Total Quiz XI.3 - Thank you for playing
Printed From: History Community ~ All Empires
Category: All Empires Community
Forum Name: Total Quiz Archive
Forum Discription: Archive of past Total Quiz contests. Next Total Quiz: January 2007
URL: http://www.allempires.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=8589
Printed Date: 23-Apr-2024 at 14:49 Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 9.56a - http://www.webwizforums.com
Topic: Total Quiz XI.3 - Thank you for playing
Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Subject: Total Quiz XI.3 - Thank you for playing
Date Posted: 25-Jan-2006 at 13:08
Total Quiz XI
(Part 3)
TOTAL QUIZ XI.3 HAS ENDED. THE NEXT TQ WILL BE IN APRIL
Introduction: TQ is a history trivia contest. Anyone is free to participate and the contest is open to all forum members and guests.
Instructions: Go
to the questions page enter your name and submit answers to the
questions. You are allowed an unlimited number of submissions and you
may use any source, reference or search engine to help you with your
answering. Points are awarded for correct answers. The participant with
the most points win. The scoreboard will be updated at 4-hour intervals when possible. Only use
the answer sheet to submit answers, DO NOT post answers on the forum.
Scores:
NickName | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 | Q5 | Q6 | Q7 | Q8 | Q9 | Q10 | Q11 | Q12 | Q13 | Q14 | Q15 | Q16 | Q17 | Total | Dawn | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | (1) | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 18 | Decebal | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | (2)
| (1) | 1 | 1 | 18 | poirot | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | (1) | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | (1) | 16 | BoudiccasWrath | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0.66 | 14.66 |
gcle2003 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2
| 1 | 1
| 1 | 11.5 |
fastspawn | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.33 | 11.33 |
Antipathy | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 11 |
Maju | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0.33 | 10.33 | Justinian | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 10 | TemplarScribe | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 10 | TheMightyPimento | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.66 | 9.66 | Kapıkulu | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 8 | Cezar | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 7 | Dave Dingleberry | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 7 | Mixcoatl | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 7 | Serge L | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 7 | Ahmed The Fighter | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 6 | Achilles | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | ulrich von hutten | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | rider | 1 | 1 | 1 | (.25) | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4.25 | Fejedelem | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0.25 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3.25 | Mila | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0.25 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3.25 | Jim crow | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | Nagyfejedelem | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | Arpa | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | Kagan | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | Phallanx | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | Yiannis | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Scores in parentheses signify bonus points for authored questions.
Thank you for playing!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ROUND TWO QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
14. Though considered a barbarian, the blood of emperors ran through his
veins. A great warrior, his reign was part of the golden age of his
country. He also founded a city named after himself which was for a
while to become the capital of an even greater country than his own.
Who is he? ( Hint: Part of his name refers to a warrior fighting with no one by his side. His
crown, still preserved today, is the subject of legends and has been
used to support a controversial idea. The fact that he was a descendant
of emperors must be taken literally.) (Submitted by Decebal)
- Answer: Vladimir Monomakh
(AD. 1053-1125), He was the son of a daughter of the Byzantine Emperor
Constantine IX Monomachos, with Monomachos meaning "He who fights
alone." Vladimir was the ruler of Rus and founder of the city of
Vladimir, an important capital of Russia. His crown was said to have
been given to him by the Emperor of Byzantium, a claim used to support
Moscow as the Third Rome.
ROUND ONE QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
1. In 1492, who set sail from Spain to the “new world”? (Submitted by Invictus)
- Answer: Christopher Columbus
2. What important
revolutionary leader fought against Spanish colonial control in South
America and was known as “The Liberator”? (Submitted by Invictus)
3. What 12th
century Muslim leader is known for his leadership against the crusaders
and whose achievements include the recapture of Jerusalem and victory
at Hattin? (by Invictus)
4. The Charge of
the Light Brigade: In which war and battle did the charge happen? Who
was the commander of the Light Brigade? What was the units name that
supported the Light Brigade (French unit)? Who is the author of the
original poem, 'Charge of the Light Brigade'? (Answer all four parts to
receive full points) (by Rider)
- Answer: The charge happened in the Crimean War, in the year 1854, at the Battle of Balaclava. The Commander was Earl or
Lord of Cardigan. The supporting unit's name was Chasseur d'Afrique
(Hunters of Africa).
The author of the original poem is Alfred, Lord Tennyson.
5. The capital of
Korea has been approximately located at the same area since the Joseon
dynasty. When Yi Seonggye went out searching for a capital, he first
went to the Daejeon area. While there, a geomancer informed him that he
could not make his capital there, as it would be the capital of the
next dynasty. Taking this in mind, he arrived in what is now present
day Seoul and made that his capital. The current capital of South Korea
has gone through numerous name changes. In Baekje times it was called
Wiryeseong, in Joseon it was called Hanseong, and in modern day South
Korea, the city is referred to as Seoul. What old Shilla word is the
word Seoul derived from and what does it mean? (by Gubook Janggoon)
- Answer: Derived from Seorabeol. (Seorabul, Surabul, ect.) Means: "Capital"
6. These two Japanese clans, often fierce rivals, spearheaded the Meiji Restoration (by Gubook Janggoon)
- Answer: the Shimazu and the Chosu
Moderator's note: Satsuma was also accepted, although Satsuma is the name of the region and the clan was named Shimazu
As in the previous quiz, the
questions were arranged in approximate order of difficulty. Questions
1-3 were intended to be easier questions. The next three required more
research, and question 7 and onward were written in a riddle-like style
as more challenging questions.
