What does your BA username mean?

Discussion in 'Beer Talk' started by twizzard, Nov 20, 2013.

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  1. EgadBananas

    EgadBananas Initiate (0) Mar 18, 2009 Louisiana

    An alias using my initials "EB".
     
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  2. champ103

    champ103 Grand High Pooh-Bah (6,296) Sep 3, 2007 Texas
    Society Pooh-Bah

    I use to wrestle. In high school and college (club/intramural team not intercollegiate, Title 9 and all that). Won lots of tournaments in high school, and was in the 103 weight class. The nick name stuck through college.
     
    #542 champ103, Jun 19, 2014
    Last edited: Jun 19, 2014
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  3. BoardwalkBock

    BoardwalkBock Pooh-Bah (2,041) Aug 18, 2012 New York
    Pooh-Bah

    Boardwalk Bock was a beer that my brother and I planned to brew and name. We were going to try to open a brewery in our hometown of Long Beach, NY and use our natural/cultural sites as beer names. Our boardwalk, while still iconic (the new one), was around for over 80 years before Hurricane Sandy destroyed it. It was "supposedly" built by Elephants in the early 1920's, although after further research at our local Historical Society it is proven they were just used for good press. My brother passed away in August of 2012 surfing and the same month I made this account to get as much information on beer, brewing and the likes as I could to make sure our dream didn't go unfulfilled. I've just created my new IPA named after him and hope to use this as a jumping off point.
     
  4. fmccormi

    fmccormi Initiate (0) Oct 24, 2010 California

    My avatar is, uh . . . autobiographical. Thaaaaaat's me. My name is my undergrad student ID from way back in South Bend.

    Suuuuuuuuper creative on both parts, I know.
     
  5. mabermud

    mabermud Initiate (0) Dec 13, 2006 Washington

    The name has to do with part of my religion, a portion of my name before I became Muslim, a letter from my birth sign, a combo letter of the street I lived on growing up and the third letter in my wife's last name, the second to the last letter of the month when I joined BA, and last but not least, the last letter of my birth doctors, first husband's middle name.
     
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  6. Beer_lover89

    Beer_lover89 Initiate (0) Aug 9, 2013 Texas

    Mines. ....well its self explanatory.
     
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  7. Punchy_Munchie

    Punchy_Munchie Zealot (502) May 26, 2014 Wisconsin
    Trader

    My first cat's name is Munchie. When I brought home a second cat, the first thing she did was punch her in the face.

    Update: They get along fine now.
     
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  8. JayORear

    JayORear Grand Pooh-Bah (3,058) Feb 22, 2012 California
    Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    My name for realz. Just the slightest bit of a statement--I never want to hide behind a screen name and say shit online I wouldn't say in real life. Not that that ever happens here. :wink:
     
  9. Guffy

    Guffy Initiate (0) Jan 17, 2012 Minnesota

    A misspelled play on words...It's Surly, ahhhhhhh! :angry:
     
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  10. telejunkie

    telejunkie Savant (1,107) Sep 14, 2007 Vermont

    was a powder/ski-crazed weather dork scanning weather forums before I was a beer forums geek...name is a double entendre being a fanatical tele-skier and avid watcher of weather teleconnections which indicate long term weather patterns. Just kept the name on beer forums cause i liked it...
     
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  11. BullDoza

    BullDoza Initiate (0) Apr 12, 2014 Texas

    Doza is the back half of my last name. Most close friends refer to me as "Doza"...college, dating back to HS.

    I added "Bull". To the front as a play on words (bulldozer). Had a reputation for bullying my way to the basket in pick up games.
     
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  12. Spaghett

    Spaghett Initiate (0) Oct 27, 2011 California

    I'm Spaghett, I spook people.
     
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  13. Droopy487

    Droopy487 Initiate (0) Dec 3, 2013 Tennessee

    Was nicknamed Droopy when we started rockcrawling about 15 years ago. 487 was our first race team number.
     
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  14. stingley

    stingley Crusader (467) Sep 21, 2013 Pennsylvania

    Smitty Werbenjagermanjensen was too long. He was number one, you know!
     
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  15. Hockey_Fan

    Hockey_Fan Pooh-Bah (1,851) Jan 13, 2013 Maryland
    Pooh-Bah

    I like hockey...
     
