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Sunday 21 July 1661

(Lord’s day). At home all the morning, putting my papers in order against my going to-morrow and doing many things else to that end. Had a good dinner, and Stankes and his wife with us. To my business again in the afternoon, and in the evening came the two Trices, Mr. Greene, and Mr. Philips, and so we began to argue. At last it came to some agreement that for our giving of my aunt 10l. she is to quit the house, and for other matters they are to be left to the law, which do please us all, and so we broke up, pretty well satisfyed. Then came Mr. Barnwell and J. Bowles and supped with us, and after supper away, and so I having taken leave of them and put things in the best order I could against to-morrow I went to bed. Old William Luffe having been here this afternoon and paid up his bond of 20l., and I did give him into his hand my uncle’s surrender of Sturtlow to me before Mr. Philips, R. Barnwell, and Mr. Pigott, which he did acknowledge to them my uncle did in his lifetime deliver to him.

Monday 22 July 1661Saturday 20 July 1661

Also on this day

Temperature: 15°C / 59°F

  • (Average for July 1661)

In Earls Colne, Essex

(About this data)

Annotations

  • “for our giving of my aunt 10

  • Auntie’s weak position?

    Perhaps it’s the sons who appreciate the weakness of her position and see more to be gained in pursuing the matter of the

  • Trice
    Unusual nautical name that-Viking? Every morning aboard ship sailors trice up their racks so the sweepers can man their brooms, or they used to.

  • “Trice” cf www.yourdictionary.com
    from middle english: trise: at one pull,from trisen: to hoist
    from middle dutch:trisen, from trise:pulley.
    I dont know;were those bloody vikings in Holland too?

  • “were those bloody vikings in Holland too?”

    Yep!

    (And in Belgium, France, Spain, Italy, Constantinopel, Russia, … and North America)

  • “my aunt

  • Rev. Josselin’s diary for today:

    July. 21. God good to us in many outward mercies, the harvest ripening(.) said a stop put to the eagerness of Episcopal men, lord send and continue peace and quietness in our habitation, men are slippery in their ways, the lord be good to us in his and fix our hearts upon him.

  • Vikings and Guinness: the river Liffey the home to that ale and maker of the records was discovered by some characters from the Baltic region looking for labour to bring in the sommer crops, to help the wives left behind while the boys enjoyed the summer games: http://www.dublinuncovered.net/history.html
    one of many sites to review the corporate take overs of the 9th century style.

  • the only reason the Vikings are called “bloody” is bad publicity and the fact that their tribal institutions dissapeared. They were not more bloody than others in their time and their descendency and part of their culture is all around us.

  • Vikings not bloody?

    But what about the Blood Eagle? No other group in Europe seems to have used quite such a ghastly form of ritualized vengeance on the enemy. Not surprising that this practice should gain more notoriety than the personal cleanliness that attracted numbers of the female vanquished.

    But this is getting seriously off-topic.

  • What about Viking man skins nailed to the Church doors?

  • Viking skins

    Where analysed recently, have been shown to be not human skin at all, but of animal origin. Bang goes another legend.

  • Legends are used to instill fear, or great deads of daring do.

  • re: Bloody Vikings!

    Remember, there is another reason to call them bloody Vikings:

    http://arago4.tn.utwente.nl/stonedead/tv-series/sketches/fc-25/spam-sketch.html

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