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[Sussex] What should Sussaxons be proud of?



DNB_Seagull

Dirty Northerner. For now
Apr 27, 2014
579
I started 'What should English people be proud of?' earlier today and a few things in there including 'stoolball' are from Sussex. So thought Sussex deserves a 2nd thread. :clap2:

It's a very affluent cultural place with a reputation for tolerance would be my starting point tbh. Lewes bonfire! Then there's our regional football team BHAFC of course!
 








Eeyore

Colonel Hee-Haw of Queen's Park
NSC Patron
Apr 5, 2014
25,903
Wouldn't Lewes Bonfire be regarded as a symbol of intolerance by some ?
 






Screaming J

He'll put a spell on you
Jul 13, 2004
2,403
Exiled from the South Country
I'm sure I read somewhere that it was the last part of England to convert to Christianity from ye olde pagan beliefs. Shame we couldn't have held out for longer!
 




vegster

Sanity Clause
May 5, 2008
28,272
We don't like Frenchies.
 




Sussaxon

New member
Mar 19, 2014
287
Sussex
Banoffee Pie, The invention of Television, the birthplace of British motor racing and statistically the sunniest county in the UK. :D

PS... 1 Week till Sussex Day- 16th June!!! Get those martlets flying!!!!!!
 


Gwylan

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
31,827
Uffern
The invention of Television

Where does this come from? Television had many inventors but only one of them (a minor one) was British, John Logie Baird. He was from Helensburgh in Scotland and demonstrated his version of a television in London.

Are you thinking of cinema? William Friese-Green worked in Brighton - although his claim to be inventor of cinematography is almost as spurious as Baird's claim to be TV's progenitor
 


JetsetJimbo

Well-known member
Jun 13, 2011
1,165
I'm sure I read somewhere that it was the last part of England to convert to Christianity from ye olde pagan beliefs. Shame we couldn't have held out for longer!

I'm fairly sure that was actually the Isle of Wight, though you may be right if you're talking about mainland England.
 




Bulldog

Well-known member
Sep 25, 2010
749
That we were once an independent kingdom with our own monarchy, army and (I presume) currency.

I guess the king had a capital "city", anyone know where it was?
 












Wellesley

Well-known member
Jul 24, 2013
4,973
That we were once an independent kingdom with our own monarchy, army and (I presume) currency.

I guess the king had a capital "city", anyone know where it was?

Whitehawk.
 


WATFORD zero

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 10, 2003
27,766
Stoolball, Trugs and Twittens

And if the Inuit think they have a lot of words for Snow, here are some sussex words for Mud

Clodgy - muddy and wet, like a field path after heavy rain
Gawm - especially sticky, foul-smelling mud
Gubber - black mud of rotting organic matter
Ike - a mess or area of mud
Pug - a kind of loam, particularly the sticky yellow Wealden clay
Slab - the thickest mud
Sleech - mud or river sediment used for manure
Slob - thick mud
Slough - a muddy hole
Slub - thick mud
Slurry - diluted mud, saturated with so much water that it cannot drain
Smeery - wet and sticky surface mud
Stoach - to trample ground, like cattle; also the silty mud at Rye harbour
Stodge - thick puddingy mud
Stug - watery mud
Swank - a bog
 
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Sweeney Todd

New member
Apr 24, 2008
1,636
Oxford/Lancing
Beaches that have the largest grains of sand in the world…
 


Baldseagull

Well-known member
Jan 26, 2012
11,839
Crawley
I think we have more piers than any other County, but have to put East and West back together for that.
 


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