::::Fwiw, I'm not really seeing any answers to questions of actual geographic extent in that first chapter, mostly info on the "how they came to be" that, again, isn't really the focus of the question. Or maybe the info I'm looking for is in the pages that are omitted from the preview?
::::The rest of the book is clearly focused on a much earlier period than I'm interested in (granted, parish boundaries may not have changed much between the start of the Reformation and the Georgian era, but culture, practices, and the relationship of most people to their church and parish certainly would have!) -- [[User:Avocado|Avocado]] ([[User talk:Avocado|talk]]) 16:09, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::The chapter is relevant to how far people had to travel in the middle ages, which I can see is not the period you are interested in. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 21:25, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::Yeah, it looks to me as if the pages I need are probably among the unavailable ones, then. Oh well. Thank you for the suggestion regardless! -- [[User:Avocado|Avocado]] ([[User talk:Avocado|talk]]) 22:47, 20 December 2024 (UTC)


:One last link, the introduction of which might be helpful, describing attempts to create new parishes for the growing population in the early 19th century (particularly pp. 19-20):
== Human attention to the different part of a person ==
:[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=hrIOAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA1 ''The New parishes acts, 1843,1844, & 1856. With notes and observations &c'']
:[[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 12:30, 21 December 2024 (UTC)


== When was the first bat mitzvah? ==
Hi there,
I look for a reference to the claim that person pay more attention to the faces than the hands and cloths (for example when they meet someone and want to recognize who is this person).
I look also for the name of the phenomena, which an object has parts which have different importance for its recognition by human (some-kind of attention importance)?


[[Bar and bat mitzvah]] has a short history section, all of which is about bar mitzvah. When was the first bat mitzvah? What is its history? <span style="position: relative; top: -0.5em;">꧁</span>[[User:Zanahary|Zanahary]]<span style="position: relative; top: -0.5em;">꧂</span> 01:52, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
Thanks [[Special:Contributions/2A06:C701:4B44:3600:F08A:6497:E38B:D479|2A06:C701:4B44:3600:F08A:6497:E38B:D479]] ([[User talk:2A06:C701:4B44:3600:F08A:6497:E38B:D479|talk]]) 22:36, 3 May 2023 (UTC)
:Start by reading [[Face perception]]. [[User:Cullen328|Cullen328]] ([[User talk:Cullen328|talk]]) 22:39, 3 May 2023 (UTC)
::IMO face <u>perception</u>, the ability to see that something ''is'' a face and to "read" it (interpret the facial expression as conveying information about mental states and processes of its bearer) is another cognitive ability than face <u>recognition</u> (the ability to distinguish people just by facial features and to recognize familiar faces and identify their bearers). Our article [[Face perception]] and other articles ([[Facial recognition system]], [[Prosopagnosia]]) conflate these. While these abilities are correlated<sup>&thinsp;[https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full/10.1098/rsos.201169]</sup> and many prosopagnosics do experience difficulties classifying facial expressions, case studies have described individuals with developmental prosopagnosia who are able to correctly label photographic displays of facial emotion.<sup>[https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0010945216300715]</sup> &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 07:13, 4 May 2023 (UTC)
:When it comes to the ability to recognize and identify people, face recognition is the most studied aspect in the literature.<sup>[https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0010945215004104]</sup> While the review article I linked to is not a reference directly supporting the claim, the fact that face recognition is the most studied aspect reflects its superior role in recognizing and identifying people. The article also mentions voice, name, body habitus, personal belongings, handwriting, gait and body motion as cues by which one can identify people, but not hands or clothing, which strongly suggests they play a lesser role. A more direct support is from an article reporting on a study of incidents of errors in recognizing people: "{{tq|Despite the fact that all of the different kinds of input information can lead to much the same types of incident, the majority of incidents recorded involved the facial features as the primary source of information. We do not regard this observation as demonstrating that face recognition is peculiarly prone to error. Rather, it probably reflects the important role that face processing plays in everyday recognition. Faces are much relied on for two reasons. Firstly, visual information is important because we see far more people than we hear voices or see or hear names; secondly, of the different types of visual information the facial features are more likely to be thought veridical in determining the person’s identity than such cues as clothing or hair-style. Thus, it is highly likely that most incidents are reported to faces as the primary source simply because this is the source of information that is most often used.}}"<sup>[https://bpspsychub.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.2044-8295.1985.tb01972.x]</sup> Note that this is not presented as a conclusion based on any findings of that specific study, but assumed to be general knowledge. &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 07:58, 4 May 2023 (UTC)


:To be clear, I am more asking when the bat mitzvah ritual became part of common Jewish practice. <span style="position: relative; top: -0.5em;">꧁</span>[[User:Zanahary|Zanahary]]<span style="position: relative; top: -0.5em;">꧂</span> 01:53, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
= May 4 =
:Parts from Google's translation of [[:he:בת מצווה]]:
::As early as the early 19th century, in the early days of Reform Judaism, confirmation ceremonies for boys and girls began to be held in which their knowledge of the religion was tested, similar to that practiced among Christians. It spread to the more liberal circles of German Jewry, and by the middle of the century had also begun to be widespread among the Orthodox bourgeoisie. Rabbi Jacob Etlinger of Altona was forced by the community's regulations to participate in such an event in 1867, and published the sermon he had prepared for the purpose later. He emphasized that he was obligated to do so by law, and that Judaism did not recognize that the principles of the religion should be adopted in such a public declaration, since it is binding from birth. However, as part of his attempt to stop the Reform, he supported a kind of parallel procedure that was intended to take place exclusively outside the synagogue.
::The idea of confirmation was not always met with resistance, especially with regard to girls: the chief rabbi of the Central Consistory of French Jews, Shlomo Zalman Ullmann, permitted it for both sexes in 1843. In 1844, confirmation for young Jews was held for the first time in Verona, Italy. In the 1880s, Rabbi Zvi Hermann Adler agreed to the widespread introduction of the ceremony, after it had become increasingly common in synagogues, but refused to call it 'confirmation'. In 1901, Rabbi Eliyahu Bechor, cantor in Alexandria, permitted it for both boys and girls, inspired by what was happening in Italy. Other rabbis initially ordered a more conservative event.
::At the beginning of the twentieth century, the attitude towards the bat mitzvah party was reserved, because it was sometimes an attempt to imitate symbols drawn from the confirmation ceremony, and indeed there were rabbis, such as Rabbi Aharon Volkin, who forbade the custom on the grounds of gentile laws, or who treated it with suspicion, such as Rabbi Moshe Feinstein, who in a 1950s recantation forbade holding an event in the synagogue because it was "a matter of authority and a mere vanity...there is no point and no basis for considering it a matter of a mitzvah and a mitzvah meal". The Haredi community also expressed strong opposition to the celebration of the bat mitzvah due to its origins in Reform circles. In 1977, Rabbi Yehuda David Bleich referred to it as one of the "current problems in halakhah", noting that only a minority among the Orthodox celebrate it and that it had spread to them from among the Conservatives.
::On the other hand, as early as the beginning of the twentieth century, rabbis began to encourage holding a Bat Mitzvah party for a daughter, similar to a party that is customary for a son, with the aim of strengthening observance of the mitzvot among Jewish women.
:&nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 11:23, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
::Thank you! Surprising how recent it is. <span style="position: relative; top: -0.5em;">꧁</span>[[User:Zanahary|Zanahary]]<span style="position: relative; top: -0.5em;">꧂</span> 21:51, 17 December 2024 (UTC)

= December 18 =

== Major feminist achievements prior to 18th century ==

What would be the most important feminist victories prior to the 18th and 19th centuries? I'm looking for specific laws or major changes (anywhere in the world), not just minor improvements in women's pursuit of equality. Something on the same scale and importantance as the women's suffrage. [[User:DuxCoverture|DuxCoverture]] ([[User talk:DuxCoverture|talk]]) 11:54, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
:I'm not aware of any occuring without being foreseable a set of conditions such as the perspective of a minimal equal representation both in the judiciary and law enforcement. Those seem to be dependent on technological progress, maybe particularly law enforcement although the judiciary sometimes heavily relies on recording capabilities. Unfortunately [[Ancient Egypt#Social status|Ancient Egypt]] is not very explicitly illustrating the genesis of its sociological dynamics. --[[User:Askedonty|Askedonty]] ([[User talk:Askedonty|talk]]) 16:25, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
:Before universal male suffrage became the norm in the 19th century, also male [[commoner]]s did not pull significant political weight, at least in Western society, so any feminist "victories" before then can only have been minor improvements in women's rights in general. &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 22:40, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
::Changes regarding divorce, property rights of women, protections against sexual assault or men's mistreatment of women could have have been significant, right? (Though I don't know what those changes were) [[Special:Contributions/2601:644:907E:A70:9072:5C74:BC02:CB02|2601:644:907E:A70:9072:5C74:BC02:CB02]] ([[User talk:2601:644:907E:A70:9072:5C74:BC02:CB02|talk]]) 06:09, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
:::I don't think many of those were widely, significantly changed prior to the 18th century, though the World is large and diverse, and history is long, so it's difficult to generalise. See [[Women's rights]]. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/94.1.223.204|94.1.223.204]] ([[User talk:94.1.223.204|talk]]) 11:05, 19 December 2024 (UTC)

:In the English monarchy, when [[Henry I of England|King Henry I]] died in 1135 with no living male legitimate child, [[The Anarchy|a civil war]] followed over whether [[Empress Matilda|his daughter]] or [[Stephen, King of England|his nephew]] should inherit the throne. (It was settled by [[Treaty of Wallingford|a compromise]].) But in 1553 when [[Edward VI|King Edward VI]] died, [[Mary I of England|Queen Mary I]] inherited the throne and those who objected did it on religious grounds and not because she was a woman: in fact there was an attempt to place [[Lady Jane Grey]] on the throne instead. --[[Special:Contributions/142.112.149.206|142.112.149.206]] ([[User talk:142.112.149.206|talk]]) 01:50, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Although Mary's detractors believed that her [[List_of_Protestant_martyrs_of_the_English_Reformation#Persecution_of_Protestants_under_Mary_I_(1553–1558)|Catholic zeal]] was a result of her gender; a point made by the [[Calvinist]] reformer [[John Knox]], who published a [[polemic]] entitled ''[[The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstruous Regiment of Women]]''. When the Protestant [[Elizabeth I]] inherited the throne, there was a quick about face; Elizabeth was compared to the Biblical [[Deborah]], who had freed the Israelites from the [[Canaan]]ites and led them to an era of peace and prosperity, and was obviously a divine exception to the principle that females were unfit to rule. [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 12:21, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
:A possibly fictional account in the film [[Agora]] has the proto-feminist [[Hypatia]] anticipating [[Johannes Kepler|Kepler's]] orbits about two millenia before that gentleman, surely a significant feminine achievement. [[User:Philvoids|Philvoids]] ([[User talk:Philvoids|talk]]) 01:17, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
::{{xt|"The film contains numerous historical inaccuracies: It inflates Hypatia's achievements and incorrectly portrays her as finding a proof of Aristarchus of Samos's heliocentric model of the universe, which there is no evidence that Hypatia ever studied."}} (from our Hypatia article linked above). [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 14:59, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Even if true (we have no proof she did not embrace the heliocentric model while developing the theory of gravitation to boot), it did not result in a major change in the position of women. &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 03:22, 23 December 2024 (UTC)

== Intolerance by D. W. Griffith ==

Why did [[D. W. Griffith]] make the film [[Intolerance (film)|Intolerance]] after making the very popular and racist film [[The Birth of a Nation]]? What did he want to convey? [[Special:Contributions/174.160.82.127|174.160.82.127]] ([[User talk:174.160.82.127|talk]]) 18:22, 18 December 2024 (UTC)

