One of my coworkers believes that the giant Thamud people built the pyramids. All I'm getting from that is a mental image of a brown Bunyan (Fate version, obviously) in middle eastern laborer clothes.
One of my coworkers believes that the giant Thamud people built the pyramids. All I'm getting from that is a mental image of a brown Bunyan (Fate version, obviously) in middle eastern laborer clothes.
This is relevant to ancient literature.
shit BL says
Once and always and nevermore.
Just stumbled across a reference to this really old Japanese book about the (at the time newly contacted) land of America. Some of the material is a little fanciful, to say the least. Here's a Twitter thread so you can witness the glorious insanity. Highlights include bishie Benjamin Franklin, George Washington punching out a tiger, and John Adams calling on a mountain fairy to avenge his mother who was eaten by a giant snake monster.
Would anyone else love seeing TM make an Archer- George Washington or Saber/Rider John Adams Servant based on this stuff?
Last edited by RoydGolden; November 21st, 2018 at 11:04 PM.
Yeah I saw that, quite absurd isnt it
"Only in my company, will you not be a monster"
anywhere than here
Niehorster put his entire series of German and Hungarian orbats online i feel bad in a way as his reasoning is sad but I'm super excited to see them all (as when I last checked they were like 40-60 bucks each). I highly suggest everyone to go read his book on Hungary first. But to get the idea, Nierhorster is Dutch-American who lives in Germany one of the best experts on WWII military organization and orbats in general. He runs a website (click to go home on the website, or edit the link to see the whole site and go into the Index) where you can see the order of battle for most nations from when they entered the war as well for some nations various operational orbats.
The books on German organization are more general reference books (and to my sadness it ended/was canceled before the series got to the Summer 1944 series he had planned) but the Hungarian book, is probably the best book on the Hungarian military in WW2 in English.
Last edited by Cruor; November 30th, 2018 at 04:42 AM.
The Hall of Selected Cruor Praise
While this is undoubtedly interesting and don't get me wrong, I feel like anyone who was THAT motivated to know specifically about the Hungarian order of battle circa 1940 would probably be able to read even more accurate sources in Hungarian.
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Same for any other specific country, of course.
shit BL says
Once and always and nevermore.
Well to start with an orbat is usually just the current organization at the time of an event (usually just before a battle) the author chooses (for example the 353.infanterie of the XXV Corp on June 6th, but within a week it was instead apart of the XXV Corps it was apart of the Falschirm Corps), and does not usually list how staffed an organization is which is often listed in multiple areas- the ration strength of a unit, the actual strength (which is misleading as it included wounded and sick, and sometimes people not even in the division and on break), the daily strength (the amount of people there on a given day including corps and other temporary attachments) and those sources don't usually give average ages for units which are also listed elsewhere (like the 716. having a median age of 36, the 352. having a median age of 18 and most allied divisions were 19, but the Big Red One for instance was 21), nevermind the vast differences in equipment strength when a division, for instance in records of certain regiments being apart of a division at that time but you would never know if all those regiments were actually there, I can't give brigade number, but I remember one was training in a long queue to get to Normandy but was always being put behind logistics trains and for instance the Guards Armoured from the UK had difficulty getting heavier transportation to Normandy (this is why though they started appearing on allied situation maps starting on the 12th or so they didn't actually 'fully' arrive till the 28th).
there's a lot of things an author can give context to and collect by writing a book, not to mention difficulty of getting hold of some records.
The Hungarian book however is not purely an organizational reference book like the German series is, its much more of a narrative and is a good book.
This is why books like Kursk 1943 by Zitterling are highly respected by even Soviet/Russian and German scholars while, despite it being an English work written by a Swede, is an excellent compilation work with a good assessment on the combat capability and organizational efficiency of both sides.
Last edited by Cruor; November 30th, 2018 at 02:46 PM.
The Hall of Selected Cruor Praise
I know that the Shimabara Rebellion occurred during the Tokugawa Shogunate, but who was the specific shogun?
Oblivion's awkward level scaling means that after you hit level 30 to 40, all goblins, save for shamans, will be lord class. Someone joked that the goblins had converted to a democracy. This reminded of the fact that there were several times in history where the "bad guys" were actually more democratic than the "good guys". Pirates had democracies long before the Founding Fathers: http://mentalfloss.com/article/23673...es-rocked-vote And according to the Simpsons, the English during Jeanne's time had more of a concept of rights than the French: http://www.simpsonsworld.com/video/310411843752 Of course, the English are generally portrayed as the "bad guys" in most Joan of Arc stories.
Probably not the best place to ask but alot of the time I've seen people on here make really interesting references to aspects of what appears to be Buddhist mythology (This quite often ends up being a topic of converstation when talking about Tamamo) and this almost always ends up with me trying to get some books out from the library or whatever on the subject. However whenever I attempt to do so I find myself trying I always seemingly end up being flooded with a trillion books regarding the religons practices and its place in the modern world which I'm not really that interested in. Does anyone have any sort of book recommendations or tricks or whatever as to how to learn about these more mythological topics.
Pretty nice summary of Uncle Vlad's story:
i always wondered if Arthur legend was just a warning about mischief and stupidty
you know. some guys trying to pull a sword out of a rock and commoners thinking that whoever pulls it got to be their messiah just for some random kid to do it somehow
I mean, no.
First of all, he's not a random kid. He's the legitimate heir to the Throne.
Good point, really. Until I actually read it, I had no idea that Arthur was of royal blood. Just thought he was this "random kid" who was divinely chosen to have dominion over Britain. Kinda like an underdog story, in a sense.
Funny how modern superficial impressions of these myths often leave quite a bit out.
I think Disney is more at fault there
I'm honestly not sure if I should post this there, in TM Misc. Thoughts, in a SW thread, if it exists. Anyway, in neither TM or Samurai Warriors does Kojiro actually "exist". He is a pseudonym used by certain individuals. In Fate, he is a pauper (farmer), but in SW, he is a prince (noble). As for why a noble would choose to become a ronin, it's because he believed that apolitical assassins have purer souls and intentions than politicians, which may be true.
Speaking of which, is there anything actually suggesting Kojiro didn't actually exist/was a pseudonym? The closest thing I can find/come up with is that Matahachi kind of uses it as one in the Eji Yoshikawa novel but I kind of doubt that's the cause.