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Saturday, January 25, 2014

Vevoda's Cellar or Events in Time and Space

Update: I think I have them figured out, I put Berlin/Danzig back together, took out Standefer and realized that there were two locations listed on the copyright notice page.  That makes 19 total. And after I updated this post, I remembered that geekyzen had found some additional info on Calais for me. That's been added too.


I know there had been some discussion as the whether the vintages in Vevoda's relate the Eotvos Wheel as a cipher.  Maybe they are, but it just occurred to me that all the wines of Vevoda's wine that we know start with word noir, or the french word for black, and there have been 19 of them possibly identified on the SFiles22 blog.  The first 11 come direct from Vevoda's cellar, but on page 262, Eric notes that the five cities and dates listed are similar to the markings on the barrels and Eric makes a note about "Standefer 2010" as a joke in relation to the other vintages.  Could these be related to Straka's novel The Black Nineteen in some way as also noted by MJCarp at SFiles22?
  1. Noir Calais 1912: Fictional riot that takes place in 1912 at Calais, France in SOT.  Calais built the monument Le Pluviose in 1912 to commemorate the death of 27 when the steamer Pas de Calaise accidentally cause the submarine, Pluviose, to sink in May 1910, and the monument was not dedicated until 1913.  Per gz: Fourteen people were killed in a coal mine explosion at the Clarence Coal Company at Pas de Calais, France.
  2. Noir Ypres 1915: Ypres, Belgium. Second battle of Ypres during World War I, notable because the it was the first time that the Germans used poison gas on a mass scale. 
  3. Noir NV:  Still not sure on this one, as noted in the comments on the SFiles22, state codes weren't in use yet, so I haven't tracked this one down yet.  (edited to note: it was discussed in the comments that the NV might be an abbreviation to denote current events.  I'm not sure and would like to research some more before I come to a conclusion.)
  4. Black Taranaki 1863:  The Second Taranaki War was a conflict between the Maori and New Zealand government. 
  5. Noir Odessa 1871: The Odessa pogrom, one in a series of violence targeting the Jews in Odessa, a city in Ukraine. 
  6. Noir Dahomey 1840: Dahomey was an African country ruled by a monarchy in what is now Benin.  Dahomey was involved in the profitable slave trade. In 1840, Dahomey attempted to take over Yoruba territory.
  7. Noir Galway 1831:  This one is interesting doesn't appear to reference an act of violence.  The Wardenship of Galway was dissolved by the Church of Ireland in 1831.  Edmund Ffrench was the last warden.  Galway may also reference the tribes of Galway, a group of a powerful families that ran Galway until the late 19th century.  A magistrate does note that something was happening in Galway in 1831, but the details were not given in The Edinburgh Review.
  8. Noir Bijapur 1791: Doji Bara famine in South Asia.  An El Nino event caused a drought in the area from 1791-1792.  In one estimate, famine and disease may have contributed to the deaths of 11 million people. 
  9. Noir Adana 1909: The Adana Massacre occurred in Adana Province of the Ottoman Empire against the Armenian population there.
  10. Noir Rio Negro 1879:  Basically a state-sponsored land grab from the indigenous populations, in 1878, a massive campaign started to clear the land between the Negro River and the Alsina Trench by armed forces. 
  11. Noir Barkol 1756:  Refers to the Qing Dynasty's annexation of the area formerly controlled by the Zunghar Khanate. In 1756, the Chinese emperor ordered the death of all men in Barkol or Suzhou.  The murdered men's wives and children were given to soldiers in the emperor's army. 
  12. Tangier (Jun) 1905:  The First Moroccan Crisis refers to Germany's support of Morocco as an independent state, but the support damaged Germany's relations with France and the U.S.  The crisis reached a peak in June 1905, and is considered a contributing factor to WWI. 
  13. B___ (Oct) 1906:  Unable to locate, still researching. 
  14. Los Angeles (Dec) 1910:  Llewellyn Iron Works bombing was preceded by a bombing of the Los Angeles Times in October and resulted in the arrest and conviction of labor leaders. 
  15. Tripoli (Sep) 1911:  The Italo-Turkish war was Italy's attempt to assert it rights over parts of what is now Libya.  It marked the use of the first aerial bomb dropped from an airplane. 
  16. Salonika (Thessaloniki) (Mar) 1912:  Geekyzen and Jillp have brought it to me that Salonika is an alternate name for Thessaloniki.   And in 1912 Greece sunk an Ottoman ship, the Feth-i_Bülend in the harbor of Thessaloniki.
  17. Berlin/Danzig 1908:  The line from Berlin to Danzig(Gdansk) is a rough border for the Polish corridor.  The German Empire and the Kingdom of Prussia confiscated land and evicted the ethnic Polish population (although this was reversed in 1925). 
  18. New York 1949:  (from the SOT copyright notice) Airplane crash on October 28th in the Azores.  The plane was headed for New York.  Also, the Peekskill riots happened in 1949.
  19. Toronto 1949:  (from the SOT copyright notice) The SS Noronic disaster, a fire started in a linen closet and was fueled by the lemon scented furniture polish which led to several fatalities.  
(edit: minor grammar/spelling fix)
(1/27/2014 added additional places and dates)



