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Christopher 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/
Hello Chris. I believe the Greek for "born" is something like "genetos." Perhaps he is thinking in Latin; writing in Greek script. After all, the Latin "u" would transliterate the Greek omicron.
Robert would also be completely different in Greek. So the Greek script, Latin thought would be even MORE pedantic.
Hello Bob. If my conjecture is correct, he is indicating--in his own curious way--that his real name is Robert Stephenson. So he would be using the brace to introduce a bracketed remark. (Oh, yes. For the record, I was born Robert Stephenson--and I know BOTH Greek and Latin.)
I'm not sure about three parts, Sam, but the loop of the y certainly does seem to intrude into what's written below.
I recognised two Greek roots at either end ("cat" and "words")... it's the bit in the middle that doesn't seem to add up, Debs!
It 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.
This was picked up by Robert Sloman and Barry Letts, scriptwriters for Dr Who in the 1970s. During one classic story, The Daemons, they had The Master officiating at a Black Mass to summon the daemon Azal. To chants from his coven, The Master intoned a hellish spell which culminated in the chilling and exultant "Malelt tilad Ahyram!" as the daemon appeared. Happily, this "mystic bollocks" was only "Mary had a little lamb", recited backwards
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