26th January - The Questions
Specialist Questions
Set
by the Chester Road Tavern
1. Arts and Entertainment
2. History
3. Sport
4. Natural History
5. Science
6. Geography
7. Name That Tune
8. Hatches, Matches and Dispatches
Arts and Entertainment
1. Born in
Florence, 1445, which artist's famous works include ‘The Birth of Venus’ and
‘The Adoration of the Magi’?
A.Sandro Botticelli
2. Born in
Paris, 1832, which artist's famous works include ‘The Execution of the Emperor
Maximillian’ and ‘A Bar at the Follies-Bergere’?
A.Edouard Manet
3. Name the 1989
film, celebrating the life of Irish man Christie Brown, who was crippled by
Cerebral Palsy, starring Daniel Day Lewis?
A.My Left Foot
4. Which 1999
film begins with the line “In October 1994, three student film makers
disappeared in the woods near Burkittsville”?
A.The Blair Witch Project
5. Which
musician's albums include: ‘In a Silent Way’ and ‘Bitches Brew’?
A.Miles Davis
6. Which
musician's albums include: On the Beach and ‘Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere’?
A.Neil Young
7. What was
Doberman’s Christian name in the Phil Silvers show?
A.Duane
8. Which British
sitcom character founded a shop named Grot?
A.Reginald Perrin
Supplementaries
1. Who wrote
Angela’s Ashes?
A.Frank McCourt
2. Name the 2nd
book of Philip Pullman's ‘His Dark Materials’ trilogy.
A.The Subtle Knife
History
1. Which term
was invented in the 1930s to describe a shanty town built by homeless people in
America during the Great Depression?
A.Hooverville
2. Which
Communist leader was executed on Christmas Day 1989?
A.Nicolae Ceausescu (Romania)
3. Abraham
Lincoln was the first US president to be assassinated, who was the second?
A.James Garfield
4. Name one of
the Roman Emperors, collectively described by Machiavelli as the 'Five Good
Emperors'?
A.Nerva, Trajan, Hadrian, Antoninus Pius or Marcus Aurelius.
5. Which
American Civil War General had the nicknames 'Cump' and 'Uncle Billy'?
A.William Sherman
6. Whose wedding
took place in 1936 at the home of Joseph Goebbels and was attended by Adolf
Hitler?
A.Oswald Mosley and Diana Mitford (Accept either/both)
7. The Chakri
Dynasty has provided monarchs for which country since 1782?
A.Thailand (Accept Siam)
8. What country
was formed in 1932 as a result of the unification of the Kingdom of Hejaz and
the Sultanate of Najd?
A.Saudi Arabia
Supplementaries
1. Who was
nicknamed The Lion of Verdun?
A.Marshal Philippe
Pétain
2.
What was the code name of Nazi Germany’s planned
invasion of the UK via the south coast?
A.Operation Sea Lion (accept "Seelöwe” the German name for
Operation)
Sport
1. Who famously tripped up Mary Decker at the 1984
Summer Olympics?
A.Zola Budd
2. Which county cricket team plays its home games at New
Road?
A.Leicestershire
3. Who has held
the Women’s Marathon World Record (2 hrs 15 mins 25 secs) since 2003?
A.Paula Radcliffe
4. Which horse
won last year’s Grand National?
A.Many Clouds
5. Which
football team's home ground is the Macron Stadium?
A.Bolton Wanderers
6. Who holds the
men’s world long jump record?
A.Mike Powell
7. Who is
England crickets head coach?
A.Trevor Bayliss
8. Who finished
second to Lewis Hamilton in the 2015 Formula 1 championship?
A.Nico Rosberg
Supplementaries
1. Which rugby
league team are known as the Rhinos?
A.Leeds
2. Who has recently been appointed England
rugby union head coach?
A.Eddie Jones
Natural History
1. What is a
Grayling?
A.A Fish
2. Caprine means
relating to which animal?
A.Goat
3. What is the
common name for the Chilean Pine tree?
A.Monkey Puzzle Tree
4. Which fish
has the Latin name Esox Lucius?
A.The Pike
5. What do
edentulous mammals lack?
A.Teeth
6. The common
pipistrelle is one of the most common species of what in the UK?
A.Bat
7. Ursine means
relating to which animal?
A.Bear
8. What does a
mycologist study?
