Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. One cannot think of chivalry without recalling the legends of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. In the tragic last days of Camelot, Arthur reluctantly made the decision to execute his queen, Guenevere, following the discovery of her infidelity with Lancelot. The two knights chosen to guard the place of execution against possible attack by Lancelot were brothers. Both were friends of Lancelot and steadfastly refused to wear their armor, confident that Lancelot would recognize them and refuse to strike. Unfortunately, when Lancelot came to rescue Guenevere he unwittingly slew both of them, having failed to recognize them precisely because they were not wearing their armor. What were the brothers' names?
2. If you are an exponent of chivalry, and a practicing Catholic, you may not have known that you have a patron saint. Hallvard Vebjornsson was an 11th century Scandinavian nobleman, who died in a hail of arrows while defending a fugitive slave girl from an angry mob. Hallvard is a patron saint of which Scandinavian country, of which he was a native?
3. James Crichton was a 16th century Scottish nobleman who was regarded as an exemplar of ideal mandood, and was known as "The Admirable Crichton". His life was cut tragically short when he gallantly offered his sword to an adversary rather than fight him. His adversary took this gesture at face value and summarily ran him through the heart.
"The Admirable Crichton" was also the title of a 1902 play by which celebrated Scottish dramatist?
4. Undoubtedly one of the most celebrated exponents of chivalry was Sir Walter Raleigh, whose gallant (albeit probably apocryphal) gesture of spreading his cloak over a puddle so that Queen Elizabeth I might tread upon it without muddying her feet has defined chivalry for generations. Raleigh did not fare as well with Elizabeth's successor, James I. He was summarily imprisoned in the Tower upon James' accession and was eventually executed in 1618. Raleigh's composure and dignity in his final moments have become the stuff of legend; which of these famous quotes is he said to have uttered before he was beheaded?
5. Alexander Hamilton was a key figure in the early history of the United States; he was one of its Founding Fathers, and its first Secretary of the Treasury. In 1804, he was shot to death in a duel with political rival Aaron Burr. According to some versions of the incident, Hamilton fired the first shot and deliberately aimed above Burr's head, thereby throwing away his shot. Burr fired in earnest, and fatally wounded Hamilton in the abdomen. What was the cause of the duel?
6. This future U.S. President was nearly killed in 1806 while fighting a duel with a man who had slandered his wife. A bullet lodged so near his heart that it could not safely be removed, and remained there until his death. Nonetheless, he managed to shoot and kill his opponent, although it took him two tries. Which President was he?
7. This neoclassical French painter and portraitist flourished during the early 19th century and is best known for his elegant portraits of noblewomen and great beauties of his day. He acknowledged that he had been in love with women all his life. In 1867, at the age of 87, he escorted a lovely female model to her carriage after a sitting. Ever the gallant, he refused to wear a hat in a lady's presence, despite the cold, wet weather. Consequently, he contracted pneumonia and died. Who was he?
8. Fitzhugh Goldsborough was the dissolute, mentally imbalanced scion of a prominent New York family, who spent most of his time reading popular novels. One day he was roused from his indolence by a novel entitled "The Fashionable Adventure of Joshua Craig", by one David Graham Phillips. Goldsborough took it into his head that a female character in the book was a caricature of his beloved sister Addie, and vowed to avenge the slight. On January 23, 1911, he accosted Phillips in Gramercy Park and shot him six times, after which he turned the gun on himself.
As it happens, Phillips did author a novel entitled "The Great God Success", whose leading character was based on which fellow journalist, who died in the same year as Phillips?
9. This British dramatist is best known as the librettist for a number of popular operettas, many of which remain popular today. He was in retirement in the spring of 1911, and was giving swimming lessons to a pair of young ladies in a lake on his estate, when one of them lost her footing and cried for help. Ever gallant, despite his 74 years, the playwright dived in to rescue her, when he suffered a heart attack and drowned. Who was he?
10. This prominent New York businessman perished in the wreck of the R.M.S. Titanic in April of 1912. After seeing his female companion into a lifeboat, he refused to take a seat himself, declaring that no woman or child should lose their life because he decided to play the coward. Instead, he and his manservant eschewed their lifejackets, and decided to "...dress in their best and go down like gentlemen." He was also heard to request that "...If anything should happen to me, tell my wife I've done my best in doing my duty." Who was this businessman?
Source: Author
jouen58
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