This is pretty different from all of the other examples, but I thought I would throw this out here: The Aztec practice of human sacrifice. While the majority of adults sacrifices are thought to have been warriors captured in battle, the children sacrificed are thought to have been primarily noble...
@amflare Just like the Night's Watch, it's an institution which had a very important function in society and thus also was held in great esteem, but it acquired a stigma as its function degraded. +1 for an excellent example "out of left field". — errantlinguist15 hours ago
D, none of the above
The ancient error is touched on slightly earlier in the chapter, clarifying that they mean appearing in forms of majesty amongst the Children of Iluvatar as opposed to using secrecy (the Istari)
And this the Valar did, desiring to amend the errors of old, especially that...
get source novel, ctrl + f line in question, scroll up one page, copy paste text, post.
> are/were there any real-life institutions/orders/traditions which originally served a highly-respected function to everyone but became stigmatized over time to everyone except for a certain subculture and yet continued to exist for a long time†?
i wonder if the fact that robbert fought and win 3 battles in the same days is historically acurate, would it be off-topic to ask-it in history SE as it's fantasy-related ?
I was looking at the Google Analytics data1 for our site the other day, and I noticed something odd.
We have access to data on referral traffic. We know that:
Referral traffic is Google's method of reporting visits that came to
your site from sources outside of its search engine. When som...
@TheLethalCarrot The monthly rankings for everyone but Valorum depend on what content is asked, if HP is active, Bella is second, if LotR is asked (or star wars or questions I can google) i'm usually higher up and if it's whatever stuff you know you're in second
I reckon I could've beaten you last month, had I been active through the entire month as opposed to just the latter 2/3s
The Battle of the Alma (20 September 1854), which is usually considered the first battle of the Crimean War (1853–1856), took place just south of the River Alma in the Crimea. An Anglo-French force under Jacques Leroy de Saint Arnaud and FitzRoy Somerset, 1st Baron Raglan defeated General Aleksandr Sergeyevich Menshikov's Russian army, which suffered around 6,000 casualties.
== Prelude ==
The Anglo-French forces landed on the western coast of the Crimean peninsula some 35 miles (56 km) north of Sevastopol, on 13 September 1854, at the Gulf of Kalamita ("Calamity Bay"). Although disorganised and...
Three battles on same day, collectively one battle
The result was inverse tho. Allies won, Russians lost
1st: Allies win, Russians retreat. 2nd: Russians strike back, Allies retreat in confusion, Allies rally, Russians leg it. 3rd: Allies advance, Russians run for it
In the fantasy fiction A Song of Ice and Fire/Game of thrones, during Robert's Rebellion, three battles were fought in the same day, in the same place.
There where particular conditions that lead to this event: Robert Baratheon knew that his ennemies would gather in particular place, so he decid...
@Aegon i don't hink so, i though the HNQ algorythm was also based on answer (number of answered and cumulative score) so as there are no answer, no hotness
@TheLethalCarrot Cuz it's obviously fake if it gets its facts wrong. It's not like Americans are just generally oblivious to anything outside their own orbit...
Well I tend not to take much offence but I know there are those who seem to find pleasure of looking for things to take offence at, even on behalf of people
I'm voting to close this as too broad, the OP has stated in multiple comments etc. that their question is vague, and that they're looking for any parallels, this has led to the subjective list below were there is no one right answer but any example showing parallels is a valid answer. This does not fit the Q&A style of the site. — Edlothiad9 secs ago
@TheLethalCarrot "It is a common misconception that Hadrian's Wall marks the boundary between England and Scotland. In fact Hadrian's Wall lies entirely within England and has never formed the Anglo-Scottish border.[8] While it is less than 0.6 miles (1.0 km) south of the border with Scotland in the west at Bowness-on-Solway, in the east it is as much as 68 miles (109 km) away"
Provide an answer that meets all of the following criteria (source): it is the highest scoring answer on the question (source) it does not have the accepted checkmark it has a score of 23 or more it has at least one vote more than double the score of the accepted answer the accepted answer has a score of 11 or more it is not an answer to your own question (source)
I have been after the elusive Populist badge for a long time. It has been almost a year now and it still remains elusive as the candidate answer is shy of one vote and I am getting desperate.
While I am confident of the answer's quality, I am not sure if asking people to consider upvoting the an...
What are badge name's requirements?
Why didn't I get badge name (right now)?
Which badges can I earn multiple times?
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@Aegon You mean providing a good answer to a question citing every occurrence in canon as opposed to some random calculation of years stating that's the requirement when it really isn't?
However you like
George R. R. Martin has never been one for pronunciations and has said a few times that you can pronounce anything however you like.
Favorite character?
GRRM : Tyrion in Ice and Fire. Abner Marsh in Fevre Dream.
Glad to hear you pronounce the names
GRRM: In my youth I ...
@Edlothiad Pronunciations are regional: Grarse and Grass for example. In Nottingham we pronounce the city Notten'am, Americans call it NottingHAM and a lot of others just say Nottingham as it's written. There are loads of examples
...I don't believe that disinterest means what you think it means. At least, what it's supposed to mean, until people got very mixed up and started using disinterested as a synonym for uninterested.
Adjective: disinterested (comparative more disinterested, superlative most disinterested)
Having no stake or interest in the outcome; free of bias, impartial. [from 17th c.]
1919, W. Somerset Maugham, The Moon and Sixpence, ch. 1:
With his disinterested passion for art, he had a real desire to call the attention of the wise to a talent which was in the highest degree original; [...]
2011, Steven Pinker, The Better Angels of Our Nature, Penguin 2012, p. 220:
People are better off abjuring violence, if everyone else agrees to do so, and vesting authority in a disinterested third party.
Oh sure... after a certain while it becomes accepted and becomes acceptable. That doesn't mean that I won't complain about it while in the middle stage :P
plus, maybe Ser Royce is so uninterested, that he actually become disinterested. He didn't care about it that much, that he had no interest in the darkness whatsoever, be it 'un' or 'dis'