A.Fungi
Supplementaries
1. Which is the
largest British newt?
A.Great Crested newt
2. What is the world’s
largest whale species?
A.Blue Whale
Science
1. Malleus,
Incus and Stapes are all bones found in which part of the body?
A.Ear
2. Which
structural protein is the key structural component of hair and nails?
A.Keratin
3. The element
denoted by the symbol Hg was originally called Hydrargyrum. How do we refer to
this element now?
A.Mercury (Latinized Greek: hydrargyrum,
meaning watery or liquid silver)
4. Named after a
Surrey town where a spring containing this was discovered, how is hydrated
magnesium sulphate better known?
A.Epsom Salt
5. When someone
has Hepatitis, which organ is affected?
A.Liver
6. Ankylosing
Spondylitis, Scoliosis and Myelopathy are all diseases affecting which part of
the body?
A.Spine
7. What is the
common name for the cluster of seven stars called 'The Pleiades'?
A.The Seven Sisters
8. Rickets is a
disease predominantly associated with the deficiency of which vitamin?
A.Vitamin D
Supplementaries
1. What type of
bird is a Harlequin?
A.Duck
2. Dry Ice is
the frozen form of which gas?
A.Carbon Dioxide
Geography
1. Lisbon stands
on which river?
A.The Tagus
2. What is the
capital of Tasmania?
A.Hobart
3. Ajaccio is
the capital city of which island?
A.Corsica
4. What is the
largest natural lake (by area) in Wales?
A.Lake Bala
(or Lynn Tegid)
5. What is the
name of the range of hills running north to south between Worcestershire and
Herefordshire?
A.The Malverns
6. Belfast
stands on which river?
A.The Lagan
7. Which county
shares borders with Devon, Somerset, Wiltshire and Hampshire?
A.Dorset
8. Which US
state is nicknamed 'the Bluegrass State'?
A.Kentucky
Supplementaries
1. Oakham is the
county town of which English county?
A.Rutland
2. What is the
Freemantle Doctor?
A.A Wind
Name That Tune
Simply give the song title
from these initial lyrics.
1. I got my
first real six string, bought it at the five and dime.
A.Summer of 69 (Bryan Adams)
2. Hello
darkness my old friend, I've come to talk with you again.
A.The Sound of Silence (Simon and
Garfunkel)
3. Sittin’ in the
morning sun, I'll be sittin’ when the evening comes.
A.(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay (Otis Redding)
4. Young
teacher, the subject, of schoolgirl fantasy.
A.Don’t Stand So Close To Me (The Police)
5. The sirens
are screaming and the fires are howling way down in the valley tonight.
A.Bat Out of Hell (Meatloaf)
6. People try to
put us down, just because we get around.
A.My Generation (the Who)
7. On a dark
desert highway, cool wind in my hair.
A.Hotel California (The Eagles)
8. All the
leaves are brown and the sky is grey.
A.California Dreamin’ (Mamas and Papas)
Supplementaries.
1. There she
stood in the street smiling from her head to her feet.
A.All Right Now (Free)
2. You’ve done
it all, you’ve broken every code.
A.Make Me Smile (Come Up and See Me) (Steve Harley
and Cockney Rebel)
Hatches, Matches and Dispatches
The following questions all
relate to births, weddings and deaths in 2015
1. Which former
leader of the Liberal Democrats died in January 2015 at the age of just 55?
A.Charles Kennedy
2. Maxima was
born on December 1st 2015; on the same day her parents pledged 99% of their
companies’ shares to a new charitable-based venture. What was the baby’s
surname?
A.Zuckerberg
3. He died in
December 2015. An ex Fulham footballer and former manager of Coventry city he
is mostly remembered for a long BBC broadcasting career. He presented ‘Match of
the Day’ on over 600 occasions. Who was he?
A.Jimmy Hill
4. Which actor
died on February 27 2015 aged 83? His career was defined by a character he
played in a TV series that ran from 1966 until 1969. His final film role was in
2013 playing the same character in the 12th instalment of the film franchise
that followed the series.
A.Leonard Nimoy
5. Best known
for his Discworld series of novels which author died from Alzheimer’s in March
2015?
A.Terry Pratchett
6. Which actor,
comedian, writer and presenter married his partner Elliott Spencer in January
2015 and tweeted “Gosh! We go into a room as two people, sign a book and leave
as one”?
