From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #3926 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Wednesday, April 8 2020 Volume 14 : Number 3926 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Never lose your photos and videos again with this game-changer! ["Flash D] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Wed, 8 Apr 2020 09:18:53 -0400 From: "Flash Drive" Subject: Never lose your photos and videos again with this game-changer! Never lose your photos and videos again with this game-changer! http://mylost.guru/1m4UAY_gSJ-lOL_K53L6yEFA10WHSgoCRGlmUOcEc9vvuQK3 http://mylost.guru/wfp9xuC8ZjFEQqq2rD8xfyMAduYbU2GvQcRKb2NZL7g0bAY me of the Isle of Man is Ellan Vannin: ellan (Manx pronunciation: ) is a Manx word meaning "island"; Mannin (IPA: ) appears in the genitive case as Vannin (IPA: ), with initial consonant mutation, hence Ellan Vannin, "Island of Mann". The short form used in English is spelled either Mann or Man. The earliest recorded Manx form of the name is Manu or Mana. The Old Irish form of the name is Manau or Mano. Old Welsh records named it as Manaw, also reflected in Manaw Gododdin, the name for an ancient district in north Britain along the lower Firth of Forth. The oldest known reference to the island calls it Mona, in Latin (Julius Caesar, 54 BC); in the 1st century AD, Pliny the Elder records it as Monapia or Monabia, and Ptolemy (2nd century) as MonEda (M???????, Monaoida) or M??????? (Monarina), in Koine Greek. Later Latin references have Mevania or MC&navia (Orosius, 416), and Eubonia or Eumonia by Irish writers. It is found in the Sagas of Icelanders as MC6n. The name is probably cognate with the Welsh name of the island of Anglesey, Ynys MC4n, usually derived from a Celtic word for 'mountain' (reflected in Welsh mynydd, Breton menez, and Scottish Gaelic monadh), from a Proto-Celtic *moniyos. The name was at least secondarily associated with that of ManannC!n mac Lir in Irish mythology (corresponding to Welsh Manawydan fab Ll?r). In the earliest Irish mythological texts, ManannC!n is a king of the otherworld, but the 9th-century Sanas Cormaic identifies a euhemerised ManannC!n as "a famous merchant who resided in, and gave name to, the Isle of Man". Later, a ManannC!n is recorded as the first king of Mann in a Manx poem (dated 1504). History Main article: History of the Isle of Man The Braaid in central Isle of Man, with remnants of a Celtic-Norse roundhouse and two longhouses, c. AD 650b950 The island was cut off from the surrounding islands around 8000 BC. Humans colonised it by traveling by sea some time before 6500 BC. The first occupants were hunter-gatherers and fishermen. Examples of their tools are kept at the Manx Museum. The Kingdom of the Isles about the year 1100 The Neolithic Period marked the beginning of farming, and the people began to build megalithic monuments, such as Cashtal yn Ard near Maughold, King Orry's Grave at Laxey, Meayll Circle near Cregneash, and Ballaharra Stones at St John's. There were also the loc ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #3926 **********************************************