Sadly Povodine and Mercurochrome makes for a very limited palatte!
I have been known to do some modelling on quieter nights 'on proximate call'.
Definitely two-legged primates, as far as I know. The House of Welf/Guelph links the British throne with those of Hanover, both Brunswicks, and a dispossessed early Medieval line of Dukes of Bavaria (replaced by the Wittelsbachs who ruled until 1918, and whose current head is the last of the Stuarts).
I prefer my version. I think it's a heraldic beaver-like animal.BaronVonWreckedoften wrote: ↑Sat Jul 31, 2021 11:32 amDefinitely two-legged primates, as far as I know. The House of Welf/Guelph links the British throne with those of Hanover, both Brunswicks, and a dispossessed early Medieval line of Dukes of Bavaria (replaced by the Wittelsbachs who ruled until 1918, and whose current head is the last of the Stuarts).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_ ... to_present
It reminds me of that Emo Phillips joke "My mother was like a sister to me... Only we didn't have sex as often."BaronVonWreckedoften wrote: ↑Sat Jul 31, 2021 11:53 am Well, not impossible given the level of inbreeding we're talking about:
Friederich Wilhelm, the Duke of Brunswick killed at Quatre Bras, was a nephew of George III via his father Charles (killed at Jena) who had married George III's older sister, Augusta; both Charles and his wife (and new brother-in-law) were great-grandchildren of George I. George IV later married Fred's sister Caroline, making him Fred's cousin and brother-in-law. Worth pointing out that Fred was Charles' fourth son, the other three being excluded from succeeding to the title Duke of Brunswick by dint of being (1) retarded, (2) extremely retarded, and (3) blind and mildly retarded.
It's people like that who give incest a bad name.....