:The lead of our article states that, in numerous interviews, Griffith made clear that the film was a rebuttal to his critics and he felt that they were, in fact, the intolerant ones. &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 22:26, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
::<small>For not tolerating his racism? [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 15:20, 19 December 2024 (UTC)</small>
:::Precisely. Griffith thought he was presenting the truth, however unpopular, and that the criticism was meant to stifle his voice, not because the opinions he expressed were wrong but because they were unwelcome. &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 03:14, 23 December 2024 (UTC)

== Term for awkward near-similarity ==

Is there a term for the feeling produced when two things are nearly but not quite identical, and you wish they were either fully identical or clearly distinct? I think this would be reminiscent of [[Narcissism of small differences|the narcissism of small differences]], but applied to things like design or aesthetics – or like a broader application of the [[uncanny valley]] (which is specific to imitation of humans). --[[Special:Contributions/71.126.56.235|71.126.56.235]] ([[User talk:71.126.56.235|talk]]) 20:19, 18 December 2024 (UTC)

:The uncanniness of the [[uncanny valley]] would be a specific subclass of this. &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 22:29, 18 December 2024 (UTC)

== Yearbooks ==

Why [[yearbook]]s are often named '''after''' years that they concern? For example, a yearbook that concerns year 2024 and tells statistics about that year might be named '''2025''' Yearbook, with 2024 Yearbook instead concerning 2023? Which is the reason for that? --[[User:40bus|40bus]] ([[User talk:40bus|talk]]) 21:33, 18 December 2024 (UTC)

:It is good for marketing, a 2025 yearbook sounds more up to date than a 2024 one. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 21:45, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
:One argument may be that it is the year of publication, being the 2025 edition of whatever. &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 22:31, 18 December 2024 (UTC)

:In the example of a high school yearbook, 2025 would be the year in which the 2024-2025 school year ended and the students graduated. Hence, "the Class of 2025" though the senior year started in 2024. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 23:42, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
:The purpose of a yearbook is to highlight the past year activities, for example a 2025 yearbook is to highlight the activities of 2024. [[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]] ([[User talk:Stanleykswong|talk]]) 06:21, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
::Are there any yearbooks that are named after the same years that they concern, e.g. 2024 yearbook concerning 2024, 2023 yearbook concerning 2023 etc. --[[User:40bus|40bus]] ([[User talk:40bus|talk]]) 13:04, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
:::A professional baseball team will typically have a "2024 Yearbook" for the current season, since the entire season occurred in 2024. Though keep in mind that the 2024 yearbook would have come out at the start of the season, hence it actually covers stats from 2023 as well as rosters and schedules for 2024. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 14:40, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
:::In the UK, the magazine ''[[Private Eye]]'' releases an annual at the end of every year which is named in this way. It stands out from all the other comic/magazine annuals on the rack which are named after the following year. I worked in bookselling for years and always found this interesting. [[User:Turner Street|Turner Street]] ([[User talk:Turner Street|talk]]) 11:26, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
Distinguish between [[Almanac]] (for predictions) and [[Yearbook]] (for recollections). ¨[[User:Philvoids|Philvoids]] ([[User talk:Philvoids|talk]]) 01:03, 21 December 2024 (UTC)

= December 21 =

== Everything You Can Do, We Can Do Meta: source? ==

I once read in a [[George Will]] article (or it might have been in one of his short columns) that the [[University of Chicago]] or one of its departments used "Everything You Can Do, We Can Do Meta" as a motto, but it turned out this was completely (if unintentionally, at least on Will's part) made up. Does anyone else remember George Will making that claim? Regardless, has anyone any idea how George Will may have mis-heard or mis-remembered it? (I could never believe that he intentionally made it up.) Anyway, does anyone know the source of the phrase, or at least an earliest source. (Obviously it may have occurred to several people independently.) The earliest I've found on Google is a 2007 article in the MIT Technology Review. Anything earlier? [[Special:Contributions/178.51.16.158|178.51.16.158]] ([[User talk:178.51.16.158|talk]]) 04:09, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
:[https://pure.eur.nl/ws/portalfiles/portal/72947677/Smith_Kloosterhuis_De_betekenis_van_de_concepten.pdf] describes it as "[[John Bell (legal scholar)|John Bell’s]] motto" and uses the reference {{tq|J. Bell, ‘Legal Theory in Legal Education – “Everything you can do, I can do meta…”’, in: S. Eng (red.), Proceedings of the 21st IVR World Congress: Lund (Sweden), 12-17 August 2003, Wiesbaden: Frans Steiner Verlag, p. 61.}}. [[User:Polygnotus|Polygnotus]] ([[User talk:Polygnotus|talk]]) 05:51, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
:In his book ''I've Been Thinking'', [[Daniel C. Dennett]] writes: '{{tq|Doug Hofstadter and I once had a running disagreement about who first came up with the quip “Anything you can do I can do meta”; I credited him and he credited me.}}'<sup>[https://books.google.com/books?id=Cn6pEAAAQBAJ&pg=PT53&dq=%22Anything+you+can+do+I+can+do+meta%22&hl=en]</sup> Dennett credited Hofstadter (writing ''meta-'' with a hyphen) in ''Brainchildren: Essays on Designing Minds'' (1998).<sup>[https://books.google.com/books?id=G2iYMnSuhL4C&pg=PA236&dq=%22Anything+you+can+do+I+can+do+meta-%22&hl=en]</sup> Hofstadter disavowed this claim in ''I am a Strange Loop'', suggesting that the quip was Dennett's brainchild, writing, '{{tq|To my surprise, though, this “motto” started making the rounds and people quoted it back to me as if I had really thought it up and really believed it.}}'<sup>[https://books.google.com/books?id=OwnYF1SCpFkC&pg=PT455&dq=%22Anything+you+can+do+I+can+do+meta%22&hl=en]</sup>
:It is, of course, quite possible that this witty variation on Irving Berlin's "[[Anything You Can Do (I Can Do Better)]]" was invented independently again and again. In 1979, [[Arthur Allen Leff]] wrote, in an article in ''Duke Law Journal'': '{{tq|My colleague, Leon Lipson, once described a certain species of legal writing as, “Anything you can do, I can do meta.”}}'<sup>[https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2724&context=dlj]</sup> (Quite likely, John Bell (mis)quoted [[Lipson]].) For other, likely independent examples, in 1986, it is used as the title of a technical report stressing the importance of metareasoning in the domain of machine learming (Morik, Katharina. ''Anything you can do I can do meta''. Inst. für Angewandte Informatik, Projektgruppe KIT, 1986), and in 1995 we find this ascribed to cultural anthropologist [[Richard Shweder]].<sup>[https://books.google.com/books?id=9k7XZiQ81RIC&pg=PA251&dq=%22Any+thing+you+can+do,+I+can+do+meta%22&hl=en]</sup> &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 14:40, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
:(ec) He may have been mixing this up with "That's all well and good and practice, but how does it work in theory?" which is associated with the University of Chicago and attributed to [[Shmuel Weinberger]], who is a professor there. [[User:Dekimasu|Dekimasu]]<small>[[User talk:Dekimasu|よ!]]</small> 14:42, 21 December 2024 (UTC)

== Did Sir John Hume get entrapped in his own plot (historically)? ==

In Shakespeare's "First Part of the Contention..." (First Folio: "Henry VI Part 2") there's a character, Sir John Hume, a priest, who manages to entrap the Duchess of Gloucester in the conjuring of a demon, but then gets caught in the plot and is sentenced to be "strangled on the gallows".

My question: Was Sir John Hume, the priest, a historical character? If he was, did he really get caught in the plot he laid for the Duchess, and end up being executed?

Here's what goes on in Shakespeare's play:

In Act 1, Scene 2 [Oxford Shakespeare 1988] Sir John Hume and the Duchess of Gloucester are talking about using Margery Jordan "the cunning witch of Eye" and Roger Bolingbroke, the conjuror, to raise a spirit that will answer the Duchess's questions. It is clear Hume is being paid by the Duke of Suffolk to entrap the Duchess. His own motivation is not political but simple lucre.

In Act 1, Scene 4 the witch Margery Jordan, John Southwell and Sir John Hume, the two priests, and Roger Bolingbroke, the conjuror, conjure a demon (Asnath) in front of the Duchess of Gloucester in order that she may ask him questions about the fate of various people, and they all get caught and arrested by the Duke of York and his men. (Hume works for Suffolk and Cardinal Beaufort, bishop of Winchester, not for York, so it is not through Hume that York knows of these goings on, but York on his part was keeping a watch on the Duchess)

Act 2, Scene 3 King Henry: (to Margery Jordan, John Southwell, Sir John Hume, and Roger Bolingbroke) "You four, from hence to prison back again; / From thence, unto the place of execution. / The witch in Smithfield shall be burned to ashes, / And you three shall be strangled on the gallows."

[[Special:Contributions/178.51.16.158|178.51.16.158]] ([[User talk:178.51.16.158|talk]]) 16:14, 21 December 2024 (UTC)

:John Home or Hume (Home and Hume are pronounced identically) was [[Eleanor, Duchess of Gloucester]]'s confessor. According to [https://murreyandblue.org/2022/10/03/the-downfall-of-eleanor-cobham-duchess-of-gloucester/ this] and [https://www.susanhigginbotham.com/posts/eleanor-cobham-the-duchess-and-her-downfall/ this] "Home, who had been indicted only for having knowledge of the activities of the others, was pardoned and continued in his position as canon of Hereford. He died in 1473." He does not seem to have been Sir John. I'm sure someone who knows more than me will be along soon. [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 16:35, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
:::At this period "Sir" (and "Lady") could still be used as a vague title for people of some status, without really implying they had a knighthood. [[User:Johnbod|Johnbod]] ([[User talk:Johnbod|talk]]) 20:46, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
::Identically /hjuːm/ (HYOOM), to be clear. [[User:Card_Zero|<span style=" background-color:#fffff0; border:1px #995; border-style:dotted solid solid dotted;">&nbsp;Card&nbsp;Zero&nbsp;</span>]]&nbsp;[[User_talk:Card_Zero|(talk)]] 20:17, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
:Oh, and the ''[[First Part of the Contention]]'' is Henry Sixt Part II, not Part I! We also have articles about [[Roger Bolingbroke]] and [[Margery Jourdemayne]], the Witch of Eye. [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 16:59, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
::Thanks. I corrected it now. [[Special:Contributions/178.51.16.158|178.51.16.158]] ([[User talk:178.51.16.158|talk]]) 20:34, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
::There's also an article for a [[Thomas Southwell (priest)]]. In Shakespeare he is "John Southwell". The name "John Southwell" does appear in the text of the play itself (it is mentioned by Bolingbroke). I haven't checked if the quarto and the folio differ on the name. His dates seem to be consistent with this episode and [[Roger Bolingbroke]] does refer to the other priest as "Thomas Southwell". But nothing is mentioned in the article [[Thomas Southwell (priest)]] itself, so that article may be about some other priest named Thomas Southwell. In any case [[Roger Bolingbroke]] points out that only Roger Bolingbroke and Margery Jourdemayne were executed in connection with this affair. Shakespeare has them all executed. He must have been in a bad mood when he wrote that passage. Either that, or he just wanted to keep things simple. [[Special:Contributions/178.51.16.158|178.51.16.158]] ([[User talk:178.51.16.158|talk]]) 11:42, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::I think that may well be our Southwell, according to "[https://www.allabouthistory.co.uk/History/England/Person/Thomas-Southwell-1441.html?akolhvRj Chronicle of Gregory 1441. 27 Oct 1441. And on Syn Symon and Jude is eve was the wycche (age 26) be syde Westemyster brent in Smethefylde, and on the day of Symon and Jude <nowiki>[28 Oct 1441]</nowiki> the person <nowiki>[parson]</nowiki> of Syn Stevynnys in Walbroke, whyche that was one of the same fore said traytours <nowiki>[Thomas Southwell]</nowiki>, deyde in the Toure for sorowe.]" The ''Chronicle of Gregory'', written by [[William Gregory (lord mayor)|William Gregory]] is [https://www.british-history.ac.uk/camden-record-soc/vol17 published by the Camden Society] [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 12:26, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::::Some experienced editor may then want to add these facts to his article, possibly using the Chronicle of Gregory as a source. [[Special:Contributions/178.51.16.158|178.51.16.158]] ([[User talk:178.51.16.158|talk]]) 12:39, 23 December 2024 (UTC)

