Spotty's Little Known Facts

If you have a life outside of BWFC, then this is the place to tell us all about your toilet habits, and those bizarre fetishes.......

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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by mummywhycantieatcrayons » Tue Feb 04, 2014 3:54 pm

Montreal Wanderer wrote:Robert the Bruce came up in Only Connect. The name Bruce is thought to be Scottish (or common in Australian university Philosophy departments :wink: ). It is a little known fact that King Robert's family were not Scottish, but principally Norman. His ancestor had come over with William the Conqueror and the family name was up to and including his father 'de Brus' or 'de Bruis' from the area they originally hailed from (Bruis castle, Normandy). It was changed to 'the Bruce' so his new subjects could pronounce it.
I read some of Vincent van Gogh's correspondence recently in which he said that the reason he signed with just his first name was that the French, his adopted countrymen, always mangled his surname (as most of us continue to now).
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by Lost Leopard Spot » Tue Feb 04, 2014 4:10 pm

Montreal Wanderer wrote:Robert the Bruce came up in Only Connect. The name Bruce is thought to be Scottish (or common in Australian university Philosophy departments :wink: ). It is a little known fact that King Robert's family were not Scottish, but principally Norman. His ancestor had come over with William the Conqueror and the family name was up to and including his father 'de Brus' or 'de Bruis' from the area they originally hailed from (Bruis castle, Normandy). It was changed to 'the Bruce' so his new subjects could pronounce it.
He was known as The Bruce because he was the head of the 'clan' in one of the thirteen competing branches who claimed the Scottish crown - all of them descendants or direct heirs of Anglo-norman families established north of the border, like John Comyn, known as The Comyn (actually there was The Black Comyn, and a The Red Comyn) and John Balliol known as The Balliol. amongst themselves in person they were known as de Brus, d'Comyn, and de Balliol. They neither changed it nor encouraged others to use either form because amongst themselves in formal correspondence they used the English form of surname taken from their estates and were respectively Annandale (later Carrick), Badenoch, and Galloway. They were known to the lowland Scots as Mor Bruce, Balvenie and Toom Tabard. Robert the Bruce, John Comyn, and John Balliol are all much much later written transliterations from the original names Raibert de Bruis, Iain Comyn (occassionally Johannus Comus), and Jean de Ballioll (occassionally Sean Ballioll or Johannes Balliol) that are attested in contemporary documents.
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by bobo the clown » Tue Feb 04, 2014 4:13 pm

Lost Leopard Spot wrote:
Montreal Wanderer wrote:Robert the Bruce came up in Only Connect. The name Bruce is thought to be Scottish (or common in Australian university Philosophy departments :wink: ). It is a little known fact that King Robert's family were not Scottish, but principally Norman. His ancestor had come over with William the Conqueror and the family name was up to and including his father 'de Brus' or 'de Bruis' from the area they originally hailed from (Bruis castle, Normandy). It was changed to 'the Bruce' so his new subjects could pronounce it.
He was known as The Bruce because he was the head of the 'clan' in one of the thirteen competing branches who claimed the Scottish crown - all of them descendants or direct heirs of Anglo-norman families established north of the border, like John Comyn, known as The Comyn (actually there was The Black Comyn, and a The Red Comyn) and John Balliol known as The Balliol. amongst themselves in person they were known as de Brus, d'Comyn, and de Balliol. They neither changed it nor encouraged others to use either form because amongst themselves in formal correspondence they used the English form of surname taken from their estates and were respectively Annandale (later Carrick), Badenoch, and Galloway. They were known to the lowland Scots as Mor Bruce, Balvenie and Toom Tabard. Robert the Bruce, John Comyn, and John Balliol are all much much later written transliterations from the original names Raibert de Bruis, Iain Comyn (occassionally Johannus Comus), and Jean de Ballioll (occassionally Sean Ballioll or Johannes Balliol) that are attested in contemporary documents.
You only know that because you Googled it

That's cheat'n.
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by Lost Leopard Spot » Tue Feb 04, 2014 5:54 pm

^^^^^
I
Oh no I didn't. I knew that coz I knows History.
His subjects (as Monty put it) were the lowland Scots who spoke a form of English called Lallans. The highland Scots spoke Gaelic, and there were also English, Manx and Norse speaking communities. The famous Scottish clans were later than the earlier lowland clans and came about due to the fact that the Alban Scots were a mixture of Picts and Irish Scotti. The picts were matrilineal and the Scotti patrilineal which meant nobody knew who owned what until the Anglo-nirmans came along and established the clan system which basically said it doesn't matter who your mother or father was, it's your Lord that counts
Hence The Bruce, The Fitzherbert, The Kennedy etc.
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by Lost Leopard Spot » Tue Feb 04, 2014 6:01 pm

And I got most of that from my own database which I've been compiling for the last 40 odd years, and didn't bother Mr Google one wink of his sleep. I've been considering going on Mastermind and showing off big style by having the specialist subject: World History From The Beginning Until Today... That's a little known fact.
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by TANGODANCER » Tue Feb 04, 2014 6:17 pm

How come Mel Gibson's never been mentioned in all this? :|
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by Lord Kangana » Tue Feb 04, 2014 6:42 pm

Because he played William Wallace?
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by Lost Leopard Spot » Tue Feb 04, 2014 6:43 pm

