Anonymous ID: 9e2067 March 6, 2025, 10:44 p.m. No.22718004   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22717946

WTF?

 

Let me see:

Foreign invaders came in, decided they owned the place…CHECK

Foreigners took lands and properties and kicked the native people out… CHECK

Foreigners raped young native girls… CHECK

Foreigners beat and raped native women…CHECK

 

Yeah, happened before. The foreigners where the Romans and the Natives were the Icene

Their Queen was Boudica and she went tearing through the countryside and even burned London to the ground

There's a statue of her right across the street from Big Ben

Somebody point this out to Parliament

"Those who ignore History are bound to repeat it…"

Anonymous ID: 9e2067 March 6, 2025, 11:18 p.m. No.22718159   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8284

>>22718020

For 1,000 years, people had ‘Two Sleeps’. Why and how did the habit disappear.

by Robren, The Ineffable Whisperer in #RobrenReview Jan 11, 2022

 

For a start, first sleeps are mentioned in one of the most famous works of medieval literature, Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales (written between 1387 and 1400), which is presented as a storytelling contest between a group of pilgrims. They’re also included in the poet William Baldwin’s Beware the Cat (1561) – a satirical book considered by some to be the first ever novel, which centres around a man who learns to understand the language of a group of terrifying supernatural cats, one of whom, Mouse-slayer, is on trial for promiscuity.

 

But that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Ekirch found casual references to the system of twice-sleeping in every conceivable form, with hundreds in letters, diaries, medical textbooks, philosophical writings, newspaper articles and plays.

 

The practice even made it into ballads, such as “Old Robin of Portingale. “…And at the wakening of your first sleepe, You shall have a hot drink made, And at the wakening of your next sleepe, Your sorrows will have a slake…”

 

Biphasic sleep was not unique to England, either – it was widely practised throughout the preindustrial world. In France, the initial sleep was the “premier somme“; in Italy, it was “primo sonno“. In fact, Eckirch found evidence of the habit in locations as distant as Africa, South and Southeast Asia, Australia, South America and the Middle East.

 

Like many Romans, the historian Livy may have been a practitioner of biphasic sleep – he alludes to the method in his magnum opus, History of Rome (Credit: Alamy)

 

One colonial account from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 1555 described how the Tupinambá people would eat dinner after their first sleep, while another – from 19th Century Muscat, Oman – explained that the local people would retire for their first sleep before 22:00.

 

And far from being a peculiarity of the Middle Ages, Ekirch began to suspect that the method had been the dominant way of sleeping for millennia – an ancient default that we inherited from our prehistoric ancestors. The first record Ekirch found was from the 8th Century BC, in the 12,109-line Greek epic The Odyssey, while the last hints of its existence dated to the early 20th Century, before it somehow slipped into oblivion.

 

A spare moment

 

In the 17th Century, a night of sleep went something like this.

 

From as early as 21:00 to 23:00, those fortunate enough to afford them would begin flopping onto mattresses stuffed with straw or rags – alternatively it might have contained feathers, if they were wealthy – ready to sleep for a couple of hours. (At the bottom of the social ladder, people would have to make do with nestling down on a scattering of heather or, worse, a bare earth floor – possibly even without a blanket.)

 

At the time, most people slept communally, and often found themselves snuggled up with a cosy assortment of bedbugs, fleas, lice, family members, friends, servants and – if they were travelling – total strangers.

 

To minimise any awkwardness, sleep involved a number of strict social conventions, such as avoiding physical contact or too much fidgeting, and there were designated sleeping positions. For example, female children would typically lie at one side of the bed, with the oldest nearest the wall, followed by the mother and father, then male children – again arranged by age – then non-family members.

 

A couple of hours later, people would begin rousing from this initial slumber. The night-time wakefulness usually lasted until about 01:00, and was not generally caused by noise or other disturbances in the night – and neither was it initiated by any kind of alarm (these were only invented in 1787, by an American man who – somewhat ironically – needed to wake up on time to sell clocks). Instead, the waking happened entirely naturally, just as it does in the morning.

 

The period of wakefulness that followed was known as “the watch” – and it was a surprisingly useful window in which to get things done. “[The records] describe how people did just about anything and everything after they awakened from their first sleep,” says Ekirch.

 

More:

https://robertchaen.com/2022/01/11/75021/

 

Other reference:

What Was The Medieval ‘Two Sleeps’ Habit?

AncientPages.com | June 10, 2024

https://www.ancientpages.com/2024/06/10/what-was-the-medieval-two-sleeps-habit/

 

The forgotten medieval habit of 'two sleeps'

Zaria Gorvett 9 January 2022

https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20220107-the-lost-medieval-habit-of-biphasic-sleep

Anonymous ID: 9e2067 March 7, 2025, 12:23 a.m. No.22718391   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22718336

Landed on a hill, 80 years of rain and it finally was exposed enough to roll down said hill onto the tracks. Likely a USAAF 500 pounder. 1/3 of those dropped did not detonate

Anonymous ID: 9e2067 March 7, 2025, 1:14 a.m. No.22718497   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22718487

They went into extended muh joo as the muh mason hasn't worked either and they've gone through every tab in their playbook and still can't understand why their shit fails

Only thing they ever had going was either baiting anons into a bread-wasting argument to bury the good stuff or having arguments among themselves when anons ignored the bait