18 comments:

  1. *POSSIBLE* 1906 (Oct) B___ -- Buckingham, Quebec.

    http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=FA0B16FC3D5512738DDDA00894D8415B868CF1D3

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    1. Very difficult to find anything about the Buckingham Strike. The NYT article indicates that the workers "stormed the hill" to the mill, where the mill owners were waiting with armed police who shot the workers "without parleying."

      Then there's this: en.wikipedia.org/wiki?title=Talk:Buckingham%2C_Quebec, which was removed from the Wikipedia Article due to "POV" issues. Definitely sympathetic to the workers -- and the only other mention I could find.


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    2. How about the Brownsville Affair? I think you mentioned this once. I can't remember in connection to what now though.

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    3. Dutch Intervention in Bali, 1906
      San Francisco Earthquake, 1906 (Burlingame suffered damage, and perhaps Benicia, but it sounds as though Berkeley and Belvedere were less affected as they were receiving refugees)
      The Valencia sunk after hitting rocks in British Columbia, 1906.
      Belfast linen strike 1906
      Macedonian Strugge, Bulgaria vs. Greece 1904-1908. Pogroms against ethnic greeks in Bulgaria in 1906, massacres of Bulgarian civilians. Two of the hardest hit areas, Bitola and Skopje.

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  2. I thought I would just look at one of your ? ones. I chose Galway 1893 because there was no violence there. This intrigued me. So I tried to find something in Galway in 1893. I found the Corrib Viaduct. http://archiseek.com/2013/clifden-railway-viaduct-galway/#.UuQc9xAo61s

    I found a bit of information about this project. It was not without some difficulties.

    http://www.historyireland.com/20th-century-contemporary-history/the-connemara-railway-1895-1935/

    One year later, May 1892, payment of wages was said to be irregular and in some places did not take place at all. The men were to be paid fortnightly, on Fridays and Saturdays. Those from around Galway were receiving regular wages, but those at Moycullen were forced to come into the city demanding payment. They were told there was no money for them, but that as soon as some would arrive they would be paid. Workers in Oughterard took out summonses against Braddock. And in Clifden, one hundred and eighteen men went on strike at the end of May. However, following discussions they were back at work by the middle of June; but payment of wages continued to be irregular. By now Braddock had run up debts among the traders in Galway city. They complained to the company, accusing it of bringing a ‘mere adventurer and pauper contractor into the area’. But the MGWRC refused to accept responsibility for Braddock’s debts. However, on 8 July 1892, the company was forced to take action and took possession of the entire works, along with all plant and machinery, for breach of contract.

    I can't find proof of any riots occurring due to these inequitable or unpaid wages though.

    So I kept looking.

    I searched "problems building corrib viaduct" thinking maybe people died building it. But instead, I got this...

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corrib_gas_controversy


    The Corrib gas controversy concerns plans by Shell E&P Ireland, Statoil Exploration (Ireland) Limited, Vermilion Energy Trust and the Irish government for processing the Corrib gas field through Broadhaven and Sruth Fada Conn Bays in Kilcommon parish, Erris, County Mayo, and objections raised against those plans.

