User:Itai
![]() - ![]() | This user is a translator from Hebrew to English on Wikipedia:Translation. |
![]() - ![]() | This user is a translator and proofreader from Hebrew to English on Wikipedia:Translation. |
Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries/March 16
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[edit](No longer Away.)
My Wikipedia time is limited at the moment, but I'm still around.
- ... that some pale stonecrops (example pictured) in Spain closely resemble Israeli specimens, while neighboring plants in Spain can look vastly different?
- ... that John Stacy warned the Duke of Suffolk that a Tower would be dangerous to him; Suffolk was later murdered by sailors on a ship called The Nicholas of the Tower?
- ... that Frank Lloyd Wright's Unity Temple was likened to a Mayan ball court after its completion in 1908?
- ... that Emmett Barrett wore glasses while playing American football?
- ... that emos and anti-emos confronted each other, but Hare Krishna members de-escalated the situation?
- ... that baritone Simon Neal's 2020 performance as Don Pizarro in Beethoven's Fidelio included riding a horse on the stage of the Royal Opera House?
- ... that the defection of Padua during the Scaliger War was partly due to a Scaliger lord's open seduction of the Lord of Padua's wife?
- ... that Lyle Lin was the first Taiwanese player to be selected and signed via the Major League Baseball draft?
- ... that in one version of Zeus's childhood his enemies are terrified of the goat who raised him?
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The Phaistos Disc is a disc of fired clay from the Greek island of Crete, dating possibly from the middle or late Minoan Bronze Age (second millennium BC). It bears a text on both sides in an unknown script and language, and its purpose and original place of manufacture remain disputed. Discovered in 1908 by the Italian archaeologist Luigi Pernier, the disc is made of fine-grained clay, intentionally and properly fired, and is approximately cylindrical with a diameter of around 16 centimetres (6.3 inches) and a thickness of almost 2 centimetres (0.79 inches), with rounded edges. The disc is an early example of movable-type printing, with the embossed signs that comprise its inscription resulting from separate stamps that were pressed into the soft clay before firing. It has captured the imagination of amateur and professional palaeographers, and many attempts have been made to decipher the text, which comprises 241 occurrences of 45 distinct signs. The Phaistos Disc is now on display at the Heraklion Archaeological Museum on Crete.Artefact credit: unknown; photographed by C messier; edited by Bammesk
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27 February 2025 |
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