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October 1st in History

On This Day - 1st October

959 Edgar the Peaceable became king of all England. 'The Peaceable', was not necessarily a comment on the deeds of his life, for he was a strong leader, shown by his seizure of the Northumbrian and Mercian kingdoms from his older brother. His reign though, was a remarkably peaceable one, thanks to draconian laws that involved having one's tongue ripped out, at best, for stealing an apple. Edgar died on 8th July 975 at Winchester in Hampshire.



1553 The Coronation of Queen Mary I. She was the only surviving child born of the ill-fated marriage of Henry VIII and his first wife Catherine of Aragon. As the fourth crowned monarch of the Tudor dynasty, Mary is remembered for her restoration of Roman Catholicism and she had over 280 religious dissenters burned at the stake in the Marian Persecutions.



1983 - ClassicBands.com

October 1
After having what she described at "seven flops in a row", Bonnie Tyler became the first female Welsh singer to top the Billboard Hot 100 when "Total Eclipse Of The Heart" rose to the top for the first of four weeks. The song would be nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance at the 1984 ceremony, but lost to "Flashdance... What a Feeling" by Irene Cara.
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Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
But Æthelred the Unready tried to keep the peace with the Danes in other, less successful, ways.
val70 · 51-55
@Thinkerbell Wasn't the Unready actually not the Unpopular With the Nobles?
Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
@val70

He was unpopular with the nobles because he wouldn't take their advice or counsel.

Calling Æthelred "the Unready" was a play on his name, which meant noble counsel.

Or perhaps it was even worse. It might have meant "Unrat" (rubbish in modern German), as Professor Rath was called in the Blue Angel after he took up with Lola, but I don't know enough old English to say for sure if it had that meaning back then.
val70 · 51-55
@Thinkerbell [media=https://youtu.be/yGzDLpsoq5Y]

un-rǽd : vil counsel, ill-advised course, bad plan, folly

(source: Bosworth-Toller Anglo-Saxon Dictionary online at https://bosworthtoller.com )
Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
@val70

Hmm... "folly".

That meaning for Unrat in the German of Bach's time seems to appear in his St Matthew Passion. At the anointing at Bethany, the disciples are outraged when the (spikenard) perfume is poured on Jesus' head. "Wozu dienet dieser Unrat?" Of what service is this folly/waste? This usage is not present-day contemporary, however.

[media=https://youtu.be/uhC-hvmvb-k]
val70 · 51-55
@Thinkerbell Notice the source being an Anglo-Saxon dictionary. There's a difference between High and Low German anyway. Dutch being one of the latter as an example
Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
@val70

Yes, but Bach would have spoken the High German of his time, which for "Unrat" seems to have shared the meaning of "folly" or "waste" with the Low German spoken by the Angles and Saxons 700years earlier.
val70 · 51-55
@Thinkerbell Sorry, I misread your comment. The dyslexia, you know. Been looking around for a better posting for my next example of a great classical music performance. Taking more time!