Monthly Archives: January 2009

Colossus

Colossus is a popular large  Lovatts crossword but where did the name come from?

In Ancient Greek the word  was first used by the historian Herodotus as a name for certain gigantic statues in Egypt.

It became better known, of course, when applied to the Colossus of Rhodes, a 36 metre-high statue of Apollo that stood [more…]

Dollar

The word DOLLAR originally started out in English as doler.

In the 16th century, the present day town of Jachymov, situated in the Erzgebirge Mountains, Czechoslavakia, was known as Sankt Joachimsthal and was in Bohemia.

In 1519, under the direction of the Count of Schlick, large coins were minted there using silver from a nearby mine.

A [more…]

Annie Oakley

Born Phoebe Anne Oakley Moses in Darke County, Ohio, America on 13 August, 1860, Annie Oakley was to become the greatest woman rifle shot ever known.
At the age of six, Annie was already using a rifle to hunt food for her family and was renowned for her spectacular aim.
One of her biggest feats occurred [more…]

Cenacle

The Last Supper is probably one of the best-known Biblical events of world history and yet not many people are clear on where the event was held.

The ‘Last Supper room’ is known as the CENACLE, which is derived from the Latin coenaculum and means ‘dining hall’. It was here that all the apostles were [more…]

El nino

El Nino originally referred to the annual warm current off western Peru. It was named after the Christmas child El Nino de Navidad because the phenomenon began in late December.

El Nino now usually refers to the more severe weather conditions that occur every three to seven years when the ocean currents off South America [more…]

Jesse Owens

Jesse Owens was part of the US team, which competed in the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin. Adolf Hitler refused to recognise Owens’ outstanding achievements because he was black.

Born in Danville, Alabama, James Cleveland Owens became known as one of the greatest athletes of all times. 

He excelled at track sports at high school. In [more…]

Jolly Roger

Whereas many children find it hard to identify their own national flag, the majority would be able to pick out the flag flown by pirates, as well as knowing its name – the Jolly Roger.

Characters like Blackbeard, Long John Silver and Captain Hook have, over the years, brought the pirate trade of yesteryear to [more…]

J Edgar Hoover

This American criminologist and government official’s career began in 1916 when he began work in the Justice Department in the War Emergency Division. He became the first director of the FBI.

John Edgar was born in 1935 in Washington DC.  He studied law at George Washington University. In 1917 he joined the United States Department of Justice [more…]

Ned Kelly

Although Ned Kelly is one of Australia’s most notorious bushrangers, very few people know more than the fact that he and his gang wore metal armour over their heads and bodies.

Ned Kelly was born at Beveridge, Victoria in December 1854 to an Irish couple, John and Ellen Kelly. At the age of twelve, Ned’s [more…]