A.Stephen Fry
7. Married on Valentine’s
Day 2015 which actor, famous for his roles playing Stephen Hawking in a 2004 TV
film and Sherlock Holmes on TV, married theatre director Sophie Hunter?
A.Benedict Cumberbatch
8. Which actress
and former wife of Brad Pitt married Justin Theroux in August?
A.Jennifer Aniston
Supplementaries.
1. In 1999 at
the age of 4 this incredibly brave Mancunian was given just 6 weeks to live.
She died in October 2015 after raising millions of pounds for Francis House
Hospice. Who was she?
A.Kirsty Howard
2. Born on May 2
2015, Princess Charlotte Elizabeth was given what other third Christian name?
A.Diana
GENERAL KNOWLEDGE
Set By
Bate Taverners
1)
|
Found
throughout much of mainland Western Europe, how Glis glis otherwise
known?
|
The
edible dormouse
|
2)
|
Which
craftsmen might use a knocker, a jolly or a wheel?
|
Potters
|
3)
|
Which
city has an NFL team called The Broncos?
|
Denver
|
4)
|
On
Jan 7th 1785, Jean Pierre Blanchard and John Jeffries completed
the first balloon crossing of which body of water?
|
The
English Channel
|
5)
|
Who
composed the music and wrote the lyrics for the 1929 operetta Bitter Sweet?
|
Noel
Coward
|
6)
|
Mount
Lycabettus is a limestone hill in which European capital?
|
Athens
|
7)
|
In
1941, German spy Josef Jakobs was the last person to be executed in which
fortress?
|
The
Tower of London
|
8)
|
Which
British tennis player won the 1968 US Open women’s singles title?
|
Virginia
Wade
|
9)
|
Which
king supposedly said, “Will no one rid me of this troublesome priest?”?
|
Henry
II
|
10)
|
Which
pale yellow gaseous halogen is the most reactive chemical element?
|
Fluorine
|
11)
|
Discovered
in Botswana in November 16th 2015, what is the Karowe AK6
|
The
second largest Diamond ever found
|
12)
|
Which
city has an NFL team called The Seahawks?
|
Seattle
|
13)
|
Allegedly
starved to death by her mother Antonia Minor, Livilla was the sister of which
Roman Emperor?
|
Claudius
|
14)
|
Which
former BBC political editor wrote A History of Modern Britain (in
2007)?
|
Andrew
Marr
|
15)
|
Which
gaseous element forms the majority of Saturn’s atmosphere?
|
Hydrogen
|
16)
|
Which
composer’s Cello Concerto in E Minor was Jacqueline du Pré’s signature
performance piece?
|
Edward
Elgar
|
17)
|
Where
would you find Death, Justice, the Hanged Man and the Fool, amongst other
groupings?
|
In
a pack of Tarot cards
|
18)
|
Ordered
in 1936, the historic warship HMS Belfast was built by which company?
|
Harland
& Wolff
|
19)
|
Who
was the first UK monarch to make a Christmas Broadcast?
|
George
V
(on
the radio in 1932)
|
20)
|
What
number is the title of Adele’s third studio album?
|
25
|
21)
|
Who
was the first American to walk in space in 1965?
|
Ed
White
|
22)
|
Which
fleet was defeated at the 1588 Battle of Gravelines?
|
The
Spanish Armada
|
23)
|
What
nationality was László Biró who invented the modern ballpoint pen?
|
Hungarian
|
24)
|
What
was the name of the European Space Agency probe which flew by and studied
Halley’s Comet in 1986?
|
Giotto
|
25)
|
Who
played the part of Vince in the 1980’s sitcom Just Good Friends?
|
Paul
Nicholas
|
26)
|
Name
either of the goals of the “Tooting Popular Front” in the 1970’s BBC sitcom
|
Power
to the People or
Freedom
for Tooting
|
27)
|
Which
actor’s father was appointed Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain in 1987?
|
Nigel
Havers
|
28)
|
In
which year did the professional jockey, A P McCoy, begin his career?
|
1992
(allow
a year either side?)
|
29)
|
In
which battle during the First World War were tanks first deployed?