    It reminded me of Jill Aggie's strange return for the coordinates on the Mallon Planetarium site. Shell again.

    More rigs. More pipelines. Sorry. This does not answer the question completely. But it shows history repeating itself in Galway. Labor problems.

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    1. I'm a little confused, the date on Galway is 1831. Were you looking for other years that things may have happened?

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    2. Nope, you're right. The year is wrong. I think the years are one layer. The places are another. The year will pinpoint a particular event. Perhaps related to other events. The location maybe more important than the time.

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  3. Oh, Jill's comments about Cormorant are in the Mallon stub here: http://wp.me/p4bg2Y-11i It's what leads me to the half-baked theory about the oil rig worker. http://wp.me/p4bg2Y-15C before I even looked at Galway. I don't know. It is below. It is everywhere. Stretching across the world. Uniting it in some strange way. Like the railroads did in the past. Labor issues repeated. Gas. Oil. It just seems very strange to me when we are not looking for this information and it shows itself over and over.

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    1. Agreed! And you seem to be able to pull it all together before we even know it needs pulling.

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    2. I didn't. I wrote that Oil Rigger thing because of some report. I thought the "immersion" was interesting in general. Not because of oil rigging but just about being in the water too long and its effects. It was when S. is at such an extreme depth, I had to wonder how high would you be to plunge to this depth. Like an oil rig. So went back and looked at the report. Of course, S.'s time period doesn't fit though right? That's why it's only half-baked. Okay, I checked. There were floating oil rigs back then. Weird. I didn't think so. There were not many though. In its infancy. I guess coal back then. Oil now. It's black. It's a substance. We've been fighting about "a substance" throughout time. The stuff changes but the need to control it, be the country that controls it, doesn't seem to change.

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  4. Ah, I see. Still -- kudos.

    Here's a Senate Committee report (Education and Labor) from 1939 about their 1937 investigation into Labor Rights that Leo Huberman wrote about (https://archive.org/details/laborspyracket00huberich) [I got his name and that book from one of the card catalog cards.] The Senate Committee document is about Industrial Munitions purchases. The numbers are disgusting.

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    1. and here's the link to the report... http://debs.indstate.edu/u5885v5_1939.pdf

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  5. Criminy: This is from Radio Straka Transmission 5 (transcript at SFiles22):

    "So, 1905, June, Tangier, Morocco. It's the first Moroccan crisis, the imperial struggle between Germany and France. 1906, in October, the Balkan's is another center of tension in the build up to the Great War. 1908, in October, in Danzig, Berlin Germany where there are crushing the Bosnian crisis in violation of the Treaty of Berlin and then in 1910 in December in Los Angeles in the American, in America, the Times bombing, of course, the Los Angeles Times. In 1911, September, Tripoli, Libya, Tripoli Massacres, the massacres by the Italian troops including those arial bombardments we talked about. 1912, in March, Solonika, in Greece. This was the first Blakan War. ? liberation of the Solonika. So, the powerful control us. Their control is not absolute. This is the story. "Ship of Theseus" three hundred ninety-six, page 396. [not in book]"

    http://sfiles22.blogspot.com/2013/10/radio-straka-transmission-five.html

    Did I just have a duh moment here?

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  6. The Balkans would include Bulgaria, so they would have been involved in the Macedonia conflict, too. It's a bit frustrating as there are so many threads to pull, too many to keep track of. I did go back to the notes on SFiles22 and Berlin/Danzig maybe shouldn't have been separated, but I'm leaving them for now.

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  7. Is #13 part of "Ship of Theseus" itself? The town "S" ends up in when the bomb explodes is referred to as B___. (p89)

    That would also help us date that particular portion of the book.

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  8. It's very possible. I will say with the traven rabbit hole I found, the lines between fiction and history are getting very fuzzy. It would make sense for B. to reference an "in-book" event.

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  9. NV means Non-Vintage. It's used for sparkling wines, Port, Sherry, and fortified wines that are of mixed date.

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  10. fiction and history are getting very fuzzy

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