Ankh shows up in an unlikely place

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=Tamar

Lieutenant
May 20, 2012
13,435
2,900
#1
A Danish foundry made a large round cauldron between 1906 and 1947. Cast into its side was a maker's mark condisting of the letters ANK.H and a crown. (Yes, the dot was between the K and the H) I'm told that the crown was a mark of registration in the UK, but why would a Danish foundry register its products in the UK?
 
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RathDarkblade

Moderator
City Watch
Mar 24, 2015
17,901
3,400
48
Melbourne, Victoria
#3
A Danish foundry made a large round cauldron between 1906 and 1947. Cast into its side was a maker's mark condisting of the letters ANK.H and a crown. (Yes, the dot was between the K and the H) I'm told that the crown was a mark of registration in the UK, but why would a Danish foundry register its products in the UK?
I tried finding pictures or other websites with pictures or more information, but can't find any. Details, please?

Awesome! I'm reminded of Mr. Tulip's favourite Bank.

I'd be 'lion' if he ever banked there. (Sorry) ;)

More probably, it's Tulip's favourite bank to rob ...? But what does rob (anybody) got to do with it?

... and now I'm trying to make sense after having 6 hours of sleep. Again. (Oops) ;)
 
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Likes: Tonyblack

=Tamar

Lieutenant
May 20, 2012
13,435
2,900
#4
I was watching a video on youtube about cast iron cookware. A commenter described it. The commenter was keyfred8, which probably won't help.
 

RathDarkblade

Moderator
City Watch
Mar 24, 2015
17,901
3,400
48
Melbourne, Victoria
#12
I recall seeing a business in Tucson called "Ephebian"

Ephebian
Yes, but the business clearly didn't know how to spell "Ephebian" - they spelled it with two "i"s instead of two "e"s. Oh the humanity.

An ephebian (or "ephebus") was a youth in ancient Greece who had reached the age of puberty. The name is from the Greek word ephēbos, from "epi-" ("upon") and "hēbē" ("youth" or "puberty").

Meanwhile, a "klatch" is defined (in north America, anyway) as "an informal social gathering at which coffee is served." The term “coffee klatch” comes from the German word “kaffeeklatsch”, which translates to coffee (kaffee) + gossip (klatsch) - so it's friends gathering for coffee and gossip, usually at someone's house. (So, it's especially appropriate for a quasi-Arabian culture, since the Arabs invented coffee).

Surely everyone knows where Hersheba and Djelibeybi come from. :) But, apparently, the Tezuma and other Lost Empires(TM) are also in a jungle in Klatch, which is surely a geographical misallocation. And why the name "Tezuma", given that it's a Japanese word? ;)

Maybe something like "Teanotchland" (Tenochtitlan) would've been more Aztec. Or "Which-hodgepodge" (standing it for Huitzilopochtli, the Aztec god of War, pron. "Which-Li-o-Potch-Li") ... though the "li" part sounds more Chinese than anything.

Or, if we're going for an Incan or Mayan angle, how about the names "Inkadinkadon't" (standing in for Incas) or "the Angeline Empire" (reference both to Maya Angelou and the Angevine Empire)...? *G*

Anyway, don't mind me. Just thinking aloud ... ;)
 
Likes: Tonyblack
Jul 27, 2008
19,957
3,400
Stirlingshire, Scotland
#14
Yes, but the business clearly didn't know how to spell "Ephebian" - they spelled it with two "i"s instead of two "e"s. Oh the humanity.

An ephebian (or "ephebus") was a youth in ancient Greece who had reached the age of puberty. The name is from the Greek word ephēbos, from "epi-" ("upon") and "hēbē" ("youth" or "puberty").

Meanwhile, a "klatch" is defined (in north America, anyway) as "an informal social gathering at which coffee is served." The term “coffee klatch” comes from the German word “kaffeeklatsch”, which translates to coffee (kaffee) + gossip (klatsch) - so it's friends gathering for coffee and gossip, usually at someone's house. (So, it's especially appropriate for a quasi-Arabian culture, since the Arabs invented coffee).

Surely everyone knows where Hersheba and Djelibeybi come from. :) But, apparently, the Tezuma and other Lost Empires(TM) are also in a jungle in Klatch, which is surely a geographical misallocation. And why the name "Tezuma", given that it's a Japanese word? ;)

Maybe something like "Teanotchland" (Tenochtitlan) would've been more Aztec. Or "Which-hodgepodge" (standing it for Huitzilopochtli, the Aztec god of War, pron. "Which-Li-o-Potch-Li") ... though the "li" part sounds more Chinese than anything.

Or, if we're going for an Incan or Mayan angle, how about the names "Inkadinkadon't" (standing in for Incas) or "the Angeline Empire" (reference both to Maya Angelou and the Angevine Empire)...? *G*

Anyway, don't mind me. Just thinking aloud ... ;)
Maybe you should be sacrificed for butchering that Rath.
 

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