And here I was expecting Gareth to come in and say "Can't help you Debs, it's all Greek to me."
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Help please, what does this say?
Collapse
X
-
Hi -
I think it's meant to be Latin, transliterated into pretty rotten Greek.
Letter by letter, then:
nu, alpha, tau, upsilon, sigma (terminal): representing natus, meaning something like "born" (someone will have to help me with the Latin).
And the second word:
rho (upper case), omega, beta, epsilon (very cursive), rho, tau, upsilon, sigma: the last two letters in the upper case for no apparent reason, representing Robertus, meaning something like Robert.
"Born Robert" ... but signed as Roslyn.
It's a pretty awful job, to be honest, and highly pretentious. Old Dean Liddell is turning in his grave.
Regards,
Mark
* I acknowledge that Lynn arrived at this suggestion a couple of pages ago.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by lynn cates View PostHello Chris. By Jove! What about "born Robert S"?
What a pedantic chap!Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
Comment
-
Originally posted by m_w_r View PostI think it's meant to be Latin, transliterated into pretty rotten Greek.
Letter by letter, then:
nu, alpha, tau, upsilon, sigma (terminal): representing natus, meaning something like "born" (someone will have to help me with the Latin).
And the second word:
rho (upper case), omega, beta, epsilon (very cursive), rho, tau, upsilon, sigma: the last two letters in the upper case for no apparent reason, representing Robertus, meaning something like Robert.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Chris View Postthe transliteration into Greek brings to mind Rennes-le-Chateau, where the same thing was done to conceal a message in a fake inscription that was supposed to have been on a tombstone in the churchyard.Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
Comment
-
Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostThe inscription on the tomb read "Et in Arcadia Ego"... which, loosely translated, means "This Side Up"
Comment
-
Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostIt might just be a load of "mystic bollocks", of course. It strikes me that there was a fad to make up incantations/inscriptions in apparently "ancient tongues" amongst some occultists of that era, and later. One thinks of Lovecraft, Crowley and (amongst fiction writers) Dennis Wheatley in this context.
Maybe not so much the occult motive as D'Onston once more demonstrating his eruditeness by flexing his knowledge of Latin and Greek in, of all places, signing the marriage register, just like how he had to fling in his knowledge of French in his letter of 16 October 1888 to the City of London police, that the killer took an organ "d'une femme prostituée" for which he (of course) knew a specific black magic use, and that the word "Juwes" was actually "Juives"--French for "Jews"--or so he thought, though it's actually French for les demoiselles juives -- D'O, clever pants!!!
Chris
ChrisChristopher T. George
Organizer, RipperCon #JacktheRipper-#True Crime Conference
just held in Baltimore, April 7-8, 2018.
For information about RipperCon, go to http://rippercon.com/
RipperCon 2018 talks can now be heard at http://www.casebook.org/podcast/
Comment
Comment