= December 22 =

== Mike Johnson ==

I saw [[Mike Johnson]] on TV a day or two ago. (He was speaking from some official podium ... I believe about the recent government shutdown possibility, the Continuing Resolution, etc.) I was surprised to see that he was wearing a [[yarmulke]]. The color of the yarmulke was a close match to the color of Johnson's hair, so I had to look closely and I had to look twice. I said to myself "I never knew that he was Jewish". It bothered me, so I looked him up and -- as expected -- he is not Jewish. Why would he be wearing a yarmulke? Thanks. [[Special:Contributions/32.209.69.24|32.209.69.24]] ([[User talk:32.209.69.24|talk]]) 07:40, 22 December 2024 (UTC)

:Presumably to show his support for Israel and anti-semitism (and make inroads into the traditional Jewish-American support for the Democratic Party). Trump wore one too. [[User:Clarityfiend|Clarityfiend]] ([[User talk:Clarityfiend|talk]]) 10:39, 22 December 2024 (UTC)

:: OK, thanks. I did not know that was a "thing". To wear one to show support. First I ever heard of that or seen that. Thanks. [[Special:Contributions/32.209.69.24|32.209.69.24]] ([[User talk:32.209.69.24|talk]]) 13:12, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::[Edited to add – Edit Conflict with Lambiam below.] He may also have just come from, or be shortly going to, some (not necessarily religious) event held in a synagogue, where he would wear it for courtesy. I would do the same, and have my (non-Jewish) grandfather's kippah, which he wore for this purpose not infrequently, having many Jewish friends. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/94.1.223.204|94.1.223.204]] ([[User talk:94.1.223.204|talk]]) 16:39, 22 December 2024 (UTC)

:: I assume you mis-spoke: ''to show his support for ... anti-semitism''. [[Special:Contributions/32.209.69.24|32.209.69.24]] ([[User talk:32.209.69.24|talk]]) 13:16, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:It is somewhat customary, also for male goyim, to don a yarmulke when visiting a synagogue or attending a Jewish celebration or other ceremony, like Biden [https://prisonplanets.com/not-a-dimes-worth-of-difference-between-the-republicans-and-the-democrats/ here] while lecturing at a synagogue in Atlanta, Georgia (and under him Trump while groping the [[Western Wall]]). Was Johnson speaking at a synagogue? &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 16:38, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::It may have been [https://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/speaker-of-the-house-mike-johnson-places-a-yarmulke-on-his-news-photo/2190446356 a Hanukkah reception]. &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 16:50, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Precisely, {{u|Lambian}}. Here is Johnson's [https://mikejohnson.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=1500 official statement]. [[User:Cullen328|Cullen328]] ([[User talk:Cullen328|talk]]) 17:17, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::::This year Hanukkah begins unusually late in the Gregorian calendar, starting at sundown on December 25, when Congress will not be in session. This coincidence can be described by the portmanteau [[Chrismukkah]]. So, the Congressional observance of Hanukkah was ahead of schedule this year. Back in 2013, Hanukkah arrived unusually early, during the US holiday of [[Thanksgiving (United States)|Thanksgiving]], resulting in the portmanteau of [[Thanksgivukkah]]. [[User:Cullen328|Cullen328]] ([[User talk:Cullen328|talk]]) 17:15, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::When you want to check the correlation between Jewish and Christian holidays, you can use the fact that Orthodox Christian months almost always correspond to Jewish months. For Chanucah, the relevant correlation is Emma/Kislev. From the table [[Special:Permalink/1188536894#The Reichenau Primer (opposite Pangur Bán)]], in 2024 (with [[Golden Number]] 11) ''Emma'' began on 3 December, so 24 ''Emma'' is 26 December. [[Special:Contributions/92.12.75.131|92.12.75.131]] ([[User talk:92.12.75.131|talk]]) 15:45, 23 December 2024 (UTC)

== Joseph Mary Thouveau, Bishop of Sebastopol ==

Who was Joseph Mary Thouveau, Bishop of Sebastopol? There is only one reference online ("[https://zsl-archive.maxarchiveservices.co.uk/index.php/thouveau-joseph-mary Letter from Joseph Mary Thouveau. Bishop of Sebastopol, to Philip Lutley Sclater regarding Lady Amherst's Pheasant]", 1869), and that has no further details. <span class="vcard"><span class="fn">[[User:Pigsonthewing|Andy Mabbett]]</span> (<span class="nickname">Pigsonthewing</span>); [[User talk:Pigsonthewing|Talk to Andy]]; [[Special:Contributions/Pigsonthewing|Andy's edits]]</span> 22:03, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:After that search engine I used insisted I was looking for a Chauveau I finally located [https://catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/d2s61.html this] Joseph Marie Chauveau - So the J M ''Thouveau'' item from [https://zsl-archive.maxarchiveservices.co.uk/index.php/thouveau-joseph-mary maxarchiveservices uk] must be one of the [[idiosyncrasy|eccentricities]] produced by that old fashioned hand-written communication they had in the past. --[[User:Askedonty|Askedonty]] ([[User talk:Askedonty|talk]]) 22:24, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:Of interest that other notice [https://irfa.paris/en/missionnaire/0488-chauveau-joseph/ Joseph, Marie, Pierre]. The hand-written text scribbled on the portrait stands as 'Eveque de Sebastopolis'. Pierre-Joseph Chauveau probably, now is also mentioned as Pierre-Joseph in [https://www.google.fr/books/edition/Voyages_et_d%C3%A9couvertes_scientifiques_de/oL7RAAAAMAAJ?&gbpv=1&bsq=Joseph+Marie+Chauveau+,+faisan&dq=Joseph+Marie+Chauveau+,+faisan&printsec=frontcover Voyages] ..even though, Lady Amherst's Pheasant is referred, in the same, through an other missionary intermediary: [https://www.google.fr/books/edition/Encyclop%C3%A9die_biologique/bldMAAAAYAAJ?&gbpv=1&bsq=Lady+Amherst's&dq=Lady+Amherst's&printsec=frontcover similar]. --[[User:Askedonty|Askedonty]] ([[User talk:Askedonty|talk]]) 23:28, 22 December 2024 (UTC)

:Also in [https://www.google.fr/books/edition/Contribution_des_missionnaires_fran%C3%A7ais/WVfVAAAAMAAJ?gbpv=0 Contribution des missionnaires français au progrès des sciences naturelles au XIX et XX. (1932)]. Full texts are not accessible though it seems there is three times the same content in three different but more or less simultaneously published editions. [[User:Askedonty|Askedonty]] ([[User talk:Askedonty|talk]]) 23:59, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::There is a stub at [[:fr:Joseph-Marie Chauveau]] (there is also a zh article) and a list of bishops at [[:fr:Évêché titulaire de Sébastopolis-en-Arménie]]. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 03:31, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:: {{Ping|Askedonty}} Awesome work, thank you; and really useful. I'll notify my contact at ZSL, so they can fix their transcription error.
:: [The Google Books links aren't showing me the search results, but that's a generic issue, nothing to do with your links]. <span class="vcard"><span class="fn">[[User:Pigsonthewing|Andy Mabbett]]</span> (<span class="nickname">Pigsonthewing</span>); [[User talk:Pigsonthewing|Talk to Andy]]; [[Special:Contributions/Pigsonthewing|Andy's edits]]</span> 16:34, 23 December 2024 (UTC)

= December 23 =

== London Milkman photo ==

I am writing a rough draft of ''Delivery After Raid'', also known as ''The London Milkman'' in my [[User:Viriditas/sandbox15|sandbox]]. I’m still trying to verify basic information, such as the original publication of the photo. It was allegedly first published on October 10, 1940, in ''Daily Mirror'', but it’s behind a paywall in British Newspaper Archive, but from the previews I can see, I don’t know think the photo is there. Does anyone know who originally published it or publicized it, or which British papers carried it in the 1940s? For a photo that’s supposed to be famous, it’s almost impossible to find anything about it before 1998. [[User:Viriditas|Viriditas]] ([[User talk:Viriditas|talk]]) 04:01, 23 December 2024 (UTC)

:Somewhat tellingly, [https://www.thetimes.com/article/daily-encounters-national-portrait-gallery-wc2-r3tbr2svwr2 this article] about this photo in ''The Times'' just writes, "{{tq|On the morning of October 10, 1940, a photograph taken by Fred Morley of Fox Photos was published in a London newspaper.}}" The lack of identification of the newspaper is not due to reluctance of mentioning a competitor, since further on in the article we read, "{{tq|... the Daily Mirror became the first daily newspaper to carry photographs ...}}". &nbsp;--[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 11:45, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:I see it credited (by Getty Images) to "[[Edward George Warris Hulton|Hulton]] Archive", which might mean it was in [[Picture Post]]. [[User:Card_Zero|<span style=" background-color:#fffff0; border:1px #995; border-style:dotted solid solid dotted;">&nbsp;Card&nbsp;Zero&nbsp;</span>]]&nbsp;[[User_talk:Card_Zero|(talk)]] 12:29, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
::It was Fox Photos, they were a major agency supplying pictures to all of Fleet Street. [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 13:22, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::You mean it might have appeared in multiple papers on October 10, 1940? [[User:Card_Zero|<span style=" background-color:#fffff0; border:1px #995; border-style:dotted solid solid dotted;">&nbsp;Card&nbsp;Zero&nbsp;</span>]]&nbsp;[[User_talk:Card_Zero|(talk)]] 14:06, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
::::No, I mean the Hulton credit does not imply anything about where it might have appeared. [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 14:14, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::I can't join the dots. Doesn't being credited to the photographic archive of ''Picture Post'' imply that it might have appeared in ''Picture Post''? How does the agency being Fox Photos negate the possibility? [[User:Card_Zero|<span style=" background-color:#fffff0; border:1px #995; border-style:dotted solid solid dotted;">&nbsp;Card&nbsp;Zero&nbsp;</span>]]&nbsp;[[User_talk:Card_Zero|(talk)]] 14:21, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::It wasn't a Hulton picture, it was a Fox picture. The Hulton Archive absorbed other archives over the years, before being itself absorbed by Getty. [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 14:31, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Oh! Right, I didn't understand that about Hulton. [[User:Card_Zero|<span style=" background-color:#fffff0; border:1px #995; border-style:dotted solid solid dotted;">&nbsp;Card&nbsp;Zero&nbsp;</span>]]&nbsp;[[User_talk:Card_Zero|(talk)]] 14:38, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:Not in the ''Daily Mirror'' of Thursday 10 October 1940. [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 13:19, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
::{{Ping|DuncanHill}} Maybe the 11th, if they picked up on the previous day's London-only publication? <span class="vcard"><span class="fn">[[User:Pigsonthewing|Andy Mabbett]]</span> (<span class="nickname">Pigsonthewing</span>); [[User talk:Pigsonthewing|Talk to Andy]]; [[Special:Contributions/Pigsonthewing|Andy's edits]]</span> 16:38, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::a lot of searches suggest it was the ''Daily Mail''. [[User:Nthep|Nthep]] ([[User talk:Nthep|talk]]) 18:05, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::{{Ping|Pigsonthewing}} I've checked the ''Mirror'' for the 11th, and the rest of the week. I've checked the ''News Chronicle'', the ''Express'', and the ''Herald'' for the 10th. ''Mail'' not on BNA. [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 19:38, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
::::As general context, from my professional experience of picture researching back in the day, photo libraries and agencies quite often tried to claim photos and other illustrations in their collections as their own IP even when they were in fact not their IP and even when they were out of copyright. Often the same illustration was actually available from multiple providers, though obviously (in that pre-digital era) one paid a fee to whichever of them you borrowed a copy from for reproduction in a book or periodical. Attributions in published material may not, therefore, accurately reflect the true origin of an image. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/94.1.223.204|94.1.223.204]] ([[User talk:94.1.223.204|talk]]) 18:06, 23 December 2024 (UTC)

