Scottish ell - significado y definición. Qué es Scottish ell
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Qué (quién) es Scottish ell - definición

UNIT OF LENGTH
Ell (unit); Ell (Scots); Aune; Ell-wand; Ellwand; Ell (Scottish length); Flemish ell; Ulna (unit)
  • The Ell Shop]]
  • foot]] (''Schuch'') and ell (''Öln'').

Ellwand         
·noun Formerly, a measuring rod an ell long.
Lynching of Ell Persons         
  • Back side of Historical Marker near the site
  • NAACP Historical Marker near the site of the Ell Persons lynching
  • Grave of Antoinette "Antonetty" Rappel - Forest Hill Cemetery Midtown Memphis, TN
LYNCHING IN 1917, IN MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE, UNITED STATES
Antoinette Rappel; Ell Persons; Ell Person; Ell Parsons; Ell Persons lynching
Ell Persons was a black man who was lynched on 22 May 1917, after he was accused of having raped and decapitated a 15-year-old white girl, Antoinette Rappel, in Memphis, Tennessee, United States. He was arrested and was awaiting trial when he was captured by a lynch party, who burned him alive and scattered his remains around town, throwing his head at a group of African Americans.
ell         
¦ noun a former measure of length used mainly for textiles, normally 45 inches in England and 37 inches in Scotland.
Origin
OE eln; from an Indo-Eur. root shared by L. ulna (see ulna); the measure was orig. linked to the length of the human arm or forearm.

Wikipedia

Ell

An ell (from Proto-Germanic *alinō, cognate with Latin ulna) is a northwestern European unit of measurement, originally understood as a cubit (the combined length of the forearm and extended hand). The word literally means "arm", and survives in the form of the modern English word "elbow" (arm-bend). Later usage through the 19th century refers to several longer units, some of which are thought to derive from a "double ell".

An ell-wand or ellwand was a rod of length one ell used for official measurement. Edward I of England required that every town have one. In Scotland, the Belt of Orion was called "the King's Ellwand". An iron ellwand is preserved in the entrance to Stånga Church on the Swedish island of Gotland, indicating the role that rural churches had in disseminating uniform measures.

Several national forms existed, with different lengths, including the Scottish ell (≈37 inches or 94 centimetres), the Flemish ell [el] (≈27 in or 68.6 cm), the French ell [aune] (≈54 in or 137.2 cm), the Polish ell (≈31 in or 78.7 cm), the Danish alen (24 Danish inches or 2 Danish fod: 62.7708 cm), the Swedish aln (2 Swedish fot 59.38 cm) and the German ell [Elle] of different lengths in Frankfurt (54.7 cm), Cologne, Leipzig (Saxony) or Hamburg.

Select customs were observed by English importers of Dutch textiles; although all cloths were bought by the Flemish ell, linen was sold by the English ell, but tapestry was sold by the Flemish ell.

The Viking ell was the measure from the elbow to the tip of the middle finger, about 18 inches (460 mm). The Viking or primitive ell was used in Iceland up to the 13th century. By the 13th century, a law set the "stika" as equal to 2 ells which was the English ell of the time.