søndag den 25. maj 2025

The Insect-Warfare

 

 

 

WTF???!!!!!!!!!! So what I saw some days ago as a red, itchy mark on my neck - which still is with me although not as big - happened because this delicate part of my body was turned into a kind of lavatory by some damn insect???? And, by the way, isn't it too early for mosquitos, as the season for their warfare on humans should be in July or August? I think so, and right now it's way too cold both for them, me and all sensible creatures, so what bit me and gave me this itchy, sore wound???? 


It looks somewhat like this, which is supposed to be a mosquito bite

I'm not in favor of mosquitos, so I was genuinely shocked to learn that they were part of Nazi plans for "biological warfare", and that they made some advanced studies, both in collecting the insects, in keeping them alive and their worth as "animal bombs". Actually, it seems that they in 1944 flooded some otherwise drained areas and planted loads of starving mosquitos to see how good they were in conveying malaria to the unsuspecting population living there. According to my information, they did that in 1944 in Italy, but I'm not sure, this information is quite reliable. If it happened, then why did they choose an ally as their "research animal"??? According to this information, the area wasn't drained and cleaned up again until the 1950s and in the meantime many innocent people were killed by insects, as that's what malaria does all too often ....


On a yearly basis, those small annoying creatures, called mosquitos, kill more people than e.g. lions or tigers. Actually, they top the list of animals killing humans.


Wikipedia

This being the case, it does make sense that the Nazis planned to use mosquitos as an advanced biological weapon: They are small, but may be lethal.


 

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/feb/14/nazi-scientists-mosquitoes-biological-weapon 

 

https://theconversation.com/is-it-ethical-to-use-data-from-nazi-medical-experiments-39928

 

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-26193808 

 

https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/about/index.html 

 

Wikipedia


fredag den 23. maj 2025

Men Are So Very Easy

 

Being a man himself, that dentist knows his male patients through and through, and he doesn't need to force the mouth open on any of them. However, it may prove difficult to make these patients close their mouth again to look what women call "normal".

Are men really that easy, and do women think that's the case? Sorry, to confirm that suspicion, but I do think so, although I take it that some of it is make-believe or even play-acting on the part of the men.

A relationship made in Heaven? If that's not what he believes, then why stalk that pretty lady when it's obviously a waste of time?

Some men make a big deal out of some (maybe) not so pretty physically traits in a specific woman, especially some surplus weight, even berating her for them. However, the same men who do that will often be totally blind to the fact that their looks aren't what they may have been when they themselves were young and sexy.


What a loss for his women acquaintances!!!! Are we to surmise that they are devastated?
 
When visiting some special websites, I often see postings or comments by men who complain about the looks of women of today. (Some) women may feel the same way about men, but I seldom see postings or comments about that kind of disappointment, how come? Could it be because women are afraid to make men sad by that kind of complaints, and if so, why don't men feel that way about them? Women don't appreciate being called names or being ridiculed by men for not fulfilling their dreams of "perfect womanhood" so why would they expect that if it's not OK to do the same to them? As to those "perfect women" they seem to have tired out on all those men who are not perfect, and even proud of it ....


Build Your Own Religion

 

Actually, not a bad idea - or is it? To "shop" religions, or just parts of religions, after one's mood or wishes isn't considered all right to do, as it indicates that here we have an individual who hasn't any genuine FAITH. The "Ideal Religion" is supposed to be a fixed entity, propped up with "facts" of a certain kind: They are entirely built on beliefs and faith, wishes and fantasies, not hardcore proofs, like in a well-documented historical event.


Anyway, maybe someone just loves specific parts of The Quran, but - very understandable - hates what it says about the subjection of women. To such a person, the solution might be to ignore that part and substitute it with, e.g. some Buddhist stuff. Also, let's imagine that the same person hates what was done to Jesus and those two poor robbers who were executed with him, so he/she decides to skip that part and maybe go straight back to the much more cozy scenery of the stable where Mary gave birth to him?

Oops, that sure would transform the story and give it some new perspectives, but why not? I don't think I've ever seen any crucifixion sceneries with a girl, so by a few changes the story has been turned upside down, and it may even develop into a Happy End for the newborn baby. Actually, I think it's about time for something like that as the world needs many more happy endings, e.g. in politics of the today.


torsdag den 22. maj 2025

Queen Victoria's Maternal Aunt Was No Meek - Or Chaste - Wife

 

Portrait by Franz Xaver Winterhalter, 1848

Juliana of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (1781-1860) was the maternal aunt of Queen Victoria of England (1819-1901) as well as the paternal aunt of her beloved husband, Prince Albert (1819–1861). Her younger sister, Victoria (1786-1861), married twice and had two daughters, one of them being Queen Victoria. 

