Royal Game Of Ur (2600 BC – 2400 BC)
Thousands of years ago, the Royal Game of Ur was a popular pastime for the people of Mediterranean and Middle East regions. As Irving Finkel, assistant keeper in the Department of the Middle East at London's British Museum, explains, "For such a long time, there were no forms of entertainment. Games had an excellent stronghold in that environment. They were unrivaled."
you haven't seen Galaxy Quest, have you?
it's interesting because nobody was able to decipher it. It was sold to Rudolf II at some point so chances are it was just faked to make money, however when they analyzed the texts there was no statistical evidence that it was just made up. It checked out as a language (from a statstical point of view) so it _may_ well be a code.
#24 Mm-hm. "Detailed."
#28 Is he resting his massive chin on his... ? Impressive, indeed.
#30 No forms of entertainment? There were toys for kids, there was music, dancing, many forms of art, plays, drinking, orgies... more drinking and more orgies... that's... well, that's about it, I guess.
#33 They seem unsure. The sign reads: "Burial site of Richard III?"
So how old was Napoleon in the early 1700s?
#10 Galileo was wrong. The 97% scientific consensus was...