7. As a teenager
he went to study at the University of Oxford. However, it was a trip to
another city that prompted him to compose one of the most important
writings on imperial history – a work that took him about 15 years to
finish. Many such as Churchill praised his work. In All Empires Forum,
however, his work has seen more criticism than praise. Who was he? (by Imperator Invictus)
- Answer: Edward Gibbon. He wrote the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, published in 1776, which has become one of the most important works in western historical writing.
8. I came to
court one day with a deer, and told my emperor that it was a horse. My
emperor, fearing my power, had no choice but to agree with me. Who am I
and who was my emperor. (by Poirot)
- Answer: Zhao Gao, the chief enunch of the Qin(Chin) Dynasty of China. The
emperor was Qin Ershi,
or Qin II, the second emperor of the Qin. His "calling a deer a horse"
become idiomatic usage in Chinese referring to a deliberate untruth for
ulterior motives.
9. I lived in a
heavenly palace and had 500 wives though I forbade my subjects to have
more than one. I made all property in my kingdom common so I could be
called by some to be the first communist. My brother was a famous
founder of christianity. Tens of Millions died in the war I started and
eventually lost. The general that defeated me had a dish of food named
after him that can be found on menus around the world today. Who was
the general that defeated me?
- Answer: Zuo Zong Tang, also known as General Tso, as in the dish "General Tso's Chicken." "I" refers to Hong
Xiu Quan, who believed that Jesus was his brother whose territory from
his conquest was known as the "Heavenly Kingdom". The war refers to the
Taiping rebellion which was the second largest war in history in terms
of casulaties.
10. Troublesome
times in the family and country - A nomadic power had recently invaded
nearby regions. Worse yet, after the death of their father, chaos took
hold of the family. The one son who inherited the throne was killed by
another son with the help of nomadic allies. However, after achieving
the crown, he (the latter) turned against his allies and was captured
and later killed in battle. Then, another brother of the two ascended
the throne, but was blinded and deposed after only a few years.
Eventually, the throne passed on to a son of one of the above. Name the
“family” (dynasty) in which the events took place. (by Imperator Invictus)
- Answer: The Sassanid Dynasty
of Persia. The setting of the question is the late 5th century BC. The
White Huns had invaded the region and had become a power east of the
Sassanid Empire. In 484, the Emperor Peroz, Son of Yazdegerd II, was
killed in battle against the White Huns, after which a period of
political chaos ensued until the reign of Kosorau.
11. Father and
Daughter. The two lived in a time of invasion, conquest, and uneasiness
within the family. The father was described as a warrior of great
courage in battle, who led his armies in some of the most dynamic times
in history. The daughter wrote about the life and times of her father
in a work distinguished for its time. (by Imperator Invictus)
- Answer: Emperor Alexius Comnenos and his daugher Anna Comnena.
Alexius was the emperor of Byzantium at around the time of the First
Crusade, a troublesome time for the empire. He probably had the highest
reputation of warrior abilities among the emperors: "First to Charge
and last to flee." His daughter, Anna, wrote the Alexiad, a history of
Alexius' reign. Anna is known as one of the first female historians.
Moderator's note: I hope You've enjoyed the Byzantine family questions in the recent quizzes!
12. What ancient
artifact, which bears the words of a child, was unearthed during a time
of war between powers on a continent across the sea from where it was
buried? Due to the outcome of the war, the artifact had to be
surrendered to another power, although with great reluctance. Name this
important artifact, whose name today has reached symbol status. (by Imperator Invictus)
- Answer: The Rosetta Stone.
The Rosetta stone bore the decree of the Pharoah Ptomely V, who was 8
years old at the time. It was discovered during the period of the
Napoleonic wars by French scientists who accompanied Napoleon to Egypt.
The Rosetta Stone was eventually surrendered to the British. The
significance of this artifcat is that it contained both Hieroglyphics
and Greek versions of the same text, allowing the decyphering of the
ancient Egyptian writing.
13. I am
associated with the most powerful men of my time. I am probably the
most famous ruler of my very old kingdom and my death brought the end
of an era. My successor blackened my name so thoroughly that even
hundreds of years later I am still misrepresented in literature and
film works. I reigned for 21 years and had 4 children. (by Dawn)
- Answer: Cleopatra VII of the Ptolemy Dynasty in Egypt.