Queen Victoria's mother, "Vicky of Kent"

The sisters were young at the time that the Russian empress Catherine the Great (1729-1796) was looking for an appropriate wife for her grandson, Grand Duke Konstantin Pavlovich (1779-1831). He was the so-called "heir-presumptive" for most part of his elder brother, Alexander I's (1777-1825), reign. He might have become the new tsar at the death of his brother, but had - or may have? - secretly renounced his claim to the throne. Anyway, it was his younger brother, Nicholas (1796-1855), who became the new tsar in 1825.

Konstantin Pavlovich, the husband of Juliana

Court Etiquette wasn't Konstantin's favorite concern, and neither was a fitting behavior as a husband of his German bride, Juliana, who converted to Orthodoxy as Grand Duchess Anna Fyodorovna. Or put another way: He was abusive, and it was noticed by bystanders at the court. Juliana was handpicked by Constantin's grandmother, Catherine the Great, and the couple were married in 1796, but the union wasn't a success. Konstantin was a very jealous and brutal husband, who once put his wife inside an enormous vase and used it as target practice. However, she escaped him and her (childless) marriage by an annulment by tsar Alexander I in 1820. He had tried to reconcile his abusive brother with his estranged wife, but in vain, as she had settled for a new life with lovers and freedom. Also, her clandestine affairs brought her what the marriage to Constantine didn't accomplish: Children. The first one was a son, Eduard Edgar Schmidt-Löwe (1808 - 1892). His father may have been a Swiss nobleman, Jules Gabriel Emile de Seigneux, but when he turned as controlling as Constantin the relationship ended. However, in 1818 Eduard was enobled by his mother's younger brother, Ernst I, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, as von Løwenfels. 

Louise Hilda Aglaë d'Aubert

In 1812 Juliana gave birth to her second illegitimate child, Louise Hilda Aglaë d'Aubert. The father of the child was Rodolphe Abraham de Schiferli, a Swiss surgeon, professor and chamberlain of her household from 1812 to 1837. He had advised her during her first pregnancy and was a close friend of hers - also he was a married man. This baby was adopted by a French refugee, Jean Francois d'Aubert, but she died in her early twenties.

This young woman is Juliana as a teen, brimming with life, as well as with hopes and desires of her own, but when she grew old, her life, even dedicated to music as it was, was full of sad losses. She outlived her former, abusive husband by 29 years, and I don't think she mourned his demise, but the death of others, like e.g. her brother Ernest I, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha must have been extremely sad and hard to bear. However, she may have had some relief in the fact that her illegitimate son, Eduard, married his illegitimate daughter and thus her niece, Bertha von Schauenstein.


German princess Juliane of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, who escaped her abusive marriage to the tsar’s brother

 

https://theroyalwomen.com/2021/08/30/juliane-of-saxe-coburg-saalfeld/ 

 

https://www.madamegilflurt.com/2014/02/the-scndalous-life-of-princess-juliane.html 

 

Wikipedia

 

tirsdag den 20. maj 2025

Female Stereotypes: From "Madonna" To "The Sinful Woman"

 

Helene Sedlmayr, ca. 1830 

This 17-year-old girl (born in Munich 1813) has attained eternal fame for something that sadly enough isn't very endurable: Her beauty - and beautiful she was, no doubt about it. It was the Bavarian court painter Joseph Karl Stieler who made her portrait for inclusion in the famous "Gallery of Beauties" which was instituted by King, Ludwig I (1789-1868). This German collection of female beauties wasn't even the first one of its kind, as several other monarchs have made something like it, but this consisted of 38 portraits of women who were considered extremely beautiful. Most of them belonged to the nobility of Munich, and 36 of them were painted by Joseph Karl Stieler, who also painted the king's portrait:


Ludvig I of Bavaria 

As most, but not all, of the confirmed beauties of the king's gallery were out of nobility, what was Helene Sedlmayr doing there? OK, she was beautiful in an almost Madonna-like manner, but, being the daughter of a shoemaker, she wasn't noble, so what was going on? The king always had a keen eye for female beauty, and one of his most famous mistresses was the Irish-born dancer, actress as well as "courtesane", Lola Montez (1821-1861), whom he endowed with a noble title that turned her into "The countess of Landsfeld". Something which the Bavarian government didn't accept, and which played a crucial part in Ludvig I losing his throne. However, although she died young from syphilis in New York, her portrait may still be seen in his gallery of beauties.


Lola Montez 

As to Helene Sedlmayr then she had a much less adventurous life than Lola Montez. Was she the king's mistress? I haven't seen any notes or even rumors stating that she was, so I take it that she wasn't: She simply was a notorious beauty, and he loved female beauty, so she belonged in his gallery. Also, she married one of his valets, and they had nine sons and one daughter. Before her marriage she had been employed in a toy shop which also supplied the royal court, so, contrary to Lola Montez, she hadn't in any way been what's called "a loose woman". No, Helene was "a good girl, who happened to be extremely beautiful".


