I'm back, and a poll, and stuff
Thursday, 15 November 2007 12:32 amI was away from LJ for a while, due to work-related RL horrors (well, nothing seriously horror-y, it was just me stressing out), and I have some catching up to do - including answering some 50 comments to my "Knave of Spades" post. Life should be a bit more quiet for a while, and I'll do my best to reply :-).
In the meantime I have a poll for you. I guess - well, I have set up a blog for my original work over at Blogspot (it's here, and it has one viewer, if a very dear one *g*), and I am trying to make out how I am going to develop it, and whether I will double-post. So far there is nothing there that hasn't appeared here first, but I might change that. The poll is just to gauge your interests and satisfy my curiosity, not about how I can increase my readership or something ;-). So if you feel like ticky boxes...
[Poll #1088754]
Thanks! :D
In the meantime I have a poll for you. I guess - well, I have set up a blog for my original work over at Blogspot (it's here, and it has one viewer, if a very dear one *g*), and I am trying to make out how I am going to develop it, and whether I will double-post. So far there is nothing there that hasn't appeared here first, but I might change that. The poll is just to gauge your interests and satisfy my curiosity, not about how I can increase my readership or something ;-). So if you feel like ticky boxes...
[Poll #1088754]
Thanks! :D
no subject
Date: Saturday, 17 November 2007 06:55 pm (UTC)About the celts and Switzerland (Hallstatt is in Austria ;))... It's a bit complicated, because the Allemanni (a german tribe, they came much later in our area) are actually more important for their influence to Switzerland, but because of our a bit strained relationship with Germany (especially in WWII), in schools and museums they concentrate too much on the celts and how they lost against Cesar (the Helvetii wander out and Cesar beat them in today's France and they had to wander back)) to emphasise the difference to Germany. As far as I know (but those times are not my speciality) today's research about the period suggest that the celts and romans blended peacefully together (trading, religion).