Cheers BB. Which place was once known as the 'Land of sugar cake' ?That's the one. The dental connection is that it's the only bird born with teeth...
Over to you.
Cheers BB. Which place was once known as the 'Land of sugar cake' ?That's the one. The dental connection is that it's the only bird born with teeth...
Over to you.
There are clues in what links an album by a group called Soft Machine, with the 'Land of Toys' in Pinocchio and a painting by Peter Bruegel the Elder.
aha... you beat me...The Land of Cockaigne?
Nearly there BB. Where does the word come from and from which language - and, who used it to describe a real place ? Also what is the connection to the Sexton Blake referred to previously ?aha... you beat me...
and of course something to do with Cocaine!

You've got it YorkieLondon??
The word Cockaine derived from the old Norman Cocaigne which was a word for a mythical land of milk and honey - the 'Pais de Cocaigne' literally translated as the 'Land of the suger cake', which meant that everything was luxurious there. The Normans actually named London the land of the sugar cake (probably before they arrived and actually saw it) - once having seen it they may, of course, have been rather pissed off - particularly if they came from the south through Lewisham
Different abbreviations of this ie. Cocagne, Cockayne could lead us to Cocknay and Cockney - but this is not known for sure. Particularly as the word cockney was used in the 17th Century for all city dwellers. There are references to a mythical land of Cocaigne in many older sources - but the only real place that was called this was London. Over to you.You've got it YorkieThe word Cockaine derived from the old Norman Cocaigne which was a word for a mythical land of milk and honey - the 'Pais de Cocaigne' literally translated as the 'Land of the suger cake', which meant that everything was luxurious there. The Normans actually named London the land of the sugar cake (probably before they arrived and actually saw it) - once having seen it they may, of course, have been rather pissed off - particularly if they came from the south through Lewisham
Different abbreviations of this ie. Cocagne, Cockayne could lead us to Cocknay and Cockney - but this is not known for sure. Particularly as the word cockney was used in the 17th Century for all city dwellers. There are references to a mythical land of Cocaigne in many older sources - but the only real place that was called this was London. Over to you.
Wild guess, are they all hospital alert codes ?Ok..... what did grey and pink and cocaine have in common?
Part of the way thereCaravan had an album called The Land of Grey And Pink and two of the lead members were brothers called Hastings. The Normans beat Harold at Hastings on their way to the land of sugar cake.