Pub Quiz thread

  • Please bear with us on the new site integration and fixing any known bugs over the coming days. If you can not log in please try resetting your password and check your spam box. If you have tried these steps and are still struggling email [email protected] with your username/registered email address
  • Log in now to remove adverts - no adverts at all to registered members!
“I am always drawn back to the places where I have lived, the houses and their neighborhoods.”

The opening line from Breakfast at Tiffany's - the book by Truman Capote also included three of his short stories with those titles?

That line could have been written for me...
 
Why might the earliest mention of Valentine's Day as a day for lovers suggest a description of recent UK politics?

The original St.Valentine was a bishop who was executed by Emperor Claudius for conducting prohibited marriages - around the time of the collapse of the Roman Empire, a time of increasing taxation, diminishing trade, and the bulk of Europe against them.

History repeating itself?
 
Why might the earliest mention of Valentine's Day as a day for lovers suggest a description of recent UK politics?

not sure but starting with this:

In ancient Rome, 13, 14 and 15 February were celebrated as Lupercalia, a pagan fertility festival. This seems to be the basis for a celebration of love on this date. It was marked in a subtly different way in those days, however. According to Noel Lenski, classics professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder, speaking in the National Geographic, young men would strip naked and use goat- or dog-skin whips to spank the backsides of young women in order to improve their fertility; an early IVF, if you will


TBH I can't imagine Bojo, Gove, Farage and Leadsom naked....