ParkCungHee
Deity
- Joined
- Aug 13, 2006
- Messages
- 12,921
Statistics as a field of Mathematics dates from the middle ages, at the very least from the 18th century.What? Yes. (Interesting form of argument there...)
Statistics as a field of Mathematics dates from the middle ages, at the very least from the 18th century.What? Yes. (Interesting form of argument there...)
JEELEN said:I was being kind. Putting things together, then putting those things into someone else´s mouth and trying to insult the other party hardly constitutes an argument. If your ´arguments´ are meant to be personal, please take them elsewhere. Sir.
Yes.If one duke was elected, will the others keep holding their former titles?
I mean, will they have the authority to administrate their own foreign policy?
And another question - in the Seven Years War, the Habsburg Monarchy of Austria fought against Principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel. But they both were part of the Holy Roman Empire. How can it be?
Did William the Conqueror execute and/or replace all the Saxon vassals with Norman ones?
If not, was there much opposition to his rule among his Saxon vassals, especially immediately after the Battle of Hastings?
If so, how were the titles determined and allotted?
This. There were also several Saxon lords who fled to Scotland, forming an ad hoc government-in-exile there. Most of them either reached an accommodation with the Normans, integrated into the Scottish system, or just flat-out faded into obscurity.I'm hardly an expert on Olde England, but the Saxon aristocracy generally was mixed into the "common" English populace/peasantry, and replaced with a new French-speaking Norman aristocracy. Also, I believe that there was still about 10-15 years of civil war after the Battle of Hastings.
Here's one for you guys: why were the Italian republics (i.e. Venice, San Marino) formally referred to as "The Most Serene Republic of X"? Why serene? Why was this common in Italy and not elsewhere? My limited googling only has come up with the wiki, which doesn't have any explanation as to how this appellation came to be.
Statistics as a field of Mathematics dates from the middle ages, at the very least from the 18th century.
I get it. You don't know enough about the subject to come up with tautological argument in defense of a position that makes no sense, so you've instead decided to think I'm being personal for having called you out over it!
Awwww, that's cute. Shame you don't sputter off into indignation more regularly.
JEELEN said:More off topic comment I see. Sir, kindly take your childish pranks to the Tavern. You obviously don´t have a point, question or issue that needs answering here.
Awww, that's cute. You can't come up with a riposte, or elaborate on the subject and have to pull the age card. Cute.
Oh yeah. Watch the film The Third Man. While set after the war, it's not much different to what was going on during it. Most of the big-time black marketers in post-war Europe had cut their teeth during the war - or, in the case of the Germans, during the pre-war years of Nazi rule. The Unione Corse, in France, in particular made a lot of headway during WWII, by smuggling goods into Vichy for sale. The German economy was so rotten that people had no choice but to get their goods from the black market, similar to what happened in the USSR and its satellites.Was there a lot of black market activity in Nazi Germany and German occupied areas?
So you aren't going to try?JEELEN said:Nope: