Malm Whale

(atlasobscura.com)

24 points | by thunderbong 4 days ago

2 comments

  • pottertheotter 3 hours ago
    Ok, wow… “The fishermen who first discovered the poor stranded whale started the procedure by poking its eyes out, so that it would "not be able to see us." Over the next two days, the creature was methodically axed, speared and shot until it finally died in a sea of its own blood.”

    I guess it was 1865.

    • AIorNot 3 hours ago
      Humans are the worst species aren’t we
      • readthenotes1 3 hours ago
        No
        • squibonpig 1 hour ago
          I think we have the greatest depth and breadth of cruelty
          • fellowniusmonk 43 minutes ago
            Our capabilities are so high and our population so differentiated we basically hold nearly all the records for everything (barring some extremeophile metrics) so it makes sense.
  • amarant 2 hours ago
    I wonder if the event visible in one of the photos is etymological source of the word festival?

    The word can be deconstructed in Swedish as fest i val which translates to "party in whale"

    • thomassmith65 2 hours ago
      It surely is; 'fest' is the Swedish word for 'party'. I actually think Swedish or Norwegian (which are practically the same language) are closer to English than even Dutch. Many of the most common, short English words are the same.
    • tdeck 1 hour ago
      Wiktionary says

      > From Middle English festival (adjective), from Old French festival (“festive”), from Late Latin fēstīvālis, from Latin fēstīvus (“festive”). By surface analysis, festive +‎ -al. Displaced native Old English frēols. The noun is shortened from festival day, from Middle English festival dai, festiuall day (“feast day, festival”).

      https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/festival