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Page 10

Newsletter 99, Winter 2012  © Hampshire Mills Group

QUIZZICAL CORNER

No Winter Quiz but Here are the Answers to the Autumn Brainteasers……

 

Q1:  The French- named Beaulieu River once had a very different name:  River Exe.  Do you know the origins of the name Exe, where the river starts and how long it is?

Answer: According to Wikipedia: 

The Beaulieu River, formerly known as the River Exe, is a small river flowing south through the New Forest in the county of Hampshire in southern England. The name "Beaulieu" is French, meaning "beautiful place".

The earlier name, "Exe", is Brythonic, deriving from an original Ancient British word '*Iska', which is also at the root of other Exe and Esk river-names in England, and also the Usk in Wales (Wysg in Welsh). Its root meaning may be "fish" or "fish-place", as it seems to be cognate with the Latin "pisces" and Greek "ichthus", as well as English "fish".

The Beaulieu River rises near Lyndhurst in the centre of the New Forest, and flows south-easterly across the forest heaths to the village of Beaulieu. The river is some 12 miles (19 km) long, of which the last 4 miles (6.4 km) are tidal. Unusually, the entire river, including its bed, is owned by Lord Montagu of Beaulieu.

 

Q2.  Where are you likely to see The Maid of the Mill performed, what with and by whom?

Answer:  This is a traditional Cotswold dance performed by a team of Morris Dancers so you are particularly likely to see them at Bampton on Whit Mondays  clutching handkerchiefs which are tied together or linked.

(I have yet to establish what connection it has with mills, but knowing Morris dances probably means a lot of milling about -  whilst showing off to a miller’s daughter what intricate wheels can be made with a lot of handkerchiefs tied together! – Ed.)

 

Q3.  There are several types of thimbles.  Why would you find a thimble on a sailing boat?

Answer:  Sailing boats’ sail ropes  have shaped metal bands helping to take the strain.  They are called Thimble Eye Splice.  With the introduction of the more advanced sailing ships, reliable sails became necessary and these types of thimbles were designed specifically for help in creating these sails.

 

 

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