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  16. The_Craft_Deviant_Rob

    The_Craft_Deviant_Rob Initiate (0) Feb 14, 2014 New Jersey

    Well the craft because I love beer, Rob because thats my name and deviant because its a cool word and we all have a little deviant in us :wink:
     
  17. 2ellas

    2ellas Maven (1,302) Feb 20, 2014 New Hampshire
    Trader

    I have twin boys and ellas is a combination of both of their names. Ellas was taken soooo 2ellas it is and that's that!
     
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  18. Daemose

    Daemose Maven (1,407) Oct 3, 2011 Texas

    A name I use for everything that originated when I made up a name for my barbarian on Diablo 2 back in Y2K or so. Also the name of a character in a book I hope to write eventually.
     
  19. BlumBeer

    BlumBeer Initiate (0) May 17, 2012 Florida

    Blum is my last name..and Beer is what I love....
     
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  20. Orca

    Orca Grand Pooh-Bah (4,710) Sep 18, 2010 Washington
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    Draheim (German: Starostei Draheim) or Drahim (Polish: Starostwo Drahimskie) was a starostwo (crown territory) of the Polish kingdom from the 15th century. Pawned to Brandenburg-Prussia in 1657, it was directly incorporated into the Kingdom of Prussia in 1772.

    In the High Middle Ages, the region of the later starostwo was a borderland of the Piast Kingdom of Poland with Duchy of Pomerania and Margraviate of Brandenburg. In 1268, the largely unsettled area was given to the Knights Templar by the Polish duke Przemysł II.[1] The order invited German settlers (Ostsiedlung).[2] The German name Tempelburg for present-day Polish Czaplinek dates back to that era, and derives from the German name of the Knights Templar, Templer.[1]

    In 1312, the order was dissolved, and its possessions were taken over by the Knights Hospitaller.[1] Draheim Castle (in the area of modern Stare Drawsko) was built in the mid-14th century at the crossing of the trade route via marchionis from Pomeranian Stargard to Danzig and the via regalis from Kolberg to Poznań.[3] In 1368, during an exchange of territories, Margrave Otto VII of Brandenburg gave the areas around Czaplinek and Wałcz (Deutsch Krone) to the Polish king Casimir III the Great, who in 1370 established Wałcz County (powiat Wałcz) from these accessions: part of the Poznań Voivodeship (palatinate), it consisted of seven loosely connected regions in royal or noble possession subordinate to the judicum castrensis in Wałcz.[1]

    Draheim was made one of three (sub-)starosties of the county, the other ones being Usz-Pila (Schneidemühl) and Wałcz.[1] In addition to the three starosties, four regions consisting of allodial possessions of the von Wedell, von der Goltz and Czarnowski families were also part of the county.[1] These noble families were also in possession of areas in Pomerania, the Brandeburgian Neumark and other parts of Poland, and also of areas within the Draheim starosty.[1] Draheim Castle was a royal possession.[1] The starost of Draheim (also tenutarius or capitaneatus tenutae) was appointed for life by the Polish king, who owned a quarter of the starosty's income.[4] The starost was in charge of the local administration, military and jurisdiction.[4] His German subjects however, in contrast to peasants on Polish noble estates, were able to appeal his judicial decisions at the court in Wałcz, and were repeatedly assured this right in respective documents.[4]

    When in the late 14th century the southwestern territories of Heinrichsdorf-Warlange and Brotzen-Machlin became allodial possessions of the von der Goltz family, who before had held the areas as fiefs, and were thus excluded from the starosty, Draheim lost a direct land route to the rest of Walcz county.[3] Draheim was then surrounded by the Imperial Duchy of Pomerania in the north, east and southeast, with the exception of the small enclave of Groß Poplow-Brutzen which was in the possession of the von Manteuffel family and directly under the Polish crown; in the southeast, Draheim bordered the Neumark exclave Groß Zacharin-Doderlage.[3] The border was not fixed, but varied according to the ability of competing nobles in the frontier region to manifest their respective claims.[5] When a noble perceived an intrusion into his territory, he and his subjects traditionally reacted with an inequatio, a mounted raid, into the territory of his competitor on the other side of the border.[5] This practice persisted in Walcz county until the late 18th century.[6]

    In 1407 German and Polish nobility conquered the castle of Draheim (Stare Drawsko). These robber barons used the region as a base for raids until 1422, when they were defeated by the burghers of Dramburg (Drawsko Pomorskie). In 1438 the Teutonic Knights recognized Polish control of the region.

