Difference between revisions of "Ghyll:Briorus Jan-Vanderschusen"
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− | + | Dibblit --[[User:DrAckroyd|Dr. H. L. Ackroyd]] 16:52, 21 May 2005 (EDT) | |
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+ | ==Notes== | ||
+ | Original conceiver of the betrothal march, born circa -300 EC. | ||
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+ | ''"The alimentary canal is thirty-two feet long. You control only the first [[nanit]] of it. Control it well."'' --'''[[Briorus Jan-Vanderschusen]]''' | ||
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+ | In [The [[Opoudelian Starker]]'s] aquatic (or captainly) incarnation he is most often called Vanderdecken or -vecken or -schusen, the last of which is doubtless a folk reminiscence of the famous (and deservedly so) inventor Briorus Jan-Vanderschusen. | ||
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+ | The original conceiver of the betrothal march is thought to have been Briorus Jan-Vanderschusen, the noted philosophy and inventor who was thought to be born around -300 EC. As records from this time are hard to decipher, little is known about him. | ||
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+ | The grave of the famous Briorus Jan-Vanderschusen was an incredibly large tableau of roughly 1 kunanit by 1 unanit topped with thousands and thousands of objects. Even now, researchers are still puzzled by the significance of this exaggerated volume. |
Revision as of 09:55, 23 May 2005
Dibblit --Dr. H. L. Ackroyd 16:52, 21 May 2005 (EDT)
Notes
Original conceiver of the betrothal march, born circa -300 EC.
"The alimentary canal is thirty-two feet long. You control only the first nanit of it. Control it well." --Briorus Jan-Vanderschusen
In [The Opoudelian Starker's] aquatic (or captainly) incarnation he is most often called Vanderdecken or -vecken or -schusen, the last of which is doubtless a folk reminiscence of the famous (and deservedly so) inventor Briorus Jan-Vanderschusen.
The original conceiver of the betrothal march is thought to have been Briorus Jan-Vanderschusen, the noted philosophy and inventor who was thought to be born around -300 EC. As records from this time are hard to decipher, little is known about him.
The grave of the famous Briorus Jan-Vanderschusen was an incredibly large tableau of roughly 1 kunanit by 1 unanit topped with thousands and thousands of objects. Even now, researchers are still puzzled by the significance of this exaggerated volume.