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#1
Ancient & Medieval Battles / Re: Lake Peipus 1242 AD
Last post by Justin Swanton - Today at 12:59:12 PM
Quote from: Nick Harbud on Today at 12:42:39 PMThere is even mention of one battle being won by the music from a Russian organ.

Vunder Veapons indeed!

:P
The origin of the famous Stalin's Organ, the latter however not so well adapted for use in a church.
#2
Ancient & Medieval Battles / Re: Lake Peipus 1242 AD
Last post by Nick Harbud - Today at 12:42:39 PM
Well, you might be in good company regarding the music.  The Russian side tended to bring along musical instruments, bells, etc, to stiffen the troops enough to stand a load of Teutonic Knights charging down upon them.  There is even mention of one battle being won by the music from a Russian organ.

Vunder Veapons indeed!

:P
#3
Ancient and Medieval History / Re: Oldest shipwreck...
Last post by Cantabrigian - Today at 12:26:59 PM
A shekel for an old ex-leper?
#4
Does anyone else remember how we used to laugh at the gerontocracy of the Soviet Union?
#5
Ancient and Medieval History / Re: Pharoah's retreat
Last post by Cantabrigian - Today at 12:07:44 PM
It seems unlikely that it was a retreat in the conventional sense of the word - i.e. somewhere you go for rest and recouperation.  Nobody goes to the North Sinai for that ...

More likely to have been the opposite - somewhere the pharaoh was based when attacking.
#6
Ahar me hearties
#7
Ancient & Medieval Battles / Re: Lake Peipus 1242 AD
Last post by Ian61 - Today at 09:51:52 AM
An LP of Prokofiev's evocative music for the film was one of the first in my collection, I suppose I have to think of this as being in the fantasy section now. :-\ 
#8
Ancient and Medieval History / Re: Oldest shipwreck...
Last post by Denis Grey - Today at 09:47:30 AM
Quote from: Justin Swanton on Today at 08:15:23 AMOf interest. I presume the copper ingots were their equivalent of money?

Hence the expression "Spare a copper, guv'nor".
#9
Ancient and Medieval History / Re: Oldest shipwreck...
Last post by Erpingham - Today at 09:45:58 AM
Depends what you call money, I suppose.  I can't really see a thriving money economy down the fish market based on 60lb small change.  But if you say standard units of exchange for barter, maybe.
#10
Looking around a bit, it seems copper ingots were used as money around the Aegean before the invention of true money, according to this article.