She had one son with Julius Caesar and three children with Marc Antony and
ruled from 51 B.C. to her death in 30 B.C. In literature and film works, her life has been regarded as something of a tragedy.
14. (Advanced to Round Two)
15. This king was
given his name due to a swarm of flying insects said to have surrounded
him at his birth. He built a city named after himself which was modeled
on Jerusalem. The city still stands today as a place of pilgrimage and
has amazing architecture, unlike any other in the world. What is the
name of the king? (by Decebal)
- Answer: Gebra Maskal Lalibela of the Zagwe dynasty of Ethiopia. The
saintly king was given this name due to a swarm of bees said to have
surrounded him at his birth, which his mother took as a sign of his
future reign as Emperor of Ethiopia. Lalibela is said to have seen Jerusalem and then attempted to build a
new Jerusalem as his capital. As such, many features have Biblical
names - even the town's river is known as the River Jordan. It remained
the capital of Ethiopia from the late 12th century and into the 13th
century.
16. This
historical region takes it name from a river whose ancient name that
resembles a type of animal. This region was one of the most highly
contested in history and was part of many empires. According to work of
a certain European poet, one of the rulers who ruled the region was a
“Scythian.” What is the name of this region? (by Imperator Invictus)
- Answer: Transoxiana. Transoxiana,
a region in Central Asia east of the Caspian Sea, was called so because
it was the land across ("trans") the River Oxus. One of the most
important cities in Transoxiana was Samarkand, a rich trade city that
was also capital of the empire of Tamerlane (Timur Lenk). The English
playwright Christopher Marlowe wrote a play titled Tamburlaine, loosely
based on the historical Tamerlaine. In the play, Tamburlaine is a
scythian shpeherd.
Moderator's notes: I decided to accept Mesopotamia as
an alternate answer, as it was known as the land between two rivers,
one of which was the Tigris. I think semantically, the relation in the
case of Mesopotamia is valid for question. It also happens that
Tamerlane's empire extended into Mesopotamia. However, I was largely
dissapointed in this, since having Mesopotamia as an answer makes the
question much easier.
17. This is a
fierce clash between the blue and gray that lasted two days and decided
the fate of two historical figures. This is a tale of two opposing
figures. One was a “loser” on the winning side, and became a scapegoat
for his superiors, blamed for incompetent command. The other was a
“winner” on the losing side, and, despite being wounded, saved his side
from being relentlessly pursued by the victorious enemy. Both figures
went on to accomplish more things. The loser on the winning side became
a famous writer, and the winner on the losing side became a leader of a
famous organization. This is a multipart question:
- What was the name
of the battle that involved these two figures
- 2. Who was the loser on
the winning side? What was his most famous piece of writing?
- 3. Who was
the winner on the losing side? What was the name of the famous
organization that he led? (by Poirot)
- Answer: 1. The Battle of Shiloh 2. Lew Wallace; Ben Hur 3. Nathan Bedford
Forrest; Ku Klux Klan 1. The Battle of Shiloh, between the Union and
the Confederacy in 1862 during the American Civil War, was one of the
bloodiest battles in United States history. 2. The loser on the winning
side was Lew Wallace, who was blamed by General U.S. Grant and the
public for the heavily casualities suffered by the Union troops.
Wallace was unable to position his troops at the ordered locale
(Pittsburg Landing)until the fighting was almost over. As a result, he
was demoted and transferred from his command. After the American Civil
War, Wallace became a famous novelist, whose most popular work was Ben
Hur, the best selling American novel i
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Replies:
Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 25-Jan-2006 at 13:25
Good Luck everyone! Thanks to question contributors who have made this TQ possible.
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 25-Jan-2006 at 14:22
The First scoreboard update has been posted. The next updates will be in 4 hour intervals, whenever possible.
I can't believe No. 16 was answered so quickly. Decebal, you must've known exactly what I was talking about.
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Posted By: Decebal
Date Posted: 25-Jan-2006 at 14:39
I don't know if it was just me, but I got it right away when I read it.
------------- What is history but a fable agreed upon?
Napoleon Bonaparte
Even if you are a minority of one, the truth is the truth.- Mohandas Gandhi
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Posted By: poirot
Date Posted: 25-Jan-2006 at 16:06
Paul, that was a good one, number nine Decebal, your second question has been beaten
------------- AAAAAAAAAA
"The crisis of yesterday is the joke of tomorrow.� ~ HG Wells
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 25-Jan-2006 at 16:47
Clarifications:
Q14: "blood of emperors ran through his veins" means that he was a descendent of a line of Emperors.
Poirot, your question has been beaten. (You'll find out by whom at the next score update).
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Posted By: Mila
Date Posted: 25-Jan-2006 at 17:54
I didn't know we could use search engines. I put "no idea" for half of them, but oh well - a few I knew, I hope.
------------- [IMG]http://img272.imageshack.us/img272/9259/1xw2.jpg">
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Posted By: poirot
Date Posted: 25-Jan-2006 at 17:57
Originally posted by Imperator Invictus
Clarifications: Q14: "blood of emperors ran through his veins" means that he was a descendent of a line of Emperors.