Princess Diana admirering Helene Sedlmayr

One might say that Lola Montez and Helene Sedlmayr represent two popular, but opposite, female stereotypes, the one of the chaste Madonna and the other one, the sensual, non-chaste seductress. In many ways these stereotypes are utterly ridiculous, but they have been long-lived and can't be ignored as molds for recognizable female characters in the Patriarchy. Interestingly enough, the princess whom we see admirering the portrait of Helene Sedlmayr herself changed from being an idolized Madonna-figure to a somewhat shady and sensuous character by taking a lover: That's all it takes for a woman in the Patriarchy!

By the way, King Ludvig I didn't just exploit these 38 beauties for his gallery of portraits, but he also saw to it that they had an allowance or gave them a position at court. 


https://www.artnet.com/artists/joseph-karl-stieler/

 

https://www.schloss-nymphenburg.de/englisch/palace/room15.htm 

 

Wikipedia


Respecting The Soul And Mind Of A Pet

 

Yup, pets have friends too, and being members of your family, you have to comply with their wishes for visits, food, etc. Otherwise, you would be a cruel and no-good pet-parent with a total lack of empathy.

Are they friends like humans may be friends? I suppose they are, at least in some sense of the word, but who knows for sure? Nobody, but if these weird birds strike up a friendship like humans do, it may be of great value in the continued fight for the preservation of the penguin colony. Anyway, to see such animals, who are so utterly different in looks and behavior, living together in peace and harmony, makes one think good and emphatic thoughts about both humans and animals. 

I saw a documentary about pets which were left all by themselves somewhere after their owners just took off, leaving them to fend for themselves. It was heart-breaking, as it was obvious, that the animals were scared and devastated by being abandoned like that. So very unfair to someone who was led to think of him-/herself as a member of a human family, only to be treated like garbage. There is no doubt that animals have minds to think and remember, to mourn a loss, to love and to feel happiness. They are individuals who should be respected, and not being used as expendable toys.


 

lørdag den 17. maj 2025

The Woman Who Died Twice

She was a young, pretty and very wealthy, Danish, a widow after a seemingly successful marriage to her somewhat older cousin, the rich ship-owner and merchant Andreas Bodenhoff

However, she wasn't only wealthy, but also DEAD: Giertrud Birgitte Bodenhoff (1779-1798).


The grave of Giertrud Birgitte Bodenhoff on the beautiful and stylish cemetery in Copenhagen, Assistens Kirkegården, that also holds Hans Christian Andersen

Such a rich and elaborate grave wasn't for everyone, but Giertrud really was very wealthy. Also, she was out of a well-connected family. One might assume that that ought to have been her guarantee of a peaceful and undisturbed resting place, but no, on the contrary. Not long after her burial, there were rumors that she hadn't been dead when she was interred, but only in some kind of coma. The doctors had treated her with some heavy stuff, morphine and the like when she had a boil inside one of her ears. That in itself is dangerous, and when the patient is overdosed it may even be lethal. Anyway, Giertrud was pronounced dead by her doctors and buried in her splendid grave. As it is, one of her three half-brothers wasn't too sure that she really had died, and he said: "I don't understand, why my sister is laid to rest, 17 years old and with red cheeks."

How did the rumor of Giertrud not being dead start? Well, a grave digger by the name of Christian Meisling made a confession when he lay dying: He and some of his colleagues had not only digged graves out, but had also been grave-robbers. They knew that this young and rich widow had been laid into her coffin, adorned with jewelry which any poor, pennyless grave digger would want to get his hands on, so they had dug her up. To their extreme horror, the "dead" woman woke up, when they pulled at her ear rings. When she realized what was going on, she begged them to save her life, offering them a lot of money, but they choose to kill her and close the grave upon her once more.

Had Giertrud and her family known this she might have saved herself even before the grave robbers found and murdered her, but they didn't, so this time she stayed dead, so to speak. Actually, for many years, until one of her relatives had her grave opened once more as he wanted to check up on what had happened to her. Even at the time of the death of Giertrud it was well-known that the grave-diggers had robbed several corpses, as some of them had been found in the bushes or on the ground. The dead body of one totally nude, young man, who was found robbed of everything in the bushes by his grave, made it obvious that there must be foul play on the cemetery. 


Viggo Starcke

When the grave of Giertrud was opened in 1953 by her relative, the Danish politican, Viggo Starcke, he found evidence that she had moved - or had been moved - after her interment. However, this observation wasn't conclusive, as some expert said that it happened quite often that corpses moved when their coffin was moved. 

So, WHAT happened to the rich, young widow, who even knew how to run the business she had inherited from her dead husband? I would say that that still is an open question, but I, for one, believe the grave-digger, Mr. Christian Meisling, when he said that he and his colleagues killed her.

 

https://cemeteriesroute.eu/poi-details.aspx?t=2786&p=15521

https://slaegtsbibliotek.dk/920461.pdf 

Wikipedia