== Belgia, the Netherlands, to a 16th c. Englishman? ==

In Shakespeare's "[[Comedy of Errors]]" (Act 3, Scene 2) Dromio of Syracuse and his master Antipholus of Syracuse discuss Nell the kitchen wench who Dromio says "is spherical, like a globe. I could find out countries in her." After asking about the location of a bunch of countries on Nell (very funny! recommended!), Antipholus ends with: "Where stood Belgia, the Netherlands?" Dromio hints "Belgia, the Netherlands" stood in her privates ("O, sir, I did not look so low.") My question is not about how adequate the comparison is but on whether "Belgia" and "the Netherlands" were the same thing, two synonymous designations for the same thing to Shakespeare (the Netherlands being the whole of the Low Countries and Belgia being just a slightly more literate equivalent of the same)? Or were "the Netherlands" already the Northern Low Countries (i.e. modern Netherlands), i.e. the provinces that had seceded about 15 years prior from the Spanish Low Countries (Union of Utrecht) while "Belgia" was the Southern Low Countries (i.e. modern Belgium and Luxembourg), i.e. the provinces that decided to stay with Spain (Union of Arras)? [[Special:Contributions/178.51.16.158|178.51.16.158]] ([[User talk:178.51.16.158|talk]]) 13:40, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:Essentially they were regarded as the same - you might look at [[Leo Belgicus]], a visual trope invented in 1583, perhaps a decade before the play was written, including both (and more). In Latin at this period and later [[Belgica Foederata]] was the United Provinces, [[Belgica Regia]] the Southern Netherlands. The Roman province had included both. [[User:Johnbod|Johnbod]] ([[User talk:Johnbod|talk]]) 15:40, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
::Johnbod, I agree with your explanation, but I thought that [[Gallia Belgica]] was south of the Rhine, so it only included the southern part of the United Provinces. [[User:TSventon|TSventon]] ([[User talk:TSventon|talk]]) 16:39, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Yes, it seems so - "parts of both" would be more accurate. The Dutch didn't want to think of themselves as [[Germania Inferior|Inferior Germans]], that's for sure! [[User:Johnbod|Johnbod]] ([[User talk:Johnbod|talk]]) 17:40, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
::::This general region was originally part of [[Middle Francia]] aka [[Lotharingia]], possession of whose multifarious territories have been fought over by themselves, West Francia (roughly, France) and East Francia (roughly, Germany) for most of the last 1,100 years. The status of any particular bit of territory was potentially subject to repeated and abrupt changees due to wars, treaties, dynastic marriages, expected or unexpected inheritances, and even being sold for ready cash. See, for an entertaining (though exhausting as well as exhaustive) account of this, [[Simon Winder]]'s ''Lotharingia: A Personal History of Europe's Lost Country'' (2019). {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/94.1.223.204|94.1.223.204]] ([[User talk:94.1.223.204|talk]]) 18:19, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::Actually Middle Francia, Lotharingia, different birds: Middle Francia was allocated to Lothair 1 (795-855), Lotharingia was allocated to (and named after) his son Lothair 2 (835-869) (not after his father Lothair 1). Lotharingia was about half the size of Middle Francia, as Middle Francia also included Provence and the northern half of Italy. Upper Lotharingia was essentially made up of Bourgogne and Lorraine (in fact the name "Lorraine" goes back to "Lotharingia" etymologically speaking, through a form "Loherraine"), and was eventually reduced to just Lorraine, whereas Lower Lotharingia was essentially made up of the Low Countries, except for the county of Flanders which was part of the kingdom of France, originally "Western Francia". In time these titles became more and more meaningless. In the 11th c. Godefroid de Bouillon, the leader of the First Crusade and conqueror of Jerusalem was still styled "Duc de Basse Lotharingie" even though by then there were more powerful and important rulers in that same territory (most significantly the duke of Brabant) [[Special:Contributions/178.51.16.158|178.51.16.158]] ([[User talk:178.51.16.158|talk]]) 19:18, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
== Indigenous territory/Indian reservations ==

Are there Indigenous territory in Ecuador, Suriname? What about Honduras, Guatemala, and Salvador?

Latest revision as of 20:09, 23 December 2024

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December 9

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Tribes and inceldom

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One common saying in incel subcultures is that women are "programmed" to only have relationships with the 20% top men. This appears to be consistent (o at least not contradicted by) this phrase in the polygamy article: "More recent genetic data has clarified that, in most regions throughout history, a smaller proportion of men contributed to human genetic history compared to women."

Then again, while I've heard of modern tribes with weird marriage practices (for example the Wodaabe or the Trobriand people) I've never heard of tribes where 70% of men die virgins. Is there any tribe/society where something like that happens? (I realize that modern tribes are by definition different to Paleolithic tribes)90.77.114.87 (talk) 13:51, 9 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

From what I've read in the past, it seems that hunter-gatherer cultures over the last 50,000 years ago probably tended to be mildly polygynous -- that is, certain men, due to their personalities and demonstrated skills, managed to attract more than one woman at a time into a relationship with them. (Usually a small number -- some men having large numbers of wives is associated more with agricultural civilizations, and women there could often have less freedom of choice than women in hunter-gatherer groups.) Everybody of both sexes is likely to be most attracted to high-status individuals, but under hunter-gatherer conditions, women also need help with child-rearing, which factors into their mating strategies. AnonMoos (talk) 14:19, 9 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
P.S. Under the classic anthropological band-tribe-chiefdom-state classification system (on Wikipedia, covered in the vaguely named Sociopolitical typology article), most historical hunter-gatherer cultures were "bands", while the Wodaabe and Trobriand people sound more like "tribes". AnonMoos (talk) 14:26, 9 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Worth remembering, though: who has "sanctioned" relationships is not necessarily equivalent to who actually has sex. - Jmabel | Talk 19:15, 9 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It has been said (in mammals at least) that each 5% difference in mass for males means that their harem (zoology) has one more female. The sexual dimorphism#Humans article says that human males are 15% heavier that the females (previously I had heard 20%), suggesting that the harem-holder has three mates (or 4, if the 20% is correct). But this does not mean that 75% of human males never had sex. Firstly, holding a harem is a dangerous, short term job if other animals are any guide, with the harem master regularly killed or overthrown. Secondly, in current polygynous human cultures and in polygynous animals, there is a huge amount of cheating. Evidence from animals shows that when females cheat, they are statistically more likely to produce offspring from that mating than from a mating with their main male. Abductive (reasoning) 11:09, 11 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It's doubtful that there were commonly "harems" at any stage of human evolution which is very relevant to modern human behavior. Gorillas have moderate harems of often around 3 or 4 females (as opposed to elephant seals, which commonly have a harem size in the thirties). Robust Australopithecines may have been similar, but modern humans are not descended from them. What we know about attested hunter-gatherer societies strongly suggests that during the last 50,000 years or so (since Behavioral modernity) the majority of men who had wives had one wife, but some exceptional men were able to attract 2 or 3 women at a time into relationships. Men having large numbers of wives (real harems) wasn't too feasible until the rise of social stratification which occurred with the development of agriculture. AnonMoos (talk) 16:50, 11 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
How do we know that? Because the same evidence is that prior to 50,000 years ago, humans did have harems. Abductive (reasoning) 20:22, 11 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Where can we find this evidence?  --Lambiam 08:31, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
A Recent Shift from Polygyny to Monogamy in Humans Is Suggested by the Analysis of Worldwide Y-Chromosome Diversity. Abductive (reasoning) 14:53, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Scattering in US elections

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What does scattering mean in the context of US elections? Examples: 1944 United_States presidential election in California#Results 1886 United States House of Representatives elections#Mississippi. Searching mostly produces Electron scattering, which is not the same thing at all! Is there (or should there be) an article or section that could be linked? Cavrdg (talk) 14:32, 9 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

If you click on the source for Frederick G. Berry in the 1886 election, then on Scattering on the following page, it says it's for those with "No Party Affiliation". Clarityfiend (talk) 14:44, 9 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Presumably from the phrase "a scattering of votes" (i.e. for other candidates than those listed)... AnonMoos (talk) 15:52, 9 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I suspect that the intended word is "smattering". Cullen328 (talk) 09:12, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
That's what I have of Spanish. —Tamfang (talk) 20:07, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

December 11

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Shopping carts

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Where were the first shopping carts introduced?

Both articles agree it was in 1937 in Oklaholma. I believe that Humpty Dumpty is more likely, but some high quality sources would be useful. TSventon (talk) 11:55, 11 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

It seems to be a matter of some dispute, but Guide to the Telescoping Shopping Cart Collection, 1946-1983, 2000 by the Smithsonian Institution has the complex details of the dispute between Sylvan Goldman [of Humpty Dumpty] and Orla Watson. No mention of Piggly Wiggly, but our article on Watson notes that in 1946, he donated the first models of his cart to 10 grocery stores in Kansas City.
The Illustrated History of American Military Commissaries (p. 205) has both Watson and Goldman introducing their carts in 1947 (this may refer to carts that telescope into each other for storage, a feature apparently lacking in Goldman's first model).
Scalable Innovation: A Guide for Inventors, Entrepreneurs, and IP Professionals says that Goldman's first cart was introduced to Humpty Dumty in 1937.
Make of that what you will. Alansplodge (talk) 13:30, 11 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Absolutely. I remember that the power lift arrangement mentioned in the Smithsonian's link was still an object of analysis for would-be inventors in the mid-sixties, and possibly later, even though the soon to be ubiquituous checkout counter conveyor belt was very much ready making it unnecessary. Couldn't help curiously but think about those when learning about Bredt's rule at school later, see my user page, but it's true "Bredt" sounded rather like "Bread" in my imagination. --Askedonty (talk) 15:33, 11 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
On Newspapers.com (pay site), I'm seeing shopping carts referenced in Portland, Oregon in 1935 or earlier, and occasionally illustrated, at a store called the Public Market; and as far as the term itself is concerned, it goes back to at least the 1850s. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots15:18, 11 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
But perhaps referring to a cart brought by the shopper to carry goods home with, rather than one provided by the storekeeper for use in-store? Alansplodge (talk) 16:14, 11 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

@Alansplodge, Askedonty, and Baseball Bugs: thank you for your help, it seems that the Harvard Business Review is mistaken and the Piggly Wiggly chain did not introduce the first shopping baskets, which answers my question. The shopping cart article references a paper by Catherine Grandclément, which shows that several companies were selling early shopping carts in 1937, so crediting Sylvan Goldman alone is not the whole story. TSventon (talk) 17:22, 11 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Lilacs/flowers re: Allies in Europe WWII

