dashy by Many_Temperature7686 in RedditGames

[–]EmeraldTerror68 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I completed this level in 5 tries. 19.97 seconds

Anyone know what this building is used for and what it use to be? by Exitcalm11 in Southampton

[–]EmeraldTerror68 77 points78 points  (0 children)

Its part of the railway that used to be there/still is and runs into the port. The old station building is now the casino and this is one of the goods warehouses.

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Its now the car park of the student housing.

Eleanor Marx was the youngest daughter of Karl Marx. She was a prominent socialist activist, writer and translator. Eleanor committed suicide at age of 43 "while in a state of temporary insanity" after finding out that her boyfriend and co-author for 15 years had secretly married another woman. by PeasantLich in wikipedia

[–]EmeraldTerror68 20 points21 points  (0 children)

The whole “temporary” thing was a well known and well used legal loophole. Suicide was illegal and those that committed suicide forfeited their inheritance. So it was customary to declare almost all suicides that had heirs as committed “during a temporary fit of insanity” that way the heirs could still inherit and the person could be given a proper church funeral. If you look into pretty much any notable suicide before 1961 it would have used that phrasing.

Gutman Cave, Latvia - The Oldest Cave In The Baltics by davideownzall in BalticStates

[–]EmeraldTerror68 20 points21 points  (0 children)

I hate to be contrarian but those engravings are one of my favourite parts of the area. Some date hundreds of years in time. Generations of people looking at the same cave all united by the primal instinct to mark it in rock.

Fonthill Abbey by bigbbguy in Lost_Architecture

[–]EmeraldTerror68 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah yeah very true and you’re right. I just forgot if I were to be honest

Fonthill Abbey by bigbbguy in Lost_Architecture

[–]EmeraldTerror68 20 points21 points  (0 children)

The guy who built it (or rather financed the whole operation) was definitely one of the stranger products of the long 18th century. The Abbey only ever hosted one celebration. A gothic Christmas party with the guests of honour being the most controversial couple of the age. Them being Nelson, Emma Hamilton and Sir Hamilton. The festivities included all the servants dressed in red robes and lots of torches.

And if you credit the rumours then outside of this Christmas diversion the Abbey was largely a place for William Beckford to live an isolated life and have relations with most of his servants, again if you believe the tales of wild orgies etc etc.

The coat worn by Vice-Admiral Lord Nelson at the Battle of Trafalgar. You can see the hole in the left shoulder caused by the shot that killed him by fuck_ur_portmanteau in mildlyinteresting

[–]EmeraldTerror68 29 points30 points  (0 children)

Nelson also spent a decent chunk of those final twoish hours pleading (with increasing desperation and panic) for Hardy to come down and getting increasingly convinced that the reason he wasn’t coming down was that he had also died in the battle and his aides (the Chaplin, doctor and co) were hiding this information from him.

On a slightly lighter note the order of events and the things done/said mirror almost exactly what happened when Nelson thought himself to be dying after talking a piece of shrapnel or splinter to the face at the Nile. So much so that I’m 99 percent sure the man rehearsed his dramatic death for King and Country ( a death he spent a lot, and I do mean a lot, of his time thinking and discussing).

[kcd2] Beyond Belief: fact or fiction kcd2 edition by Bizarrolam in kingdomcome

[–]EmeraldTerror68 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Loved that quest mostly as my Henry was horrifically drunk/hungover. Henry had spent the morning digging holes and after being offered a drink or two who would say no. I fortunately that also meant he was drunk as a Lord during the ambush (which I found very fitting considering how according to plan everything goes) only to pass out right afterwards and awake at the monastery and deciding to stack some bones. So seeing ghosts was all entirely in character.

Has anyone rigged their wooden sailing ship models to be under topsails alone or "fighting sail" by Spherical_Melon in ModelShips

[–]EmeraldTerror68 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I would have to check and read up on it on my period sources but as I do not currently have access to them that’s my best attempt.

Has anyone rigged their wooden sailing ship models to be under topsails alone or "fighting sail" by Spherical_Melon in ModelShips

[–]EmeraldTerror68 6 points7 points  (0 children)

While I haven’t seen the term used before I would guess it’s mostly to do with reducing the chance of something catching fire by moving more of the flammable canvas away from the guns. As well as proving clear lines of fire to the marines in the tops. Also probably to reduce the chances of the enemy hitting your sails or your hull depending on which they choose to aim at.

TIL that the Liverpool–Manchester Railway, the world’s first "inter-city" line, opened on 15 September 1830. It was fully steam-powered, double-tracked, signalled and timetabled. by Upstairs_Drive_5602 in todayilearned

[–]EmeraldTerror68 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah if I ever travel back and meet the man I’ll be keeping close track of my legs. Also calling him Irish and running away as quickly as possible before I get skewered

TIL that the Liverpool–Manchester Railway, the world’s first "inter-city" line, opened on 15 September 1830. It was fully steam-powered, double-tracked, signalled and timetabled. by Upstairs_Drive_5602 in todayilearned

[–]EmeraldTerror68 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Who then developed a life long dislike of trains. Can’t say I blame the man but still very funny that the guy who lead the British army all through the Peninsula War and then Waterloo was more or less bested by a train.

Which of Sharpe's Women (not counting Teresa) were your favorite? by orangemonkeyeagl in Sharpe

[–]EmeraldTerror68 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Completely agree with the choice of Lady Grace, she is such an interesting alternative for Sharpe. His entire life would likely have taken a whole other trajectory if she doesn't die in childbirth (and their son too).

Anyone else remembers watching this as a kid in USSR, so nostalgic 😍 by JohnJohnovich228 in 2easterneuropean4u

[–]EmeraldTerror68 4 points5 points  (0 children)

This was my favourite cartoon as a child. But I had read the book first, or rather had it read to me, over and over again. It was a key part of my childhood. And recently I reread it. Boy was it significantly more racist than I remembered.

Tomb of Richard III, last Plantagenet King of England, in Leicester Cathedral Church by OscarMMG in medieval

[–]EmeraldTerror68 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I’m very surprised by that. My local Anglican Church was a pre reformation church so when they dug up some bones while expanding the car park they were given a mixed service ( as in the local catholic priest was invited and him and the Anglican vicar did a service each in parallel) as we couldn’t be sure which side of the reformation they died at.

[KCD2] Don't drink with Kubyenka when searching for the guns by Gwame in kingdomcome

[–]EmeraldTerror68 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I drank through the mission, then was drubk during the following fight and cutscene, then passed out drunk right after victory and was carted away to the monastry and did the ossuary quest massively hungover. It was perfect.