Friday, October 31, 2008
Thursday, October 30, 2008
your fate is sealed....
as well as the two german wax seals, i recently picked up another seal. i happened upon it quite by chance, so i see it as fortuitous. i did manage to contact someone who is knowledgeable about these things, and got a rough market value, and some information.
the seal is likely a cast steel stock item, that was then hand engraved by a skilled engraver. the time period estimated for the piece is likely early British Victorian (The Victorian era spanned roughly 1833~1901).
one of these days, i'll bite the bullet and pay to have someone who deals with heraldic symbols to translate this seal - the possible history of it intrigues me. seals were generally used as identification. letters or documents were sealed to prevent/show tampering, and guarantee the identity of the sender. when the owner of a seal died, the seal was generally destroyed as well to prevent (what i guess equates to in these days) identity theft. i imagine they weren't terribly common either, as they were probably fairly expensive to have made, and not really required by the working classes.
i myself wonder if this was for a wedding ban - as it appears to be two family crests hung together by a tied ribbon from a crown, and wreathed by some type of flowering vine.
quite an amazing amount of detail, given that the oval is just over an inch at it's longest point.
~ paul @ 7:56 AM
boxes: the play is the thing, writing
Monday, October 27, 2008
in the news....
this just in... eyewitness photos of a giant troll terrorizing the local trains. stay tuned for details at eleven....
* ok, you got me..... that's pretty much all i have. the troll took a nap - trains ran on schedule unscathed. no mayhem.
~ paul @ 10:41 PM
boxes: humour, the play is the thing
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
going postal....
wow... i thought the price of gas was bad. i just went to mail a small package (size 1 padded envelope, about 4"x8"x1/2"). i was given 2 prices:
standard mail: $ 3.75
express mail: $ 51.32
i had to have her repeat the second price, as she was trying not to laugh as she said it. makes me wonder, is it hand delivered by someone that looks like this* if you pick option 2?
i mention it only because the difference was so vast i was completely stunned by it. as you can imagine, i sent it regular post. i don't need it delivered in 5-8 business days.... 3-6 weeks suits me just fine, as it rarely ever takes that long between major cities.
heck, even regular mail to a friend in a tiny little town in mexico only takes 4 weeks.
*sorry grant, that was as close to a Jbunny as i could find for this post.
Sunday, October 19, 2008
heil history....
a while back, i picked up a was seal stamp that i thought was quite interesting, and probably not very common. i posted about it, as i was looking for a translation of the high german. my father in-law didn't learn high german, and could only partly translate it.
when i purchased the seal, the place selling it had a second seal, but at the time i didn't have the money (well, still don't but....) and didn't really realize the significance until much later. here is the first seal:
I believe I have mostly tranlated (or figured out) the text:
Staatliches Jahn Gnmnarium in Salzwedel
Staatliches: National
Jahn Gnmnarium: Jahn Gymnasium: Friedrich Ludwig Jahn School
in Salzwedel: Town of Salzwedel
So, this was likely the seal used for the 'National Jahn School in Salzwedel' during the Nazi rule.
the second seal, i later realized when i began looking into translating the first, had the coat of arms for the town of Salzwedel on it. this is what made me realize i should probably go back and buy it and keep the two together. thankfully, it was a not very interesting chunk of brass, and over a year later it was still exactly in the same place. I will mention that this seal does not have a handle, and it appears to have previously been mounted to something that was removed. Hence it is only a square of brass about 1/2" high - and thankfully easy to miss.
Konigl PR Gymnasium Salzwedel
Konigl PR: Royal Priviledged
Gymnasium: School
Salzwedel: Town of Salzwedel
This appears to be the seal that was in use for the 'Royal (Grammar) School - Salzwedel' as it was in 1918 - until renamed Jahn Gymnasium in 1931, and was likely the precursor to the seal above.
I would be more than happy to be corrected by anyone who has better knowledge of such things, as I've relied primarily on Google.
images were scanned and flipped for readability - they are actually mirror images so that the was seal itself appears as above.