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At 53:20 in Dunkirk (1958 film), British soldiers talk about [paraphrasing] 'flowers on the way into Belgium, raspberries on the way out', and specifically reference lilacs. I imagine this was very clear to 1958 audiences, but what is the significance of lilacs? Is it/was it a symbol of Belgium? Valereee (talk) 21:40, 11 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I think it's just that the BEF entered Belgium in the Spring, which is lilac time. DuncanHill (talk) 22:04, 11 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There are contemporary reports of the streets being strewn with lilac blossom. See here "Today the troops crossed the frontier along roads strewn with flowers. Belgian girls, wildly enthusiastic, plucked lilac from the wayside and scattered it along the road to be torn and twisted by the mighty wheels of the mechanised forces." DuncanHill (talk) 22:26, 11 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Ah! That would explain it, thanks! Valereee (talk) 16:14, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

December 12

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The USA adding a new state

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If my understanding is correct, the following numbers are valid at present: (a) number of Senators = 100; (b) number of Representatives = 435; (c) number of electors in the Electoral College = 538. If the USA were to add a new state, what would happen to these numbers? Thank you. 32.209.69.24 (talk) 06:30, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

The number of senators would increase by 2, and the number of representatives would probably increase by at least 1. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots09:23, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thus, to answer the final question, the minimum number of Electors would be 3… more if the new state has more Representatives (based on population). Blueboar (talk) 13:54, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
In the short term, there would be extra people in congress. The 86th United States Congress had 437 representatives, because Alaska and Hawaii were granted one upon entry regardless of the apportionment rules. Things were smoothed down to 435 at the next census, two congresses later. --Golbez (talk) 14:58, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks. Hmmmmmmmmmmm. Let me re-phrase my question. (a) The number of Senators is always 2 per State, correct? (b) The number of Representatives is what? Is it "capped" at 435 ... or does it increase a little bit? (c) The number of Electors (per State) is simply a function of "a" + "b" (per State), correct? Thanks. 32.209.69.24 (talk) 21:12, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

As I understand it, it is indeed capped at 435, though Golbez brings up a point I hadn't taken into account -- apparently it can go up temporarily when states are added, until the next reapportionment. --Trovatore (talk) 21:21, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I suggest that (b) would probably depend on whether the hypothetical new state was made up of territory previously part of one or more existing states, or territory not previously part of any existing state. And I suspect that the eventual result would not depend on any pre-calculable formula, but on cut-throat horsetrading between the two main parties and other interested bodies. {The poster formerly nown as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.211.243 (talk) 21:21, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Nope, it's capped at 435. See Reapportionment Act of 1929. (I had thought it was fixed in the Constitution itself, but apparently not.) --Trovatore (talk) 21:23, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The Constitution has a much higher cap, currently around eleven thousand. —Tamfang (talk) 20:09, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, one other refinement. The formula you've given for number of electors is correct, for states. But it leaves out the District of Columbia, which gets as many electors as it would get if it were a state, but never less more than those apportioned to the smallest state. In practice that means DC gets three electors. That's why the total is 538 instead of 535. --Trovatore (talk) 21:58, 12 December 2024 (UTC) Oops; I remembered the bit about the smallest state wrong. It's actually never more than the smallest state. Doesn't matter in practice; still works out to 3 electors for the foreseeable future, either way, because DC would get 3 electors if it were a state, and the least populous state gets 3. --Trovatore (talk) 23:23, 12 December 2024 (UTC) [reply]

December 13

[edit]

economics: coffee prices question

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in news report "On Tuesday, the price for Arabica beans, which account for most global production, topped $3.44 a pound (0.45kg), having jumped more than 80% this year. " [1] how do they measure it? some other report mention it is a commodity price set for trading like gold silver etc. what is the original data source for this report? i checked a few other news stories and did not find any clarification about this point, they just know something that i don't. thank you in advance for your help. Gryllida (talk, e-mail) 01:32, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Gryllida, they seem to be talking about the "Coffee C" contract in the List of traded commodities. The price seems to have peaked and then fallen a day later
thanks. i see the chart which you cannot link here. why did it peak and then drop shortly after? Gryllida (talk, e-mail) 04:08, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Financial markets tend to have periods of increase followed by periods of decrease (bull and bear markets), see market trend for background. TSventon (talk) 04:55, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

source for an order of precedence for abbotts

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Hi friends. The article for Ramsey Abbey in the UK refers to an "order of precedence for abbots in Parliament". (Sourced to an encyclopedia, which uses the wording "The abbot had a seat in Parliament and ranked next after Glastonbury and St. Alban's"). Did a ranking/order of precedence exist and if yes where can it be found? Presumably this would predate the dissolution of monasteries in england. Thanks.70.67.193.176 (talk) 06:49, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

The abbots called to parliament were called "Mitred Abbots" although not all were entitled to wear a mitre. Our Mitre article has much the same information as you quote, and I suspect the same citations. The only other reference I could find, also from an encyclopedia;
Of the abbots, the abbot of Glastonbury had the precedence till A.D. 1154, when Pope Adrian IV, an Englishman, from the affection he entertained for the place of his education, assigned this precedence to the abbot of St. Alban's. In consequence, Glastonbury ranked next after him, and Reading had the third place.
A Church Dictionary: A Practical Manual of Reference for Clergymen and Students (p. 2)
Alansplodge (talk) 21:47, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Sources differ on the order. There is a list published in 1842 of 26 abbots as "generally ... reckoned" in order here
The Church History of Britain Volume 2 (p.182) TSventon (talk) 22:15, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
"Mean lords" in that reference should presumably be Mesne lords. 194.73.48.66 (talk) 14:25, 20 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
"Mean lords" looks like an alternative spelling that was used in the 19th century, so it was probably a correct spelling in 1842. TSventon (talk) 15:07, 20 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you everyone very much for your time and research, truly appreciated. all the best,70.67.193.176 (talk) 23:44, 20 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Are the proposed Trump tariffs a regressive tax in disguise?

[edit]

I'm wondering if there has been analysis of this. The US government gets the tariff money(?) and biggest chunk will be on manufactured goods from China. Those in turn are primarily consumer goods, which means that the tariff is something like a sales tax, a type of tax well known to be regressive. Obviously there are leaks in the description above, so one would have to crunch a bunch of numbers to find out for sure. But that's what economists do, right? Has anyone weighed in on this issue? Thanks. 2601:644:8581:75B0:0:0:0:327E (talk) 08:58, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

There have been many public comments about how this is a tax on American consumers. It's only "in disguise" to those who don't understand how tariffs work. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots11:34, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks, I'll see what I can find. Do you remember if the revenue collected is supposed to be enough for the government to care about? I.e. enough to supposedly offset the inevitable tax cuts for people like Elon Musk? 2601:644:8581:75B0:0:0:0:327E (talk) 22:36, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Import duties are extremely recessive in that (a) they are charged at the same rate for any given level of income; and (b) those with less income tend to purchase far more imported goods than those with more income (define “more” and “less” any way you wish). Fiscally, they border on insignificant, running an average of 1.4% of federal revenue since 1962 (or, 0.2% of GDP), compared to 47.1% (8.0%) for individual income tax and 9.9% (1.7%) for corporate tax receipts.DOR (ex-HK) (talk) 22:52, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Curious about your point (b); why would this be? It seems to me that as my income has risen I have probably bought more stuff from abroad, at least directly. It could well be that I've bought less indirectly, but I'm not sure why that would be. --Trovatore (talk) 00:02, 14 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
More like, those with less income spend a larger fraction of their income on imported goods, instead of services. PiusImpavidus (talk) 10:48, 14 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Trovatore, most daily use items are imported: toothbrushes, combs, kitchenware, shopping bags. Most durable goods are imported: phones, TVs, cars, furniture, sporting goods, clothes. These items are more likely to be imported because it is MUCH cheaper / more profitable to make them abroad. Wander through Target, Sam's Club, or Wal-Mart and you'll be hard pressed to find "Made in America" goods. But, in a hand-crafted shop, where prices have to reflect the cost of living HERE, rather than in Bangladesh, prices soar. DOR (ex-HK) (talk) 19:13, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Um, sure, but surely it's a fairly rare person of any income level who spends a significant portion of his/her income on artisanal goods. --Trovatore (talk) 06:03, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
PiusImpavidus, Every income strata (in America) spends far more on services than on goods. Services tend to be more of a repeated purchase: laundry (vs. washing machine), Uber (vs. car), rent (vs. purchase), internet (vs. books), etc. DOR (ex-HK) (talk) 19:17, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Ron A. Dunn: Australian arachnologist

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For Ronald Albert Dunn (Q109827858) I have given names of "Ron. A.", an address in 1958 of 60 Mimosa Road, Carnegie, Victoria, Australia S.E. 9 (he was also in Carnegie in 1948) and an uncited death date of 25 June 1972.

He was an Australian arachnologist with the honorifics AAA AAIS.

Can anyone find the full given names, and a source or the death date, please? What did the honorifics stand for? Do we know how he earned his living? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 12:54, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Pigsonthewing Have you tried ancestry.com? For a start
A scan of the 1954 Carnegie electoral roll has
  • Dunn, Ronald Albert, 60 Mimosa Road, S.E. 9, accountant
  • Dunn, Gladys Harriet I, 60 Mimosa Road, S.E. 9, home duties
I can't check newspapers.com, but The Age apparently had a report about Ronald Albert Dunn on 27 Jun 1972 TSventon (talk) 14:49, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you. I don't have access to the former, but that's great. AAA seems to be (member of the) Association of Accountants of Australia: [2]. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 16:18, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I accessed Ancestry.com via the Wikipedia Library, so you should have access. Newspapers.com is also available via the library if you register, which I haven't. An editor with a Newspapers.com account would be able to make a clipping which anyone could access online.
I agree AAA is probably the Australian Society of Accountants, a predecessor of CPA Australia. They merged in 1953 (source) so the information would have been outdated in 1958. AAIS could be Associate [of the] Amalgamated Institute of Secretaries (source Who's Who in Australia, Volume 16, 1959 Abbreviations page 9). TSventon (talk) 16:48, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Last time I tried, Ancestry wasn't working for WP-Lib users. Thank you again. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 20:50, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There is a phabricator problem about loading a second page of results. My workaround is to try to add more information to the search to get more relevant results on the first page of results. TSventon (talk) 21:03, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Or perhaps someone at Wikipedia:WikiProject Resource Exchange/Resource Request could help? Alansplodge (talk) 12:35, 14 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
They already have at Wikipedia:WikiProject Resource Exchange/Resource Request#The Age (Melbourne) 27 June 1972. TSventon (talk) 12:42, 14 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Given his specialty, I suggest the honorific stands for "Aaaaaaaaagh It's (a) Spider!" Chuntuk (talk) 12:33, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

December 15

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Schisms and Byzantine Roman self-perception

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Did the three schisms between Rome and Constantinople tarnish Rome's reputation to the degree that it affected the Byzantine self-perception as the "Roman Empire" and as "Romans"? Including Constantinople's vision of succession to the Roman Empire and its notion of Second Rome. Brandmeistertalk 15:34, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Various maneuverings in the middle ages (including the infamous Fourth Crusade) certainly gave many Byzantines a negative view of western Catholics, so that toward the end some frankly preferred conquest by Muslims to a Christian alliance which would involve Byzantine religious and political subordination to the European West (see discussion at Loukas Notaras). But the Byzantines generally considered themselves to be the real Romans, and called themselves "Romaioi" much more often than they called themselves Greek (of course, "Byzantine" is a later retroactive term). AnonMoos (talk) 17:09, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I think these religious schisms had nothing to do with the secular political situation. In 330, before Christianity became an established religion that could experience schisms, Constantine the Great moved the capital of the unitary Roman Empire from Rome to the city of Byzantium and dubbed it the New Rome – later renamed to Constantinople. During the later periods in which the Western and Eastern Roman Empire were administered separately, this was not considered a political split but an expedient way of administering a large polity, of which Constantinople remained the capital. So when the Western wing of the Roman Empire fell to the Ostrogoths and even the later Exarchate of Ravenna disappeared, the Roman Empire, now only administered by the Constantinopolitan court, continued in an unbroken succession from the Roman Kingdom and subsequent Republic.  --Lambiam 10:48, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
In Ottoman Turkish, the term روم (Rum), ultimately derived from Latin Roma, was used to designate the Byzantine Empire, or, as a geographic term, its former lands. Fun fact: After the conquest of Constantinople in 1453, Mehmet the Conqueror and his successors claimed the title of Caesar of Rome, with the Ottoman Empire being the successor of the Byzantine Empire. IMO this claim has merit; Mehmet II was the first ruler of yet another dynasty, but rather than replacing the existing Byzantine administrative apparatus, he simply continued its use for the empire he had become the ruler of. If you recognize the claim, the Republic of Turkey is today's successor of the Roman Kingdom.  --Lambiam 12:01, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The Ottomans basically continued the Byzantine tax-collection system, for a while. AnonMoos (talk) 23:13, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Foreign Presidents/Heads of State CURRENTLY Buried in the USA

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How many foreign presidents are CURRENTLY buried in the USA? (I am aware of previous burials that have since been repatriated) For example, In Woodlawn Cemetery in Miami, FL, there are two Cuban presidents and a Nicaraguan president.

