Contraption which locks a pushed door in place until you release it
The latch is one-way so it will catch the door after being pushed but it must be released by hand in order for the door to close
The latch is one-way so it will catch the door after being pushed but it must be released by hand in order for the door to close
I’ve tried to trouble shoot this problem in audio and video settings but it doesn’t matter whether I reset them all or try different aspect ratios, I can’t get the screen back to what it was only a day ago.
I’d like to present the importance of the prefix MAUR in regards to Tartarian and reset scholarship. This may very well be the original term for MOORish which was confused by those figures who found this society after the reset.
There was a detective by the name of Hamilton Cleek who works in London for Scotland Yard thought up by writer Thomas Hanshew in 1913. Hamilton Cleek is not his real name, he simply calls himself by that. His true identity is the lost heir to the throne of Maurevania, hence the MAUR, supposedly located somewhere around Central Europe. This character was picked up by writer Dickinson Carr who included the SS Maurevania in a story called Cabin B-13.
Is Maurevania not merely fictional but indeed a lost country related to or perhaps also known as Tartaria? Who are the Maurish? Are they descended from St Maurus? Are they related to the Seymour family who come from Saint-Maur?
As others have posted on this forum, moorish revival structures around America and England is not what we’re told it is, but the key insight I’ve made is that it’s not MOORish, it’s actually MAURish. This was not an Islamic civilization but a tawny, swarthy one of Carolingian origin which likely has its roots in St Maurus. MAUR is also a term which can mean mason.
Perhaps it is simply the case that MOORish civilization is a fabrication perpetrated by those involved in resets. Is there good evidence that MOORish architecture is Islamic? In reality it is Roman and later Roman Catholic, by that I mean Maurish.