Poirot, your question has been beaten. (You'll find out by whom at the next score update).
|
Just for the record, I spent 1 hr making the mammoth question google free
------------- AAAAAAAAAA
"The crisis of yesterday is the joke of tomorrow.� ~ HG Wells
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Posted By: Decebal
Date Posted: 25-Jan-2006 at 18:08
Originally posted by Mila
I didn't know we could use search engines. I put "no idea" for half of them, but oh well - a few I knew, I hope. |
You know, you can keep on trying to get right answers till you get it (but only the last answer between every results update is considered).
------------- What is history but a fable agreed upon?
Napoleon Bonaparte
Even if you are a minority of one, the truth is the truth.- Mohandas Gandhi
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Posted By: Mila
Date Posted: 25-Jan-2006 at 18:12
Thanks, Decebal! Dawn told me as well. I will try again soon.
EDIT: I want to see how many I had - I expect 2, maybe 3.
------------- [IMG]http://img272.imageshack.us/img272/9259/1xw2.jpg">
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 25-Jan-2006 at 18:28
Great participation so far! Please remember that if you see something wrong with the scoring, let me know by PM.
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Posted By: poirot
Date Posted: 25-Jan-2006 at 22:10
Dawn, good job with 17
------------- AAAAAAAAAA
"The crisis of yesterday is the joke of tomorrow.� ~ HG Wells
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 00:11
Scores have been updated. There were errors in the scores calculation for Dawn and Poirot during the last update.
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Posted By: Dawn
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 00:22
How can you have a .5 mark on a question that has either 3 or 5 answers?
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 00:37
Thanks for pointing that out. The scores have been revised again.
Question 17 is now officially scored by 1/3'.
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Posted By: fastspawn
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 04:34
did my second round come through?
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Posted By: fastspawn
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 04:43
also could I ask whether the ancient name resembles a type of animal, or the river resembles a type of animal?
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Posted By: Decebal
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 10:01
Originally posted by poirot
Decebal, your second question has been beaten |
Congratulations, that was a difficult one. Let's see if you get the first one, which is just as hard, if not harder because you have to use your brain to get it, and not simply search for it.
------------- What is history but a fable agreed upon?
Napoleon Bonaparte
Even if you are a minority of one, the truth is the truth.- Mohandas Gandhi
|
Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 10:23
also could I ask whether the ancient name resembles a type of animal, or the river resembles a type of animal? |
The river's name looks like a type of animal.
Also, question 10 isn't supposed to be that hard. Think about what
regions were influenced by nomads. One answer I recieved, other than
the correct answer, was very close.
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 12:49
24 hours remaining for the first round of the Total Quiz.
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 13:12
Clarification for Question 10:
"Troublesome times in the family and country - A nomadic power had recently invaded nearby regions"
...means that a foreign nomadic power had recently invaded nearby
regions and caused trouble to the empire/kingdom of the ruling family.
The next update will probably be around 3 pm (in two hours).
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 15:59
Scores have been updated again. Sorry for the delay. I was all over the place today....
On Question 14, again "Emperor" has to be taken literally. That is, the
line of rulers were known as Emperors historically and not merely as
kings.
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Posted By: Kapikulu
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 16:28
When I saw the first three questions, I said myself: " Wow, they made the total quiz much easier than before" but as I go through, well it has been ...Finally I have personally given error in my brain, especially after questions of Decebal, Dawn and especially Poirot, after that last question, I had gone offline, with a blue screen asking to abort,retry, ignore or fail
------------- We gave up your happiness
Your hope would be enough;
we couldn't find neither;
we made up sorrows for ourselves;
we couldn't be consoled;
A Strange Orhan Veli
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 17:43
An alternate answer has been accepted for Question 16. This will boost many of your points.
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Posted By: poirot
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 17:53
Now I realize how I got a point for 16
------------- AAAAAAAAAA
"The crisis of yesterday is the joke of tomorrow.� ~ HG Wells
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Posted By: poirot
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 18:00
Congratulations Decebal!
------------- AAAAAAAAAA
"The crisis of yesterday is the joke of tomorrow.� ~ HG Wells
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 20:05
Yes, kudos to Decebal for his clean sweep. Same to Dawn, if Q14 will advance to the second round.
BoudiccasWrath, sorry that I didn't see your answer earlier for the "heavenly palance" question.
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Posted By: Dawn
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 23:02
if I give you cinnamon buns I just made will you up date the scores now ?
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 23:28
I think I have to stick with the 4 hour intervals, unless you can convince me to accept another alternate answer.
Also, I am not sure if I can guarentee many updates tomorrow. I'll be
working on an extremely tight schedule tomorrow morning, so only a few
more guesses left! this I do apologize for, but hopefullly, the fact
that we had 48 hours can give me some leeway.
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 26-Jan-2006 at 23:56
Dawn, your answer does not fit one of the criteria (named city after himself).