TANGODANCER wrote:How come Mel Gibson's never been mentioned in all this? :|
It's a little known fact that Mel Gibson's a tosser..
Err, strike that. :oops: (apparently, it's well known).
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by TANGODANCER » Tue Feb 04, 2014 8:33 pm

Lord Kangana wrote:Because he played William Wallace?
Bit of a joke LK. Braveheart was actually the name for Robert the Bruce apparently and not Wallace. Old Mel always seems to be charging about waving a flag and routing the English. Just a bit of mild fun. :wink:
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by Annoyed Grunt » Tue Feb 04, 2014 8:55 pm

Lost Leopard Spot wrote:And I got most of that from my own database which I've been compiling for the last 40 odd years, and didn't bother Mr Google one wink of his sleep. I've been considering going on Mastermind and showing off big style by having the specialist subject: World History From The Beginning Until Today... That's a little known fact.
Your own database? Are you Jimmy Wales?

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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by Montreal Wanderer » Wed Feb 05, 2014 1:12 am

TANGODANCER wrote:
Lord Kangana wrote:Because he played William Wallace?
Bit of a joke LK. Braveheart was actually the name for Robert the Bruce apparently and not Wallace. Old Mel always seems to be charging about waving a flag and routing the English. Just a bit of mild fun. :wink:
I believe they called his actual heart Braveheart (not him) post-mortem and it was taken on an (unsuccessful) crusade by Jamie Douglas as per Bruce's instructions. Eventually it (or an acceptable facsimile) made its way back to Scotland.
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by bobo the clown » Wed Feb 05, 2014 11:20 am

Tony Burrows ... the best know singer you've never heard of.

In the late '60's session singer Tony Burrows decided he fancied making it in his own right. So he created 'The Ivy League' (alongside Cooke and Greenaway, to become songwriting legends .... also in 'David & Jonathan' and 'Blue Mink'). The Ivy League developed into 'The Flowerpot Men' which included for a time Jon Lord later of Deep Purple, and had the massive hit "Let's Go To San Francisco".

Even if you are in your 20's that song will be known to you.

Not satisfied with that, yet still reluctant to use his own name, he created a number of other groups, normally becoming one-hit wonders ;
Edison Lighthouse ... "Love Grows (Where My Rosemary Goes)"
White Plains .... "My Baby Loves Lovin' ", "When You Are A King" and ""Julie, Julie, Julie Do Ya Love Me"
The Pipkins' novelty song .... "Gimme Dat, Gimme Dat, Gimme Dat Ting"
The First Class .... "Beach Baby"

He regularly sang (mimed) on two different hit songs on the same Top of the Pops shows. On one occasion he sang on two and was "Pan's People'd" for a third AND was part of a fourth group invited up to wave the programme to close at the end credits.

He also sang lead vocals on The Brotherhood of Man's "United We Stand" and a good few more.

There, consider yourselves educated.
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by Bruce Rioja » Wed Feb 05, 2014 5:27 pm

Image Those songs are probably the best known songs that I've never heard of too.
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by bobo the clown » Wed Feb 05, 2014 5:40 pm

Youtube or Spotify them Bruce. You've heard of every one.

An Internet pint on it.
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by Harry Genshaw » Thu Feb 06, 2014 6:21 pm

bobo the clown wrote:had the massive hit "Let's Go To San Francisco".
Even if you are in your 20's that song will be known to you.
Thought that was a bold claim to make Bobo as the only song I knew about San Francisco was the Scott McKenzie one and I'm in my 40s!

Any road I You Tubed it. Nope never heard it before! Honest!
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by bobo the clown » Thu Feb 06, 2014 6:23 pm

Harry Genshaw wrote:
bobo the clown wrote:had the massive hit "Let's Go To San Francisco".
Even if you are in your 20's that song will be known to you.
Thought that was a bold claim to make Bobo as the only song I knew about San Francisco was the Scott McKenzie one and I'm in my 40s!

Any road I You Tubed it. Nope never heard it before! Honest!
I am amazed. Truly.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PiK79FlEFAI" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Last edited by bobo the clown on Thu Feb 06, 2014 6:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by bobo the clown » Thu Feb 06, 2014 6:27 pm

OK .... try not to Google this ;

It's pretty well know that The Move's Flower's In The Rain was the first song ever played on Radio 1.

1. What was the second
2. What was the first song on Radio 2.

Clues ....
1. A Britishish band singing about an American city
2. A very appropriate song title, from a Musical Film
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by Worthy4England » Thu Feb 06, 2014 6:48 pm

Bee Gees - Massachucetts?

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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by bobo the clown » Thu Feb 06, 2014 6:51 pm

Worthy4England wrote:Bee Gees - Massachucetts?
Yup.

1 down, 1 to go.
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Re: Spotty's Little Known Facts

Post by TANGODANCER » Thu Feb 06, 2014 6:54 pm

bobo the clown wrote:
Harry Genshaw wrote:
bobo the clown wrote:had the massive hit "Let's Go To San Francisco".
Even if you are in your 20's that song will be known to you.
Thought that was a bold claim to make Bobo as the only song I knew about San Francisco was the Scott McKenzie one and I'm in my 40s!

Any road I You Tubed it. Nope never heard it before! Honest!
I am amazed. Truly.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PiK79FlEFAI
Likewise. I thought everybody'd been to San Fransisco, wearing flowers in their hair... :wink:
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