Are there any other foreign presidents, heads of state, that are buried in the USA? Exeter6 (talk) 17:54, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

As far as I know, all 4 of the presidents of the Republic of Texas are buried in Texas, which is currently in the US. Blueboar (talk) 18:04, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Andrés Domingo y Morales del Castillo was President of Cuba in 1954-55 and died in Miami. Not sure where he's buried though.
Also Anselmo Alliegro y Milá (President of Cuba for a few hours on January 1, 1959) similarly went to Florida and died there.
And Arnulfo Arias, ousted as President of Panama in the 1968 Panamanian coup d'état, died in Florida (a pattern emerging here...)
Alansplodge (talk) 19:28, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
For ease of reference, the Woodlawn Cemetery in question is Caballero Rivero Woodlawn Park North Cemetery and Mausoleum, housing:
  1. Gerardo Machado, president of Cuba from 1925 to 1933
  2. Carlos Prío Socarrás, president of Cuba from 1948 to 1952
  3. Anastasio Somoza Debayle, president of Nicaragua from 1967 to 1972, and from 1974 to 1979 (not to be confused with his father Anastasio Somoza García and brother Luis Somoza Debayle, both former presidents of Nicaragua, buried together in Nicaragua)
GalacticShoe (talk) 20:09, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Searching Findagrave could be fruitful. Machado's entry:[3]Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots21:45, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Polish prime minister and famous musician Ignacy Paderewski had his grave in the United States until 1992. AnonMoos (talk) 07:32, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I guess not current, though... AnonMoos (talk) 01:12, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
You can find some with the following Wikidata query: [4]. Some notable examples are Liliʻuokalani, Pierre Nord Alexis, Dương Văn Minh, Lon Nol, Bruno Carranza, Victoriano Huerta, and Mykola Livytskyi. Note that Alexander Kerensky died in the US but was buried in the UK. Unfortunately, the query also returns others who were presidents, governors, etc. of other than sovereign states. --Amble (talk) 19:09, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I suppose we should also consider Jefferson Davis as a debatable case. And Peter II of Yugoslavia was initially buried in the USA but later reburied in Serbia. He seems to have been the only European monarch who was at one point buried in the USA. --Amble (talk) 00:13, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Manuel Quezon was initially buried at Arlington. DuncanHill (talk) 00:20, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
And of course I should rather think that most monarchs of Hawaii are buried in the USA. DuncanHill (talk) 00:27, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
If burial was the custom there. (I'd guess it was, but I certainly don't know.) --142.112.149.206 (talk) 02:50, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Royal Mausoleum (Mauna ʻAla) answers that question with a definitive "yes, it was". Cullen328 (talk) 22:04, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Antanas Smetona was initially buried in Cleveland, but then reburied elsewhere in Ohio. --Amble (talk) 06:36, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
To be specific, All Souls Cemetery in Chardon according to Smetona's article. GalacticShoe (talk) 06:51, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There are a number of Egyptian mummies in US museums (List of museums with Egyptian mummies in their collections), but I can't find any that are currently known to be the mummy of a pharaoh. The mummy of Ramesses I was formerly in the US, but was returned to Egypt in 2003. --Amble (talk) 22:47, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

December 17

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Geographic extent of an English parish c. 1800

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What would have been the typical extent (in square miles or square kilometers) of an English parish, circa 1800 or so? Let's say the median rather than the mean. With more interest in rural than urban parishes. -- Avocado (talk) 00:05, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

There were tensions involved in a unit based on the placement of churches being tasked to administer the poor law; that was why "civil parishes" were split off a little bit later... AnonMoos (talk) 01:11, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Avocado As a start the mean area of a parish in England and Wales in around 1832 seems to have been around 5.6 square miles.
Source The Edinburgh Encyclopædia Volume 8. It also has figures by county if you are interested.
Thank you -- that's a starting point, at least! -- Avocado (talk) 13:14, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
But regionally variable:
By the early nineteenth century the north-west of England, including the expanding cities of Manchester and Liverpool, had just over 150 parishes, each of them covering an average of almost 12,000 acres, whereas the more rural east of the country had more than 1,600 parishes, each with an average size of approximately 2,000 acres.
OCR A Level History: Britain 1603-1760
Alansplodge (talk) 21:46, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
On the contrary , in England , which contains 38,500,000 statute acres, the parishes or livings comprehend about 3,850 acres the average; and if similar allowance be made for those livings in cities and towns , perhaps about 4,000.
An Essay on the Revenues of the Church of England (1816) p. 165
The point about urban parishes distorting the overall average is supported by St Ethelburga's Bishopsgate for instance, that had a parish of only 3 acres (or two football pitches of 110 yards by 70 yards placed side by side). [5] Alansplodge (talk) 21:46, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, that's great info -- ty! I can't seem to get a look at the content of the book. Does it say anything else about other regions? -- Avocado (talk) 23:24, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The OCR book doesn't mention other regions. I have found where the figure of 10,674 came from: page 112 of the 1816 essay has a note that Preliminary Observations ( p . 13. and 15. ) to the Popu-lation Returns in 1811 ; where the Parishes and Parochial Chapelries are stated at 10,674 . The text of page 112 says that churches are contained in be-tween 10 , and 11,000 parishes † ; and probably after a due allowance for consolidations , & c . they constitute the Churches of about 10,000 Parochial Benefices, so the calculation on p.165 of the 1816 essay is based on around 10,000 parishes in England (and Wales) in 1800 (38,500,000 divided by 3,850). TSventon (talk) 01:40, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The primary source is Abstract of the Answers and Returns Made Pursuant to an Act Passed in the Fifty-first Year of His Majesty King George III, Intituled, "An Act for Taking an Account of the Population of Great Britain, and of the Increase Or Diminution Thereof" : Preliminary Observations, Enumeration Abstract, Parish Register Abstract, 1811 and the table of parishes by county is on page xxix. TSventon (talk) 01:46, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you! -- Avocado (talk) 17:19, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Parishes, like political constituencies etc, were in theory decided by the number of inhabitants, not the area covered. What the average was at particular points, I don't know. No doubt it rose over recent centuries as the population expanded, but rural parishes generally did not. Johnbod (talk) 03:09, 20 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
But whatever the population changes, the parish boundaries in England (whether urban or rural) remained largely fixed between the 12th and mid-19th centuries. Alansplodge (talk) 13:53, 20 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Right, I'm not asking because I thought parish boundaries had been drawn to equalize the geographic area covered or I wanted to know how those boundaries came about. I'm asking because I'm curious what would have been typical in terms of geographic area in order to better understand certain aspects of the society of the time.
For instance, how far (and thus how long) would people have to travel to get to their church? How far might they live from other people who attended the same church? How far would the rector/vicar/curate have to range to attend to his parishioners in their homes?
Questions like that. Does that make the reason for this particular inquiry make more sense? -- Avocado (talk) 15:04, 20 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Someone on Reddit had a similar question and the answer there suggested C. N. L. Brooke’s Churches and Churchmen in Medieval Europe (1999) on Google books. You may find the first chapter, Rural Ecclesiastical Institutions in England : The Search for their Origins interesting. TSventon (talk) 15:44, 20 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the link!
Fwiw, I'm not really seeing any answers to questions of actual geographic extent in that first chapter, mostly info on the "how they came to be" that, again, isn't really the focus of the question. Or maybe the info I'm looking for is in the pages that are omitted from the preview?
The rest of the book is clearly focused on a much earlier period than I'm interested in (granted, parish boundaries may not have changed much between the start of the Reformation and the Georgian era, but culture, practices, and the relationship of most people to their church and parish certainly would have!) -- Avocado (talk) 16:09, 20 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The chapter is relevant to how far people had to travel in the middle ages, which I can see is not the period you are interested in. TSventon (talk) 21:25, 20 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, it looks to me as if the pages I need are probably among the unavailable ones, then. Oh well. Thank you for the suggestion regardless! -- Avocado (talk) 22:47, 20 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
One last link, the introduction of which might be helpful, describing attempts to create new parishes for the growing population in the early 19th century (particularly pp. 19-20):
The New parishes acts, 1843,1844, & 1856. With notes and observations &c
Alansplodge (talk) 12:30, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

When was the first bat mitzvah?

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Bar and bat mitzvah has a short history section, all of which is about bar mitzvah. When was the first bat mitzvah? What is its history? Zanahary 01:52, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

To be clear, I am more asking when the bat mitzvah ritual became part of common Jewish practice. Zanahary 01:53, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Parts from Google's translation of he:בת מצווה:
As early as the early 19th century, in the early days of Reform Judaism, confirmation ceremonies for boys and girls began to be held in which their knowledge of the religion was tested, similar to that practiced among Christians. It spread to the more liberal circles of German Jewry, and by the middle of the century had also begun to be widespread among the Orthodox bourgeoisie. Rabbi Jacob Etlinger of Altona was forced by the community's regulations to participate in such an event in 1867, and published the sermon he had prepared for the purpose later. He emphasized that he was obligated to do so by law, and that Judaism did not recognize that the principles of the religion should be adopted in such a public declaration, since it is binding from birth. However, as part of his attempt to stop the Reform, he supported a kind of parallel procedure that was intended to take place exclusively outside the synagogue.
The idea of confirmation was not always met with resistance, especially with regard to girls: the chief rabbi of the Central Consistory of French Jews, Shlomo Zalman Ullmann, permitted it for both sexes in 1843. In 1844, confirmation for young Jews was held for the first time in Verona, Italy. In the 1880s, Rabbi Zvi Hermann Adler agreed to the widespread introduction of the ceremony, after it had become increasingly common in synagogues, but refused to call it 'confirmation'. In 1901, Rabbi Eliyahu Bechor, cantor in Alexandria, permitted it for both boys and girls, inspired by what was happening in Italy. Other rabbis initially ordered a more conservative event.
At the beginning of the twentieth century, the attitude towards the bat mitzvah party was reserved, because it was sometimes an attempt to imitate symbols drawn from the confirmation ceremony, and indeed there were rabbis, such as Rabbi Aharon Volkin, who forbade the custom on the grounds of gentile laws, or who treated it with suspicion, such as Rabbi Moshe Feinstein, who in a 1950s recantation forbade holding an event in the synagogue because it was "a matter of authority and a mere vanity...there is no point and no basis for considering it a matter of a mitzvah and a mitzvah meal". The Haredi community also expressed strong opposition to the celebration of the bat mitzvah due to its origins in Reform circles. In 1977, Rabbi Yehuda David Bleich referred to it as one of the "current problems in halakhah", noting that only a minority among the Orthodox celebrate it and that it had spread to them from among the Conservatives.
On the other hand, as early as the beginning of the twentieth century, rabbis began to encourage holding a Bat Mitzvah party for a daughter, similar to a party that is customary for a son, with the aim of strengthening observance of the mitzvot among Jewish women.
 --Lambiam 11:23, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you! Surprising how recent it is. Zanahary 21:51, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