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Posted By: fastspawn
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 00:51
how come decebal has 15 points? he has 14 because he gave 2 questions
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Posted By: Dawn
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 00:57
pssst....... there are 17 questions (he has answered 15+ authored 2= 17)
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 01:09
Dawn, you can force a tie if you answer question 14 correctly either in the remaining round 1 or in round two
...unless someone else gets it in round one and you don't - but it looks like the question will advance to round 2.
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Posted By: Maju
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 01:27
Buff, question 14 seems extremely difficult. Nobody has replied it so
far. How many barbarians were descendants of emperors, named cities
after themselves and those cities became capitals of states larger than
their own. I really can't think of any answer.
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NO GOD, NO MASTER!
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Posted By: Dawn
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 01:56
It's just an ugly question .. but the last one you can't find always is
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 01:59
Well, there was one guy, a Hungarian adventurer, who became emperor of
an african nation. So I guess anything's possible. (needless to say, he
was on the TQ about 3 years ago)
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Posted By: Guests
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 02:52
Originally posted by Imperator Invictus
BoudiccasWrath, sorry that I didn't see your answer earlier for the "heavenly palance" question.
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No prob.
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 08:42
Final guesses for round 1. There will be no more score updates between now and the end of round 1.
Round 1 ends at 1 pm EST. However, round two will not start until I have computer access, which will be some time around 3-4 pm.
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 15:36
Round two has begun!
Answers to round 1 questions will be posted shortly.
Current scores have been posted. Bonus points have been added, calculated by the following methods:
The Bonus system for round two is a bit complex. But essentially, as it
is in our case, if the question is answered, Decebal will receive 2
points. If nobody is able to answer the question correctly, then there
will be no bonus (in this case, the question would be deemed by the
formula to be "too difficult" for the quiz.)
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Posted By: poirot
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 16:13
Great question Decebal!
His surname refers to a warrior fighting with no one by his side.
Does this mean his surname means a warrior fighting with no one by his side, or that his surname alludes to a specific warror in history who fough with no one by his side?
------------- AAAAAAAAAA
"The crisis of yesterday is the joke of tomorrow.� ~ HG Wells
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 16:28
"Means" is correct.
BTW, did you actually get #10 at the last minute or did you hold back the correct answer until then?
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Posted By: Dawn
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 18:08
So what happens when the quiz ends round 2 in a tie?
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 18:15
That I'll go and write harder questions for the next quiz.
I think a tie is a fine way to conclude the quiz.
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Posted By: poirot
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 19:11
Originally posted by Imperator Invictus
"Means" is correct.
BTW, did you actually get #10 at the last minute or did you hold back the correct answer until then?
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Only two cultures used blinding as a way of deposing their rulers.
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"The crisis of yesterday is the joke of tomorrow.� ~ HG Wells
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 19:35
Answers to the questions of round one have been posted on the first page of this thread.
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Posted By: Dawn
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 19:42
'm sorry q.16 dissapointed you if it makes you feel better it took along time to come up with the defence for that answer
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 20:24
No problem. I wrote almost all of my questions the night before the quiz,
so I definately missed something there. Actually, you were the only one
who got the "scythian" part of the question, so at least that's good.
So how did you like the questions this time?
After the last quiz, I wanted to make a more challenging quiz. However,
what I primarily had in mind was to make the quiz consist of a greater
number of challenging questions while not necessarily making the
challenging questions more challenging. If you noticed, compared to the
last quiz, this quiz has a not of questions that were difficult to
google, while in the last quiz, only 3-4 were so. In this quiz, most of
the questions between 7-17 were intended to be questions that could not
be simply googled using keywords if you didn't know where to look.
However, the fact that some of you got all of them right really surprised me.
But if questions on the level of No. 14 are what you like, then I guess we can try more of stuff like that in the next quiz!
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Posted By: Dawn
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 21:00
No No No no more questions like 14 ..... please
First thoughts on the quiz - it is great to see so many people playing. I think that is in part due to the range in difficulty in the questions making it possible for those that are not obsesed with searching able to participate and stretch their abilities abit and stumble accross new intrests . and you find out the darnest things. ( I didn't know wasabi kills paristes in fish but I do now cause of TQ) I like the idea of more questions that are difficult rather than more difficult questions. I'd like to see the average quiz being 20 questions in lenght with a balance like you did this time. Too many of those criptic questions (like14) combinded with your way of updating scores would make for an impossible quizz and would surly loose my intrest (and I suspect many others) very quickly.
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Posted By: poirot
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 21:02
In the process of doing the Total Quiz and stumbling upon not so correct answers at first, I have a couple of ideas for questions for the next total quiz.