    In the 16th century the region largely converted to Lutheranism during the Protestant Reformation. During the counter-reformation, of the three important families only the von der Goltzs remained Protestant, while the von Wedells and Czarnowskis converted to Roman Catholicism, maintaining however a tolerant attitude towards the Protestant settlers.[4] Starost Jan Czarnowski expelled the Protestant preachers in 1625; the churches were restored to Catholicism, although the populace remained largely Protestant.

    Also in the 16th century, conditions for peasants worsened in the neighboring Duchy of Pomerania due to the implementation of stringent serfdom.[7] Many peasants fled from Pomerania to Draheim and other parts of Walcz county, where the nobles offered them hereditary farmland in deserted villages and clearances which they were to settle according to German law.[8] The settlers primarily originated in Pomeranian and Neumark areas no more than 50 kilometres (31 mi) away from the Draheim border, and their influx continued throughout the 16th and 17th centuries despite protests of their former superiors.[9] This migration was enhanced by the Thirty Years War, during which Pomerania and Neumark were devastated, while the Polish territories were spared.[9] Orders of the Polish king to expel the refugees were ignored by the local nobles.[10] New villages were founded according to Magdeburg law: their settlement was organized by a Schulze, usually a rich farmer or burgher, who bought the office from the landlord and worked out the contracts (Privilegien or Lehnsbrieffe [sic!]) with the peasants.[10] Schulzes as well as free peasants and pub owners were required to attend their landlord in arms when it came to the abovementioned border skirmishes with competing nobles.[11] Since a schulze was able to partition and sell his estate, with the heirs or other acquiring party gaining all privileges of a schulze even if owning only part of such an estate, the number of schulzes increased significantly over time.[11] This process was enhanced by the landlords, who needed the schulzes' armed services at the border.[12]

    In July 1655, during the Second Northern War, Draheim was devastated by a trespassing Swedish army.[13] A Brandenburgian report noted that no more than 150 inhabitants remained, the rest had fled to nearby areas, but hesitated to return as they were deprived of all their means.[13]

    Poland pawned Draheim to Brandenburg-Prussia in the 1657 Treaty of Bromberg. This arrangement was confirmed in the 1660 Treaty of Oliva, but Frederick William, Elector of Brandenburg, did not take control of the territory until 1668. Berlin subsequently administered the territory through the office of an Amtmann, who had his seat in Draheim Castle. It was later leased to domain tenants.

    According to the Treaty of Bromberg, Frederick William promised not to infringe upon the rights of the Roman Catholic Church in Draheim. The number of Protestants in the territory gradually shrank. It was not until the reign of King Frederick William I of Prussia (1713–40) that a Protestant church was built in Tempelburg.

    Draheim's role as a fief of Poland ended with the First Partition of Poland in 1772. The territory was reorganized as part of the Province of Pomerania in 1817; Draheim was included within Landkreis Neustettin, Regierungsbezirk Köslin.

    The family name Draheim may derive from the same location as mentioned here. It is believed that most of the Draheim families got the name when they moved to other places in the neighborhood. The name Draheim here is a combination of the word "Heim", meaning "Home" and "Drage", the name of the small river. Beside the location Draheim in former Pomerania (Stare Drawsko),[14] there are also other locations to be found: Tragheim (Tragamin), Draheim [near Skwierzyna; not existing anymore][15] and Tragheim [Königsberg]. Different spelling variations were usual like Draheim, Dragheim, Tragheim, Draheym, Draym, Draim, Drahem, Drahim, Drachem etc. Most of Draheim families moved to several continents all over the world in the last centuries [mainly America and Australia]. Still most of them can be found in Germany and Poland. A lot of prussian Draheim families were one of the first settlers in Poland and often assimilated there quite quickly. They moved from Pomerania further southeast to West Prussia, Poznan and Poland. A lot of information about the location and Family Draheim is shown on Horst Draheim´s webpage (german) [[16]].

    Nowadays it is also possible with Y-DNA testing to find out if there is a recent common ancestor along Draheim families all over the world. With Haplogroup analysis you are able to determine your origins before surnames developed.[17]
     
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