December 18

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Major feminist achievements prior to 18th century

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What would be the most important feminist victories prior to the 18th and 19th centuries? I'm looking for specific laws or major changes (anywhere in the world), not just minor improvements in women's pursuit of equality. Something on the same scale and importantance as the women's suffrage. DuxCoverture (talk) 11:54, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I'm not aware of any occuring without being foreseable a set of conditions such as the perspective of a minimal equal representation both in the judiciary and law enforcement. Those seem to be dependent on technological progress, maybe particularly law enforcement although the judiciary sometimes heavily relies on recording capabilities. Unfortunately Ancient Egypt is not very explicitly illustrating the genesis of its sociological dynamics. --Askedonty (talk) 16:25, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Before universal male suffrage became the norm in the 19th century, also male commoners did not pull significant political weight, at least in Western society, so any feminist "victories" before then can only have been minor improvements in women's rights in general.  --Lambiam 22:40, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Changes regarding divorce, property rights of women, protections against sexual assault or men's mistreatment of women could have have been significant, right? (Though I don't know what those changes were) 2601:644:907E:A70:9072:5C74:BC02:CB02 (talk) 06:09, 19 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think many of those were widely, significantly changed prior to the 18th century, though the World is large and diverse, and history is long, so it's difficult to generalise. See Women's rights. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.223.204 (talk) 11:05, 19 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
In the English monarchy, when King Henry I died in 1135 with no living male legitimate child, a civil war followed over whether his daughter or his nephew should inherit the throne. (It was settled by a compromise.) But in 1553 when King Edward VI died, Queen Mary I inherited the throne and those who objected did it on religious grounds and not because she was a woman: in fact there was an attempt to place Lady Jane Grey on the throne instead. --142.112.149.206 (talk) 01:50, 20 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Although Mary's detractors believed that her Catholic zeal was a result of her gender; a point made by the Calvinist reformer John Knox, who published a polemic entitled The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstruous Regiment of Women. When the Protestant Elizabeth I inherited the throne, there was a quick about face; Elizabeth was compared to the Biblical Deborah, who had freed the Israelites from the Canaanites and led them to an era of peace and prosperity, and was obviously a divine exception to the principle that females were unfit to rule. Alansplodge (talk) 12:21, 20 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
A possibly fictional account in the film Agora has the proto-feminist Hypatia anticipating Kepler's orbits about two millenia before that gentleman, surely a significant feminine achievement. Philvoids (talk) 01:17, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
"The film contains numerous historical inaccuracies: It inflates Hypatia's achievements and incorrectly portrays her as finding a proof of Aristarchus of Samos's heliocentric model of the universe, which there is no evidence that Hypatia ever studied." (from our Hypatia article linked above). Alansplodge (talk) 14:59, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Even if true (we have no proof she did not embrace the heliocentric model while developing the theory of gravitation to boot), it did not result in a major change in the position of women.  --Lambiam 03:22, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Intolerance by D. W. Griffith

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Why did D. W. Griffith make the film Intolerance after making the very popular and racist film The Birth of a Nation? What did he want to convey? 174.160.82.127 (talk) 18:22, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

The lead of our article states that, in numerous interviews, Griffith made clear that the film was a rebuttal to his critics and he felt that they were, in fact, the intolerant ones.  --Lambiam 22:26, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
For not tolerating his racism? DuncanHill (talk) 15:20, 19 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Precisely. Griffith thought he was presenting the truth, however unpopular, and that the criticism was meant to stifle his voice, not because the opinions he expressed were wrong but because they were unwelcome.  --Lambiam 03:14, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Term for awkward near-similarity

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Is there a term for the feeling produced when two things are nearly but not quite identical, and you wish they were either fully identical or clearly distinct? I think this would be reminiscent of the narcissism of small differences, but applied to things like design or aesthetics – or like a broader application of the uncanny valley (which is specific to imitation of humans). --71.126.56.235 (talk) 20:19, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

The uncanniness of the uncanny valley would be a specific subclass of this.  --Lambiam 22:29, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Yearbooks

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Why yearbooks are often named after years that they concern? For example, a yearbook that concerns year 2024 and tells statistics about that year might be named 2025 Yearbook, with 2024 Yearbook instead concerning 2023? Which is the reason for that? --40bus (talk) 21:33, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

It is good for marketing, a 2025 yearbook sounds more up to date than a 2024 one. TSventon (talk) 21:45, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
One argument may be that it is the year of publication, being the 2025 edition of whatever.  --Lambiam 22:31, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
In the example of a high school yearbook, 2025 would be the year in which the 2024-2025 school year ended and the students graduated. Hence, "the Class of 2025" though the senior year started in 2024. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots23:42, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The purpose of a yearbook is to highlight the past year activities, for example a 2025 yearbook is to highlight the activities of 2024. Stanleykswong (talk) 06:21, 19 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Are there any yearbooks that are named after the same years that they concern, e.g. 2024 yearbook concerning 2024, 2023 yearbook concerning 2023 etc. --40bus (talk) 13:04, 19 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
A professional baseball team will typically have a "2024 Yearbook" for the current season, since the entire season occurred in 2024. Though keep in mind that the 2024 yearbook would have come out at the start of the season, hence it actually covers stats from 2023 as well as rosters and schedules for 2024. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots14:40, 19 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
In the UK, the magazine Private Eye releases an annual at the end of every year which is named in this way. It stands out from all the other comic/magazine annuals on the rack which are named after the following year. I worked in bookselling for years and always found this interesting. Turner Street (talk) 11:26, 20 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Distinguish between Almanac (for predictions) and Yearbook (for recollections). ¨Philvoids (talk) 01:03, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

December 21

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Everything You Can Do, We Can Do Meta: source?

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I once read in a George Will article (or it might have been in one of his short columns) that the University of Chicago or one of its departments used "Everything You Can Do, We Can Do Meta" as a motto, but it turned out this was completely (if unintentionally, at least on Will's part) made up. Does anyone else remember George Will making that claim? Regardless, has anyone any idea how George Will may have mis-heard or mis-remembered it? (I could never believe that he intentionally made it up.) Anyway, does anyone know the source of the phrase, or at least an earliest source. (Obviously it may have occurred to several people independently.) The earliest I've found on Google is a 2007 article in the MIT Technology Review. Anything earlier? 178.51.16.158 (talk) 04:09, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

[6] describes it as "John Bell’s motto" and uses the reference J. Bell, ‘Legal Theory in Legal Education – “Everything you can do, I can do meta…”’, in: S. Eng (red.), Proceedings of the 21st IVR World Congress: Lund (Sweden), 12-17 August 2003, Wiesbaden: Frans Steiner Verlag, p. 61.. Polygnotus (talk) 05:51, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
In his book I've Been Thinking, Daniel C. Dennett writes: 'Doug Hofstadter and I once had a running disagreement about who first came up with the quip “Anything you can do I can do meta”; I credited him and he credited me.'[7] Dennett credited Hofstadter (writing meta- with a hyphen) in Brainchildren: Essays on Designing Minds (1998).[8] Hofstadter disavowed this claim in I am a Strange Loop, suggesting that the quip was Dennett's brainchild, writing, 'To my surprise, though, this “motto” started making the rounds and people quoted it back to me as if I had really thought it up and really believed it.'[9]
It is, of course, quite possible that this witty variation on Irving Berlin's "Anything You Can Do (I Can Do Better)" was invented independently again and again. In 1979, Arthur Allen Leff wrote, in an article in Duke Law Journal: 'My colleague, Leon Lipson, once described a certain species of legal writing as, “Anything you can do, I can do meta.”'[10] (Quite likely, John Bell (mis)quoted Lipson.) For other, likely independent examples, in 1986, it is used as the title of a technical report stressing the importance of metareasoning in the domain of machine learming (Morik, Katharina. Anything you can do I can do meta. Inst. für Angewandte Informatik, Projektgruppe KIT, 1986), and in 1995 we find this ascribed to cultural anthropologist Richard Shweder.[11]  --Lambiam 14:40, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
(ec) He may have been mixing this up with "That's all well and good and practice, but how does it work in theory?" which is associated with the University of Chicago and attributed to Shmuel Weinberger, who is a professor there. Dekimasuよ! 14:42, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Did Sir John Hume get entrapped in his own plot (historically)?

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In Shakespeare's "First Part of the Contention..." (First Folio: "Henry VI Part 2") there's a character, Sir John Hume, a priest, who manages to entrap the Duchess of Gloucester in the conjuring of a demon, but then gets caught in the plot and is sentenced to be "strangled on the gallows".

My question: Was Sir John Hume, the priest, a historical character? If he was, did he really get caught in the plot he laid for the Duchess, and end up being executed?

Here's what goes on in Shakespeare's play:

In Act 1, Scene 2 [Oxford Shakespeare 1988] Sir John Hume and the Duchess of Gloucester are talking about using Margery Jordan "the cunning witch of Eye" and Roger Bolingbroke, the conjuror, to raise a spirit that will answer the Duchess's questions. It is clear Hume is being paid by the Duke of Suffolk to entrap the Duchess. His own motivation is not political but simple lucre.

In Act 1, Scene 4 the witch Margery Jordan, John Southwell and Sir John Hume, the two priests, and Roger Bolingbroke, the conjuror, conjure a demon (Asnath) in front of the Duchess of Gloucester in order that she may ask him questions about the fate of various people, and they all get caught and arrested by the Duke of York and his men. (Hume works for Suffolk and Cardinal Beaufort, bishop of Winchester, not for York, so it is not through Hume that York knows of these goings on, but York on his part was keeping a watch on the Duchess)

Act 2, Scene 3 King Henry: (to Margery Jordan, John Southwell, Sir John Hume, and Roger Bolingbroke) "You four, from hence to prison back again; / From thence, unto the place of execution. / The witch in Smithfield shall be burned to ashes, / And you three shall be strangled on the gallows."