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"The crisis of yesterday is the joke of tomorrow.� ~ HG Wells
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Posted By: Maju
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 23:24
16. This
historical region takes it name from a river whose ancient name that
resembles a type of animal. This region was one of the most highly
contested in history and was part of many empires. According to work of
a certain European poet, one of the rulers who ruled the region was a
“Scythian.” What is the name of this region? (by Imperator Invictus)
- Answer: Transoxiana. Transoxiana,
a region in Central Asia east of the Caspian Sea, was called so because
it was the land across ("trans") the River Oxus. One of the most
important cities in Transoxiana was Samarkand, a rich trade city that
was also capital of the empire of Tamerlane (Timur Lenk). The English
playwright Christopher Marlowe wrote a play titled Tamburlaine, loosely
based on the historical Tamerlaine. In the play, Tamburlaine is a
scythian shpeherd.
Moderator's notes: I decided to accept Mesopotamia as
an alternate answer, as it was known as the land between two rivers,
one of which was the Tigris. I think semantically, the relation in the
case of Mesopotamia is valid for question. It also happens that
Tamerlane's empire extended into Mesopotamia. However, I was largely
dissapointed in this, since having Mesopotamia as an answer makes the
question much easier.
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Mesopotamia was my initial reply (a little unconvinced try), yet, as I
didn't get the point initially and couldn't figure Transoxiana, I kept
searching and submitted Bosnia.
Bosnia should be a better
answer than Mesopotamia, I think, because it's speculated that the
river Bosna, from which the country takes its name is derived from
"bos" (bull in Latin), among other etymological speculations. Instead
Mesopotamia does not derive it name from the Tigris directly.
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NO GOD, NO MASTER!
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Posted By: Dawn
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 23:37
Ahhh but.... another proper name for the area is The tigis euphrates valley. and the anceint laungage of that district the name was Tigr which sounds like an animal andthen there is the poet christapher marlow and his work Tramelaine the great mentioning the scythian shepard who ended up ruling that area
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 27-Jan-2006 at 23:40
Yeah, the Tamburlaine part narrows the region down to SW Asia.
But still, there was more than one region that qualified. I should've
said that it also had to contain the Tamerlane's capital...
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 00:26
combinded with your way of updating scores |
Lol. Well I'm only doing the interval checking that so it's more fair
to people who aren't in the same time zone as I am. If I checked
continuously, that would favor people near the USA east coast.
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Posted By: Guests
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 00:42
I don't want to sound like a whiney bitch, but I could have sworn that I had put Forrest down with the KKK for question 17. I think I put that in my first attempt at answering it. I could be wrong though, and might have put another name with the group that they led as the KKK, but I thought I put Forrest.
I know it's just .33 of a point but I am just a little curious if I was an idiot and put the wrong name down with the KKK.
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 01:43
No, you're right. I'm getting bad at this. Sorry!
All scores will be re-checked thoroughly for the final score when round
2 is over. Hopefully, I'll catch all the errors if there are any more
left.
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Posted By: Guests
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 01:57
Originally posted by Imperator Invictus
No, you're right. I'm getting bad at this. Sorry!
All scores will be re-checked thoroughly for the final score when round
2 is over. Hopefully, I'll catch all the errors if there are any more
left.
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Whew! No, it's ok, you've got a lot to do and mistakes are bound to occur. I was more concerned that I screwed myself out of a portion of a point with sheer stupidity on my part. Now I won't have to verbally berate myself as my dog looks on wondering why the heck he is stuck with a crazy lady who yells at herself.
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Posted By: fastspawn
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 02:06
i wrote euphrates for 16.
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Posted By: Maju
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 02:22
Originally posted by Dawn
Ahhh but.... another proper name for the area is The tigis
euphrates valley. and the anceint laungage of that district the
name was Tigr which sounds like an animal andthen there is the poet
christapher marlow and his work Tramelaine the
great mentioning the scythian shepard who ended up ruling that
area |
I'm not complaining: I got the point anyhow. Just that I thought that
Bosna fulfilled the conditions better than Mesopotamia - though
regarding the Scythian ruler, I got satisfied with a mention of Alans
ruling it for some time (Alans are supposed to be Scythians or
Sarmatians).
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NO GOD, NO MASTER!
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Posted By: Guests
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 04:15
I'm writing on behalf of TheMightyPimento (a friend I got to try the quiz who is not a member). He is sure that the answer he submitted for number 4 was correct. Could you please double check it?
Thank you
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Posted By: Perseas
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 04:49
Originally posted by Dawn
Ahhh but.... another proper name for the area is The tigis euphrates valley. and the anceint laungage of that district the name was Tigr which sounds like an animal andthen there is the poet christapher marlow and his work Tramelaine the great mentioning the scythian shepard who ended up ruling that area |
Tigris doesnt only sounds like an animal but in greek language it means exactly 'tiger'.
------------- A mathematician is a person who thinks that if there are supposed to be three people in a room, but five come out, then two more must enter the room in order for it to be empty.
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Posted By: gcle2003
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 07:25
On Question 16 I put 'Oxiana' in my last update and the answer is given as 'Transoxiana'. Depends which books you're reading or maps you're looking at doesn't it?
Amazon is selling 'The Road to Oxiana' at http://tinyurl.com/d47v4 - http://tinyurl.com/d47v4 and there are plenty of other references around.
