attentionspanhistory/output/tipuesearch_content.js

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var tipuesearch = {"pages":[{"title":" Search Attention Span History\n","text":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n Search Attention Span History\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAttention Span History \n\n\nHome\n\n\nRSS\n\n\nTags\n\n\nTwitter\n\n\nGithub\n\n\nSearch\n\n\nSource\n\n\nDoc Blog\n\n\nFavorite Podcasts\n\n\nTrentReads\n\n\nEtymology\n\n\nOpera\n\n\nWar\n\n\nArchives\n\n\n\nSearch\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n Proudly powered by Pelican,\n which takes great advantage of Python.\n \n\n\n","tags":"","url":"https://blog.trentpalmer.org/search.html"},{"title":"Guideschi You Guys","text":"\"You Guys!\" was an insult. But this expression was transformed into a term of endearment, in America, by the working class. Because that is what the working class do. Gunpowder Plot You are probably familiar with the Gunpowder Plot , in which Guy Fawkes , attempted to blow up Parliament on 5 November 1605. And thus, because Guy Fawkes was reviled for his crime, the expression \"You Guys\" emerged as an insult. Norman Conquest But how did an Englishman come by the names \"Guy\", and \"Fawkes\"? According to Wikipedia, Fawkes is a name of Norman-French origin . Well now. It just so happens that the Normans invaded and conquered England in 1066 , an event from which the history of English Nobility ever since can be traced. Guy of Nantes And yet more than a half century before the Normans even settled in Normandy , which they would not do until the middle of the 9th Century, (from where they would later sail across the English Channel and conquer England), Guy of Nantes was Count of Nantes, as of 778, which was of course the late 8th Century, the County of Nantes being located next door to what was not yet Normandy nor inhabited by Normans, and Guy (of the Guideschi Family), not being Norman but Frankish of descent. Well, that was awkward. Breton Peninsula Geography So who was Guy, who were the Guideschi, and why were they occupying a small principality in between what are today Normandy and Brittany in the NorthWest corner of France? If you will recall that Charlemagne became King of the Franks in 768, but he was never able to conquer the Breton Peninsula , because the terrain was too rough. Thus he appointed Guy's father Roland as Count of Nantes, intending for the County of Nantes to be a buffer zone of containment protecting the Carolingian Empire from the inhabitants of the Breton Peninsula, (who could not be conquered on account of the rough terrain). Excile to Italy Anyway, one thing led to another. Guy's son Lambert had a falling-out with Charlemagne's son Louis the Pious , which resulted in the Guideschi Family being exciled to Italy. And then in 834 Lambert was given the Duchy of Spoleto , even though he was exciled, and the Guideschis firmly ensconsed themselves in the chaos and intrigue of what at that time passed for statecraft in Italy. Conclusion In conclusion I really have no idea where I was going with all this, but thanks for reading all the way to the end, you guys! Here's a podcast about the Guideshi .","tags":"Etymology","url":"https://blog.trentpalmer.org/guideschi-you-guys.html","loc":"https://blog.trentpalmer.org/guideschi-you-guys.html"},{"title":"Lohengrin","text":"Have you heard of Lohengrin ? It is a German Opera written and composed by Richard Wagner in 1850. I happen to think that German Opera is more entertaining than Italian Opera, but enough about me. King Ludwig II Which brings me to King Ludwig II of Bavaria . If I understand correctly, King Ludwig was very fond of Lohengrin, and built Neuschwanstein Castle as a private world for himself where he could live alone in a fantasy inspired by the Knight of the Swan Legend , on which Lohengrin is based. But don't judge King Ludwig II too harshly: he was after all a cigar connoisseur, drove a smoking-hot golden carriage, and Neuschwanstein Castle is an excellent place to take selfies. You really should visit the Marstallmuseum at Nymphenburg Palace in Munich and see the golden carriage . Needless to say, Lohengrin is quite different from the Strauss Operas t