|
Battle
of Flers-Courcelette (15 Sept 1916)
(accept
Battle of the Somme)
|
30)
|
In
which Oasis song do the following lyrics appear
Slip inside the eye of
your mind
Don't you know you might find A better place to play |
Don’t
Look Back in Anger
|
31)
|
In
which sea can you find the world’s freshest (i.e. least salty) water?
|
Baltic
Sea
|
32)
|
In
which century did Peter the Great become Tsar of Russia?
|
17th
(1682)
|
33)
|
In
which industry did Henry Cort make his discoveries in the late eighteenth
century?
|
Iron
industry (puddling)
|
34)
|
In
which academic field did Jean Piaget become an expert during the 20th
century?
|
Child
psychology
(accept
cognitive development)
|
35)
|
Who
was the German Foreign Minister at the outbreak of World War Two in 1939?
|
Joachim
von Ribbentrop
|
36)
|
In
which ocean is Easter Island situated?
|
Pacific
|
37)
|
What
was invented by Christopher Cockerill in 1955?
|
The
hovercraft
|
38)
|
At
what age in the Jewish religion does a bar-mitzvah take place for males?
|
13
|
39)
|
How
many years did Nelson Mandela spend in prison?
|
27
years
(allow
one either side?)
|
40)
|
What
is the collective noun for a group of rhinos?
|
Crash
(Accept
herd)
|
41)
|
The
Intu MetroCentre is a shopping centre in which town?
|
Gateshead
|
42)
|
In
1997, who left the BBC to stand as an independent candidate in the Tatton
constituency?
|
Martin
Bell
|
43)
|
In
1872, which country played England in the first international football match?
|
Scotland
|
44)
|
Who
said ‘the history of the world is but the biography of great men’?
|
Thomas
Carlyle
|
45)
|
If
you had otalgia what would you be suffering from?
|
Earache
|
46)
|
What
was invented for dog training by Francis Galton in 1876?
|
Dog
whistle
|
47)
|
Whose
is the first and largest signature on the US Declaration of Independence?
|
John
Hancock
|
48)
|
Which
prime minister left an unpaid £197 bill with his Savile Row tailor, Henry
Poole & Co?
|
Winston
Churchill
|
49)
|
One
Angel Square is the head office of The Co-operative Group in which city?
|
Manchester
|
50)
|
Gérard
Biard is the editor-in-chief of which satirical weekly news magazine?
|
Charlie
Hebdo
|
51)
|
How to Eat (1998) was which cookery writer’s first
book?
|
Nigella
Lawson
|
52)
|
Which
ship, en-route from New York to Genoa, was found abandoned in 1872?
|
The
Mary Celeste
|
53)
|
The
Whitechapel Bell Foundry in London is Britain’s oldest manufacturing company
In what century was it established?
|
16th
(1570)
|
54)
|
In
which West Yorkshire castle did Richard II die?
|
Pontefract
Castle
|
55)
|
Which
disease may be treated with L-dopa?
|
Parkinson’s
|
56)
|
Which
prestigious motor company has its headquarters in Crewe?
|
Bentley Motor Company
|
57)
|
Which
charity, based in Poole, was founded in 1824 by Sir William Hillary, albeit
under a different name?
|
Royal National Lifeboat Institution or R.N.L.I.
(originally The National Institution for the Preservation of Life from
Shipwreck)
|
58)
|
In
which English city can the ‘Centre for Life’ science village be found?
|
Newcastle-upon-Tyne
|
59)
|
What
pieces of cutlery did T.S. Eliot’s J. Alfred Prufrock measure out his life
in?
|
Coffee spoons
|
60)
|
Comprising
of 10 members, what was set up in 1994 to deal with concerns about unethical
conduct amongst MPs?
|
The
Committee on Standards in Public Life
|
61)
|
Rowntree’s
and Terry’s are confectionery brands associated with which city?
|
York
|
62)
|
With
whom did Ian St. John form a double act on television?
|
Jimmy
Greaves
|
63)
|
According
to a limerick, which bird’s bill can hold more than his belly?
|
The
Pelican
|
64)
|
The
2,390ft Cross Fell is the highest point of which range of hills?
|
The
Pennines
|
65)
|
Akio
Morita and Masaru Ibuka were the co-founders of which company?
|
Sony
|
66)
|
What
is the name of the Israel parliament?
|
The Knesset
|
67)
|
In which
film did Richard Attenborough play the gangster Pinkie Brown?