It's the same region.
Incidentally, congratulations on the piece of deception on the Gibbon question. I went running around in circles trying to find a writer on the British empire. I guess I should be less anglocentric
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 10:19
Fastpawn - I think Euphrates doesn't define a region since its a river.
Boudicca's - Yes you're right again!. The response got lost in the pile...
Gcle - ok I'll give you that one, since it does fit the criteria.
However, Oxiana and Transoxiana aren't the same region, as it seems
(one's west of Oxus, the other is east)
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Posted By: Decebal
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 10:35
Originally posted by Dawn
No No No no more questions like 14 ..... please
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I`m sorry you didn`t like my question, Dawn I`ll try to make it easier next time. maybe...
Honestly, I`m surprised at how difficult people found that question. More comments after the end of the quiz. BTW, great job everyone.
------------- What is history but a fable agreed upon?
Napoleon Bonaparte
Even if you are a minority of one, the truth is the truth.- Mohandas Gandhi
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Posted By: Guests
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 10:40
Originally posted by Imperator Invictus
Fastpawn - I think Euphrates doesn't define a region since its a river.
Boudicca's - Yes you're right again!. The response got lost in the pile...
Gcle - ok I'll give you that one, since it does fit the criteria.
However, Oxiana and Transoxiana aren't the same region, as it seems
(one's west of Oxus, the other is east)
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Sorry for being the thorn in your side this quiz.
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Posted By: gcle2003
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 11:04
Originally posted by Imperator Invictus
Fastpawn - I think Euphrates doesn't define a region since its a river.
Boudicca's - Yes you're right again!. The response got lost in the pile...
Gcle - ok I'll give you that one, since it does fit the criteria. However, Oxiana and Transoxiana aren't the same region, as it seems (one's west of Oxus, the other is east)
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I won't quibble. I was under the impression it was rather like Gaul - Transoxiana and Cisoxiana and Oxiana covering both. I guess I was being too logical.
[/QUOTE]
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 16:21
Ok it's 4 PM. So that means that's the end of the Quiz. Stay tune for
final scores to be posted later and in a few days, the awards. It looks
like Dawn and Decebal won this Total Quiz.
14. Though considered a barbarian, the blood of emperors ran through his
veins. A great warrior, his reign was part of the golden age of his
country. He also founded a city named after himself which was for a
while to become the capital of an even greater country than his own.
Who is he? (Hint: Part of his name refers to a warrior fighting with no one by his side. His
crown, still preserved today, is the subject of legends and has been
used to support a controversial idea. The fact that he was a descendant
of emperors must be taken literally.) (Submitted by Decebal)
- Answer: Vladimir Monomakh
(AD. 1053-1125), He was the son of a daughter of the Byzantine Emperor
Constantine IX Monomachos, with Monomachos meaning "He who fights
alone." Vladimir was the ruler of Rus and founder of the city of
Vladimir, an important capital of Russia. His crown was said to have
been given to him by the Emperor of Byzantium, a claim used to support
Moscow as the Third Rome.
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Posted By: poirot
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 16:50
Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!
Shame on poirot. Oh well, for some reason, I had the impression that the question has a non-European flavor, and I kept looking at descendents of African emperors - those of Mali and Ethiopia.
Although Goa does come close: The city of Goa was the capital of the Songhai Empire, but it is named after Goa, a Mansa(king of kings) of the Mali Empire.
Congratulatins Dawn and Decebal!
Anyways, I vote for 14 as the best question on this total quiz.
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"The crisis of yesterday is the joke of tomorrow.� ~ HG Wells
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 17:10
Thanks for starting the vote. To the rest, please vote for your favoirate question!
#14 was definately a tough one!
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Posted By: Perseas
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 17:29
I go with #16. I just spent more time to search for it than the rest. At least i am happy, i finally learned now the etymology of most region names in Eurasia
#14 was easy for me to find as soon as i realized that the warrior fighting with no one by his side should be a reference to monomachos.
Congrats to the winners, each one who participated and finally to Imperator for the great job.
------------- A mathematician is a person who thinks that if there are supposed to be three people in a room, but five come out, then two more must enter the room in order for it to be empty.
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Posted By: poirot
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 17:36
The next quiz is going to be TQ XI4, correct?
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"The crisis of yesterday is the joke of tomorrow.� ~ HG Wells
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 17:40
Right, the next quiz will be XI.4
However, after that, If i'm still running the quiz, I think we'll drop
the parts system. So the subsequent quizzes will be XII, XIII, XIV,
etc...
[quote]#14 was easy for me to find as soon as i realized
that the warrior fighting with no one by his side should
be a reference to monomachos.[/quote]
I guess knowing Greek really pays off!
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Posted By: poirot
Date Posted: 28-Jan-2006 at 17:45
Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh I get a chance to win the average score for a TQ part prize, since I missed the XI Part 1.
