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Showing posts from October, 2017

Friday the 13th

I am sure it is no surprise to most people that I love Friday the 13 th , I love it even more on the rare occasion that there is also a full moon (not this year) Many people however do not share my love of the day. In fact, there is a name for people who suffer from a phobia of Friday the 13 th it is called friggatriskaidekaphobia, and it is fairly common. This name originates from Frigg, the Norse goddess who was named for Friday and triskaidekaphobia the phobia of the number 13. This year we have had two Friday the 13 th ’s so I thought it would be interesting to take a look at the history behind this day. It is unclear exactly where the fear of Friday the 13 th started but there is a myth that states if 13 people dine together one of the 13 will die within a year. This myth is a combination of both Christian and Norse mythology origins. During the last supper, Jesus dined with his 12 Apostles, Judas being the 13 th guest and, as we know Jesus was crucified shortly after.

Alcatraz

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Richard and I spent our first anniversary in the San Francisco Bay area many moons ago. Alcatraz had long been on my bucket list, so of course we took the ferry and went for an afternoon visit. Alcatraz Island received its name in 1175   from   Juan Manuel de Ayala a Spanish explorer, the name translates to “ Island of the Pelicans, it has since then earned the name of “ The Rock” due to its rocky terrain.   In 1853, the U.S. Army began constructing a military fortress on the island and later it became a military prison. In 1861 Civil War prisoners were brought to the island and in 1898 prisoners from the Spanish-American war were added bringing the prison population from 26 to 450. After the earthquake of 1906 hundreds, more civilian prisoners were brought to the island. During its time as a military prison the island functioned as a minimum-security facility with the inmates working at various jobs to include working for the families who lived on the island. Even

Stonehenge

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Stonehenge     For many of years a lot of us, myself included believed that the Druids may have built Stonehenge, however radiocarbon dating has proved that this site actually existed long before the Celtic society that beget the Druid Priesthood. The Celts only came into the area after the year 300BC. We now have proof that the first phases of construction occurred on the Stonehenge site in about the year 3100 BC. Let that sink in for a moment, the year 3100 BC; it is no wonder people from all over the world flock to this mysterious site.   The first monument at Stonehenge would have been a circular enclosure, a ditch of sorts that was dug with tools made of antler. Inside 56 pits have been located (called Aubrey Holes), these seem to have been chalk pits used to bury cremated remains of prehistoric people.   Construction on this site carried on for several hundred years, with the larger sarsen stones we see in the middle of the monument being set in 2

Greyfriars Kirkyard

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Those of you who know me well know that I spend a great deal of time wandering around old cemeteries. I love them; I find them to be peaceful and strangely beautiful. On our recent trip to Edinburgh we took a nighttime tour of Greyfriars Kirkyard, we enjoyed it so much we decided to go back the next day and spend the afternoon there.     Interestingly enough this is the cemetery where JK Rowling got a lot of her inspiration for her Harry Potter books, through the gates of the cemetery you can see the school that inspired Hogwarts and as you wander about the cemetery you can find tombstones with names such as “ Thomas Riddell”.   Greyfriars Kirkyad began being used as a burial ground in 1562 when Mary Queen of Scots granted the former gardens surrounds Greyfriars Kirk to be used as a burial ground. Prior to there was a small graveyard surrounding St Giles, however this area had filled up and instead of being buried side by side bodies were soon being stacked on top