|
Brighton Rock
|
68)
|
William
Tell and The Barber of Seville are operas by which composer?
|
Gioachino
Rossini
|
69)
|
Philippa
of Hainault was the wife of which King of England?
|
Edward III
|
70)
|
The
Hainault loop can be found on which London Underground line?
|
The Central Line
|
71)
|
Gastric
acid is primarily a form of which type of acid?
|
Hydrochloric acid
|
72)
|
Traditionally,
what sort of people would be buried on the north side of a churchyard?
|
Evil-doers (or similar)
|
73)
|
Which
royal dukedom, formerly held by Queen Victoria’s second son, was recreated in
1947?
|
Duke
of Edinburgh
|
74)
|
Which
20th-century dictator used the title El Caudillo?
|
General
Francisco Franco
|
75)
|
What
was Australian Fred Spofforth the first man to do in a cricket Test Match on
2nd January, 1879?
|
Take
a hat-trick
|
76)
|
Who
did President John F. Kennedy appoint as his Attorney General?
|
His
brother Robert Kennedy
|
77)
|
Who
broadcast Letter from America for 58 years?
|
Alistair
Cook
|
78)
|
Actress
and writer Dulcie Grey was married to which actor for 59 years?
|
Michael
Denison
|
79)
|
Who
was the Chief Cook and Quartermaster on board the Hispaniola in Treasure
Island?
|
Long John Silver
|
80)
|
Which
dancer developed the shows Lord of the Dance and Feet of Flames?
|
Michael
Flatley
|
81)
|
What
is the official language of Andorra?
|
Catalan
|
82)
|
Which
former Manchester City and Aston Villa footballer holds the record for most
own goals scored in the Premiership?
|
Richard
Dunne (10)
|
83)
|
Who
shot Martin Luther King in April, 1968?
|
James
Earl Ray
|
84)
|
Which
element (Atomic Number 35) is a red-brown liquid at room temperature?
|
Bromine
|
85)
|
Which
poem is composed of 5 parts including “The Burial of the Dead” and “What the
Thunder Said”?
|
The Waste Land by T.S. Eliot
|
86)
|
Which
Devon town is at the head of the estuary of the River Dart?
|
Totnes
|
87)
|
Sir
John Franklin disappeared in 1847. What was his ill-fated expedition looking
for?
|
The
Northwest Passage
|
88)
|
Who
was shot by Valerie Solanas at The Factory in June 1968?
|
Andy
Warhol
(also
accept art critic Mario Amaya)
|
89)
|
Which
rock star’s (who died in December 2015) real name was Ian Kilmister?
|
Lemmy
(from Motorhead)
|
90)
|
Emphysema
is a long-term progressive disease of which organs?
|
The
Lungs
|
91)
|
In
which musical would you find the Kit Kat Klub?
|
Cabaret
|
92)
|
Whose
novels include “Greenmantle” and “The Thirty Nine Steps”?
|
John
Buchan
|
93)
|
Which
footballer holds the record for most Premiership appearances?
|
Ryan
Giggs (632)
|
94)
|
Which
aircraft manufacturer built the L-1011 Tristar?
|
Lockheed
|
95)
|
In
which European country would you find Lake Bled?
|
Slovenia
|
96)
|
The
pink triangle is an international symbol of gay rights. What is its
derivation?
|
An
inverted pink triangle was used as a Nazi concentration camp badge
identifying homosexual men (as well as some sexual offenders).
|
Sup 1
|
Which
Red Army general was the most decorated in Russian history?
|
Marshall
Zhukov
|
Sup 2
|
Who
composed An American in Paris?
|
|
Sup 3
|
Which
then MP wrote the 1845 novel Sybil, or the Two Nations?
|
Benjamin
Disraeli
|
Sup 4
|
The
169-seat Storting is the parliament of which country?
|
Norway
|
Sup 5
|
Abbreviated
UTC what is the common time standard across the world?
|
Coordinated
Universal Time. (French: temps universel coordonné)
|
Sup 6
|
Who
was the US President when Elvis Presley died?
|
Jimmy
Carter
|
Sup 7
|
Dictum meum pactum (my word is my bond) is the motto
of which institution?
|
London
Stock Exchange
|
Sup 8
|
In
WWII, what were the armoured vehicles of Major General Percy Hobarts 79th
Armoured Division known as?
|
The
Funnies
|