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"The crisis of yesterday is the joke of tomorrow.� ~ HG Wells
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Posted By: gcle2003
Date Posted: 29-Jan-2006 at 05:00
What's the final decision about Oxiana vs Transoxiana? I seem to have lost the point again
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Posted By: Kapikulu
Date Posted: 29-Jan-2006 at 09:34
I wrote Alan John Percivale Taylor for question 7, who was also a British historian,who studied at Oxford and had been influenced by his visits to USSR, and who had written a book about the history of the Habsburg monarchy, and commended by Churchill...
He also was seemed like fit to the answer, but well, I haven't thought about Gibbon.
------------- We gave up your happiness
Your hope would be enough;
we couldn't find neither;
we made up sorrows for ourselves;
we couldn't be consoled;
A Strange Orhan Veli
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Posted By: Serge L
Date Posted: 29-Jan-2006 at 16:30
Good quiz, it's always a pleasure. I like II idea to add some easy questions, so that nobody could be discouraged just for not being able to answer a single one. Once you find some anwers just out of the top of your head, you are encouraged to research to answer the more dificult ones too. In fact, when I was the TQ moderator (Eons ago) I seldom thought to do something like that, but actualy never did. Moreover, I agree with GLCE, I would never had thouht of the Roman empire about Q16 -- and I am not anglocentric at all!
- II please pay attention, on the head post, refering to anwers to questions, you wrote "round one" twice. The first should be "round two"
- As to the origin and meaning of total quiz "parts", I think I invented them, and that's why: during the first quizzes, Q&As submitted were very much, a lot more than an acceptable number for just one quiz. Since I could not enclose all of them in a single issue, and everyone was asking me to include his/her question on that quiz . . . I invented the multi-part quiz . Once the Q&A database had been cleared, I asked people to send more questions, after which a new issue of the quiz (with a new number) would have been held.
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 29-Jan-2006 at 16:44
Thanks for the comments, Serge_L - glad to see you back again for the Total Quiz.
Can you believe it, the TQ has gone through more than four years, since
its initiation back in HG's forum in 2001. I guess the TQ is one of the
greatest things AE inherited from Heavengames.
For some reason, I made a lot more errors in terms of scoring on this
one than in the previous two. Partly, I think the increase in
participation has made things a bit more confusing.
gcle, that was a glitch. sorry.
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Posted By: Dawn
Date Posted: 29-Jan-2006 at 22:37
A few more thoughts:
best Question: although 14 was the most difficult/cryptic I really did like the gibbons one(10?) It was devious in it's simplicity and has my vote.
I think it would be a shame to lost the multi part nature of the quizz it's one of those things you don't have to win every part to win the over all you just have to playin as many as possible. If you choose to loose the part thing though you could go for a yearly winner or something like that.
I have an idea about the little problem of correcting the massive number of answers (because I think that it will only grow in the future because of your new set up) and a way to addresss the time zone fairness issue but I have to put a little more thought into it.
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Posted By: Imperator Invictus
Date Posted: 30-Jan-2006 at 02:42
Since things are settling down, it's time for awards:
Moderator Awards
New Player Award
BoudiccasWrath
...for outstanding performance on the Total Quiz as a first-time player.
Question Writer Award
Decebal
...for his contribution of Question No. 14, "Barbarian descendent of
Emperors," which displayed an excellent combination of intrigue, and
challenge.
Total Quiz XI Awards
Winners of Total Quiz XI Part 3
Dawn
Decebal
...for scoring the highest in the Quiz
Honorable Mentions
Poirot
BoudiccasWrath
...for outstanding scores in the Quiz
Congratulations to all winners and partipicants
Thank you all for playing! It was a
pleasure to serve as moderator for this quiz. I hope you'll return in
April for part 4 of Total Quiz XI.
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Posted By: Dawn
Date Posted: 30-Jan-2006 at 18:39
"Winners of Total Quiz XI Part 3" Dawn Decebal
Guess this proves that there is not much to do in Canada in the winter
Congrates Decebal you played great and write good questions too?
Congrates to everyone else that played and tHanks to Imperator Invictus for running the quiz again.
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Posted By: Decebal
Date Posted: 30-Jan-2006 at 22:38
Congratulations Dawn! I must admit that I was hoping to beat you this time. I came pretty close the other two times that I've played. Maybe it was just coincidence, but I felt like the quiz was easier this time (or I'm getting better at them?)... I really felt I had a shot.
Perhaps we should have a team contest and show everyone that Canada can be dominant at something else than hockey or curling
Anyway, congratulations to the other players as well, especially poirot with another strong showing and Boudiccas'wrath, who seems to have arrived as another contender.
------------- What is history but a fable agreed upon?
Napoleon Bonaparte
Even if you are a minority of one, the truth is the truth.- Mohandas Gandhi
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Posted By: Guests
Date Posted: 31-Jan-2006 at 21:20
Thanks, and congrats to Dawn and Decebal. I look forward to both submitting questions to and participating in the next quiz. It was fun, albeit, frustrating at times. As for questions I liked, questions 7 and 12 stood out.
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