178.51.16.158 (talk) 16:14, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

John Home or Hume (Home and Hume are pronounced identically) was Eleanor, Duchess of Gloucester's confessor. According to this and this "Home, who had been indicted only for having knowledge of the activities of the others, was pardoned and continued in his position as canon of Hereford. He died in 1473." He does not seem to have been Sir John. I'm sure someone who knows more than me will be along soon. DuncanHill (talk) 16:35, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
At this period "Sir" (and "Lady") could still be used as a vague title for people of some status, without really implying they had a knighthood. Johnbod (talk) 20:46, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Identically /hjuːm/ (HYOOM), to be clear.  Card Zero  (talk) 20:17, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, and the First Part of the Contention is Henry Sixt Part II, not Part I! We also have articles about Roger Bolingbroke and Margery Jourdemayne, the Witch of Eye. DuncanHill (talk) 16:59, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks. I corrected it now. 178.51.16.158 (talk) 20:34, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There's also an article for a Thomas Southwell (priest). In Shakespeare he is "John Southwell". The name "John Southwell" does appear in the text of the play itself (it is mentioned by Bolingbroke). I haven't checked if the quarto and the folio differ on the name. His dates seem to be consistent with this episode and Roger Bolingbroke does refer to the other priest as "Thomas Southwell". But nothing is mentioned in the article Thomas Southwell (priest) itself, so that article may be about some other priest named Thomas Southwell. In any case Roger Bolingbroke points out that only Roger Bolingbroke and Margery Jourdemayne were executed in connection with this affair. Shakespeare has them all executed. He must have been in a bad mood when he wrote that passage. Either that, or he just wanted to keep things simple. 178.51.16.158 (talk) 11:42, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I think that may well be our Southwell, according to "Chronicle of Gregory 1441. 27 Oct 1441. And on Syn Symon and Jude is eve was the wycche (age 26) be syde Westemyster brent in Smethefylde, and on the day of Symon and Jude [28 Oct 1441] the person [parson] of Syn Stevynnys in Walbroke, whyche that was one of the same fore said traytours [Thomas Southwell], deyde in the Toure for sorowe." The Chronicle of Gregory, written by William Gregory is published by the Camden Society DuncanHill (talk) 12:26, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Some experienced editor may then want to add these facts to his article, possibly using the Chronicle of Gregory as a source. 178.51.16.158 (talk) 12:39, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

December 22

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Mike Johnson

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I saw Mike Johnson on TV a day or two ago. (He was speaking from some official podium ... I believe about the recent government shutdown possibility, the Continuing Resolution, etc.) I was surprised to see that he was wearing a yarmulke. The color of the yarmulke was a close match to the color of Johnson's hair, so I had to look closely and I had to look twice. I said to myself "I never knew that he was Jewish". It bothered me, so I looked him up and -- as expected -- he is not Jewish. Why would he be wearing a yarmulke? Thanks. 32.209.69.24 (talk) 07:40, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Presumably to show his support for Israel and anti-semitism (and make inroads into the traditional Jewish-American support for the Democratic Party). Trump wore one too. Clarityfiend (talk) 10:39, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
OK, thanks. I did not know that was a "thing". To wear one to show support. First I ever heard of that or seen that. Thanks. 32.209.69.24 (talk) 13:12, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
[Edited to add – Edit Conflict with Lambiam below.] He may also have just come from, or be shortly going to, some (not necessarily religious) event held in a synagogue, where he would wear it for courtesy. I would do the same, and have my (non-Jewish) grandfather's kippah, which he wore for this purpose not infrequently, having many Jewish friends. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.223.204 (talk) 16:39, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I assume you mis-spoke: to show his support for ... anti-semitism. 32.209.69.24 (talk) 13:16, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It is somewhat customary, also for male goyim, to don a yarmulke when visiting a synagogue or attending a Jewish celebration or other ceremony, like Biden here while lecturing at a synagogue in Atlanta, Georgia (and under him Trump while groping the Western Wall). Was Johnson speaking at a synagogue?  --Lambiam 16:38, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It may have been a Hanukkah reception.  --Lambiam 16:50, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Precisely, Lambian. Here is Johnson's official statement. Cullen328 (talk) 17:17, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
This year Hanukkah begins unusually late in the Gregorian calendar, starting at sundown on December 25, when Congress will not be in session. This coincidence can be described by the portmanteau Chrismukkah. So, the Congressional observance of Hanukkah was ahead of schedule this year. Back in 2013, Hanukkah arrived unusually early, during the US holiday of Thanksgiving, resulting in the portmanteau of Thanksgivukkah. Cullen328 (talk) 17:15, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
When you want to check the correlation between Jewish and Christian holidays, you can use the fact that Orthodox Christian months almost always correspond to Jewish months. For Chanucah, the relevant correlation is Emma/Kislev. From the table Special:Permalink/1188536894#The Reichenau Primer (opposite Pangur Bán), in 2024 (with Golden Number 11) Emma began on 3 December, so 24 Emma is 26 December. 92.12.75.131 (talk) 15:45, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Joseph Mary Thouveau, Bishop of Sebastopol

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Who was Joseph Mary Thouveau, Bishop of Sebastopol? There is only one reference online ("Letter from Joseph Mary Thouveau. Bishop of Sebastopol, to Philip Lutley Sclater regarding Lady Amherst's Pheasant", 1869), and that has no further details. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 22:03, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

After that search engine I used insisted I was looking for a Chauveau I finally located this Joseph Marie Chauveau - So the J M Thouveau item from maxarchiveservices uk must be one of the eccentricities produced by that old fashioned hand-written communication they had in the past. --Askedonty (talk) 22:24, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Of interest that other notice Joseph, Marie, Pierre. The hand-written text scribbled on the portrait stands as 'Eveque de Sebastopolis'. Pierre-Joseph Chauveau probably, now is also mentioned as Pierre-Joseph in Voyages ..even though, Lady Amherst's Pheasant is referred, in the same, through an other missionary intermediary: similar. --Askedonty (talk) 23:28, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Also in Contribution des missionnaires français au progrès des sciences naturelles au XIX et XX. (1932). Full texts are not accessible though it seems there is three times the same content in three different but more or less simultaneously published editions. Askedonty (talk) 23:59, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There is a stub at fr:Joseph-Marie Chauveau (there is also a zh article) and a list of bishops at fr:Évêché titulaire de Sébastopolis-en-Arménie. TSventon (talk) 03:31, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Askedonty: Awesome work, thank you; and really useful. I'll notify my contact at ZSL, so they can fix their transcription error.
[The Google Books links aren't showing me the search results, but that's a generic issue, nothing to do with your links]. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 16:34, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

December 23

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London Milkman photo

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I am writing a rough draft of Delivery After Raid, also known as The London Milkman in my sandbox. I’m still trying to verify basic information, such as the original publication of the photo. It was allegedly first published on October 10, 1940, in Daily Mirror, but it’s behind a paywall in British Newspaper Archive, but from the previews I can see, I don’t know think the photo is there. Does anyone know who originally published it or publicized it, or which British papers carried it in the 1940s? For a photo that’s supposed to be famous, it’s almost impossible to find anything about it before 1998. Viriditas (talk) 04:01, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Somewhat tellingly, this article about this photo in The Times just writes, "On the morning of October 10, 1940, a photograph taken by Fred Morley of Fox Photos was published in a London newspaper." The lack of identification of the newspaper is not due to reluctance of mentioning a competitor, since further on in the article we read, "... the Daily Mirror became the first daily newspaper to carry photographs ...".  --Lambiam 11:45, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I see it credited (by Getty Images) to "Hulton Archive", which might mean it was in Picture Post.  Card Zero  (talk) 12:29, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It was Fox Photos, they were a major agency supplying pictures to all of Fleet Street. DuncanHill (talk) 13:22, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
You mean it might have appeared in multiple papers on October 10, 1940?  Card Zero  (talk) 14:06, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
No, I mean the Hulton credit does not imply anything about where it might have appeared. DuncanHill (talk) 14:14, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I can't join the dots. Doesn't being credited to the photographic archive of Picture Post imply that it might have appeared in Picture Post? How does the agency being Fox Photos negate the possibility?  Card Zero  (talk) 14:21, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It wasn't a Hulton picture, it was a Fox picture. The Hulton Archive absorbed other archives over the years, before being itself absorbed by Getty. DuncanHill (talk) 14:31, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Oh! Right, I didn't understand that about Hulton.  Card Zero  (talk) 14:38, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Not in the Daily Mirror of Thursday 10 October 1940. DuncanHill (talk) 13:19, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@DuncanHill: Maybe the 11th, if they picked up on the previous day's London-only publication? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 16:38, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
a lot of searches suggest it was the Daily Mail. Nthep (talk) 18:05, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Pigsonthewing: I've checked the Mirror for the 11th, and the rest of the week. I've checked the News Chronicle, the Express, and the Herald for the 10th. Mail not on BNA. DuncanHill (talk) 19:38, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
As general context, from my professional experience of picture researching back in the day, photo libraries and agencies quite often tried to claim photos and other illustrations in their collections as their own IP even when they were in fact not their IP and even when they were out of copyright. Often the same illustration was actually available from multiple providers, though obviously (in that pre-digital era) one paid a fee to whichever of them you borrowed a copy from for reproduction in a book or periodical. Attributions in published material may not, therefore, accurately reflect the true origin of an image. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.223.204 (talk) 18:06, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Belgia, the Netherlands, to a 16th c. Englishman?

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In Shakespeare's "Comedy of Errors" (Act 3, Scene 2) Dromio of Syracuse and his master Antipholus of Syracuse discuss Nell the kitchen wench who Dromio says "is spherical, like a globe. I could find out countries in her." After asking about the location of a bunch of countries on Nell (very funny! recommended!), Antipholus ends with: "Where stood Belgia, the Netherlands?" Dromio hints "Belgia, the Netherlands" stood in her privates ("O, sir, I did not look so low.") My question is not about how adequate the comparison is but on whether "Belgia" and "the Netherlands" were the same thing, two synonymous designations for the same thing to Shakespeare (the Netherlands being the whole of the Low Countries and Belgia being just a slightly more literate equivalent of the same)? Or were "the Netherlands" already the Northern Low Countries (i.e. modern Netherlands), i.e. the provinces that had seceded about 15 years prior from the Spanish Low Countries (Union of Utrecht) while "Belgia" was the Southern Low Countries (i.e. modern Belgium and Luxembourg), i.e. the provinces that decided to stay with Spain (Union of Arras)? 178.51.16.158 (talk) 13:40, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Essentially they were regarded as the same - you might look at Leo Belgicus, a visual trope invented in 1583, perhaps a decade before the play was written, including both (and more). In Latin at this period and later Belgica Foederata was the United Provinces, Belgica Regia the Southern Netherlands. The Roman province had included both. Johnbod (talk) 15:40, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Johnbod, I agree with your explanation, but I thought that Gallia Belgica was south of the Rhine, so it only included the southern part of the United Provinces. TSventon (talk) 16:39, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, it seems so - "parts of both" would be more accurate. The Dutch didn't want to think of themselves as Inferior Germans, that's for sure! Johnbod (talk) 17:40, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
This general region was originally part of Middle Francia aka Lotharingia, possession of whose multifarious territories have been fought over by themselves, West Francia (roughly, France) and East Francia (roughly, Germany) for most of the last 1,100 years. The status of any particular bit of territory was potentially subject to repeated and abrupt changees due to wars, treaties, dynastic marriages, expected or unexpected inheritances, and even being sold for ready cash. See, for an entertaining (though exhausting as well as exhaustive) account of this, Simon Winder's Lotharingia: A Personal History of Europe's Lost Country (2019). {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.223.204 (talk) 18:19, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Actually Middle Francia, Lotharingia, different birds: Middle Francia was allocated to Lothair 1 (795-855), Lotharingia was allocated to (and named after) his son Lothair 2 (835-869) (not after his father Lothair 1). Lotharingia was about half the size of Middle Francia, as Middle Francia also included Provence and the northern half of Italy. Upper Lotharingia was essentially made up of Bourgogne and Lorraine (in fact the name "Lorraine" goes back to "Lotharingia" etymologically speaking, through a form "Loherraine"), and was eventually reduced to just Lorraine, whereas Lower Lotharingia was essentially made up of the Low Countries, except for the county of Flanders which was part of the kingdom of France, originally "Western Francia". In time these titles became more and more meaningless. In the 11th c. Godefroid de Bouillon, the leader of the First Crusade and conqueror of Jerusalem was still styled "Duc de Basse Lotharingie" even though by then there were more powerful and important rulers in that same territory (most significantly the duke of Brabant) 178.51.16.158 (talk) 19:18, 23 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Indigenous territory/Indian reservations

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Are there Indigenous territory in Ecuador, Suriname? What about Honduras, Guatemala, and Salvador?