How did they end up in my hands? I bought them from a shop that specializes in military memorabilia and antiques. They were liquidating someone's collection of Nazi memorabilia. How they got them is anyone's guess - but I would imagine at some point, someone decided they were a nice 'souvenir' while they were helping to liberate the town.
misc notes during researching the above:
Nazi Rise to power: 1925-1933
WWII: 1937-1945
Jahn School History (excerpts):
6th Period National Gymnasium- National Gymnasium Jahn 1918 - 1937
- 1918 November-Revolution: Royal Grammar School will state humanistic Gymnasium with 9 years of schooling
- 1931 Naming: Jahn Gymnasium
- 1937 Converting the state into high school gymnasium for boys with 8 years of schooling
- 1943 - 1945 Use of students of class from 6 to 8 as an Air Force-Navy assistant helpers at the
- 1939 - 1945 Second World War - More than 140 former pupils had their lives as victims of World War II
some history of the town of Salzwedel, snipped from wikipedia:
Salzwedel (IPA: [ˈzaltsveːdəl], officially known as Hansestadt Salzwedel, is a town in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. It is the capital of the district (Kreis) of Altmarkkreis Salzwedel.
The castle of Salzwedel in the Altmark was first documented in 1112. As part of the Margraviate of Brandenburg, the settlement was first mentioned as a town in 1233.
As in other German cities during the time of Nazi Germany under Adolf Hitler, the Jewish segment of the population of the city was systematically disowned and driven out of the city.
In 1943, the Neuengamme concentration camp built a female subcamp in Salzwedel, capable of holding more than 1,000 female prisoners. Eventually more than 3,000 women were held there, both Jews and non-Jews. The guard staff at the camp included sixty SS men and women. One Aufseherin is known today by name, Lieselotte Darnstaedt, who was born in 1908. Darnstaedt also served at Ravensbrück before coming to Salzwedel. On April 29, 1945, the US Army liberated the Salzwedel women's subcamp, and also a men's camp nearby for male non-German political prisoners. They were shocked to find more than ninety corpses of women who had died of typhus, dysentery and malaria. At the beginning of 1945, prior to the arrival of American ground forces, Allied war planes attacked the main train station of Salzwedel, killing 300 people. The US Army eventually turned over control of the city to the Soviet Red Army, causing Salzwedel to eventually become part of the German Democratic Republic.
On November 9, 1989 the East-West German border crossing near Salzwedel was openend, along with East-West border crossings in the rest of the country, allowing East Germans residing in Salzwedel and elsewhere to travel freely to West Germany for the first time since the building of the Berlin Wall. In 1990 Salzwedel received its first democratically elected city government.
~ paul @ 4:29 PM
boxes: life, the play is the thing
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
yet more freeware....
Paint.net 3.10: http://www.getpaint.net/
http://www.brandonz.net/projects/zscreen/index.html
http://www.apophysis.org/ - Fractal
http://keepass.info/index.html
just some links to interesting or handy items... nothing mind blowing... more just a reminder for myself when my system crashes and i must rebuild.
Monday, October 13, 2008
Gobble Gobble....
Thursday, October 09, 2008
for sale cheap....
head on over to e-bay and bid on one of the coolest things I've ever seen.
for sale, cheap... slightly used... only fired once.
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=180295129086
~ paul @ 8:02 PM
boxes: the play is the thing
Wednesday, October 08, 2008
today's post brought to you by.....
and now a word from our sponsor....
circumlocution
\sir-kuhm-loh-KYOO-shuhn\, noun:
The use of many words to express an idea that might be expressed by few; indirect or roundabout language.
Circumlocution comes from Latin circumlocutio, circumlocution-, from circum, "around" + loquor, loqui, "to speak."
~ paul @ 7:15 PM
boxes: the play is the thing, thots
Friday, October 03, 2008
spending money.....
took wednesday off since the weather was nice, and headed to a small town an hour or so away that has a decent collection of antique stores. i don't usually buy much - prices are, well... antique store prices. but once in a while you find something you either just have to have, or the price is reasonable (because the person doesn't really know what they have).
it's also interesting because you can tell where my current focus is when i head out there by what i've bought. in the past couple of years, it's been tools mostly. this round was something different.
behold:
the Art Deco Swivodex Zephyr Glass Inkwell, with unspillable swivelling base. (mine didn't include the pen, but i've included the image so you get a better sense of it.)
of the price I see online for these - $65 CDN)
i also ran across a fountain pen - i'd never heard of the brand, so i walked away, only to spend 3 hours of extra driving to go back the next day ;P
the Globetrotter, by Elysee - slim pen in bright steel with a map of the world applied in 24k gold plate, fine nib in 14k gold, 1992-c1997.
The company had a short history, but I have yet to read a bad review about these pens - so far i'm very impressed by how nice it is to write with, although perhaps a little slimmer than I'm used to (slightly larger diameter than a pencil or bic stick pen).
1925 Paul Dummert begins making jewelry in Pforzheim, Germany
1980 Élysée brand is created
1991 Staedtler acquires Élysée
2000 Élysée ceases production