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22 June 2009

Leonhard Euler on the front 10 franc CH note / Leonhard Euler's pretty pictures on the obverse

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patfromch said...

Did you know that there is a Hotel Euler in Basel?

[the link to the Hotel Marvin Euler has been removed. See Comments below.]

I am going to walk by on Thursday and will give it a nod. Most guests probably don't even know who Leonard Euler is, that he once used to be on one of our bills or where Königsberg is. They probably just want a soft bed, room service and a wake-up call in the morning.

The heydays of BASIC were before my time, I can only remember trying my hands on a Commodore 64 and later MS-DOS and have forgotten most of it. Bill Gates still claims that he knows BASIC by heart as this video shows:

MS is still developing post-Basic stuff, check this out:

I have decided to go back to school and work for a CompTIA A+ exam, basic skills in programming languages such as Java or SQL may be inevital I fear. Apart from many other things. Oh bloody hell. The introduction lesson will be on said Thursday when I will walk past the Hotel Euler.

And I can't believe I am pulling plugs for MS. Get Ubuntu or even better, get a Mac ! You can still run Windows via Bootcamp or Wine if you really have to

====================

Can you walk in the lobby and see if maybe they got a pretty little free postcard of the hotel? I asked you last year to scout me up some good local hotels -- I think you just found my hotel in Basel.

(I know I owe you some postcards. I got the postcards. I got the stamps. I just haven't put the stamps on the postcards and mailed them yet. I think Freud called this kind of behavior Anal Retentive, it comes from Bad Toilet Training at Age 2 or whenever.)

Okay, I pronounce the above Extinct Banknote a tie with NL's 1000 Guilder Spinoza note.

You should have seen the Gazillion Koroner notes of the Socialist Heroes in Czechoslovakia, they had a nasty-looking Soviet-style soldier holding a Kaloshnikov with the cylindrical ammo magazine. If he had a Speech Balloon, he would be saying: Don't try anything funny, Tovarich.

A Gazillion Koroner would have bought you a cup of coffee in Prague -- if they had any coffee, which was not all the time. Edible food was also a common challenge.

I used to have a flatmate who said that capitalism was by far the best economic system, because only a capitalist economy could produce 14 competing different models of electric guitars. How could Marx possibly have refuted that? I don't think Marx even played the ukulele. (Karl, anyway, I think Groucho plays the ukulele in a couple of movies.)

Anyway, if you want to be a Successful, even a Great Sovereign Nation, you don't put a threatening soldier on your money. You put your country's greatest Philosoph on your money.

Or the world's greatest Mathematician, if he just happens to hang in your Sovereign Nation. You festoon your hard cash with the portraits of your most brilliant Dreamers.

In the little Amsterdam hotel, I asked the front-desk lady to make me a phone call to the Spinoza House because I don't speak any Dutch, and she very nicely made the phone call and found out what I needed to know about visiting Spinoza's little house (he rented the upstairs from a sympathetic surgeon) in Rijnsburg.

Later I was in the bar and she came up to me, she looked a little embarrassed, and said:

"Of course I have heard of Spinoza. But ... just who was he?"

I didn't know the Dutch word "Wijsgeer," but my father had used the word "Philosoph," he pronounced it with a pan-Euro spin, so I told her he was a great Philosoph. She nodded, she understood, she smiled. Danke wel.

The Euro was already in business and had extincted the old Guilder notes. But later I found out why she knew Spinoza's name -- and had even seen his face now and then.

You could probably have bought a used deux chevaux with a Spinoza.

The Euler, on the other hand -- 10 Suisse (old? new?) francs, this was real Straßegelt, 20 of these jumped in and out of your wallet every week. Everybody knew what Leonhard Euler looked like. In Confoederatio Helvetica he was as familiar as Elvis.

Interestingly enough, the Nasty Socialist Hero Soldier with the Kaloshnikov was a symbol of hyperinflation and worthless currency. Nobody in Prague wanted it, they asked for DM or Pound Sterling or U$, anything but the local stuff.

But with Euler and Spinoza -- this is Real Money, you can have a very nice brandy, or a short airplane flight, or a long train trip along the Rhine. I'll bet a Spinoza could have bought you Companionship in Amsterdam for the evening, and you would get change back.

I so terribly miss the Old Money. It was such a pleasant nightmare changing it two or three times a day when you crossed a border, seeing all these new faces, wondering who they were -- not just the Dreamers, but the Queens and Kings, the Revolutionaries who overthrew them, the Statesmen.

Newton made the biggest impression of all. After his nervous breakdown, his friends dragged him out of Cambridge, he bought a house in London, and eventually used his fame and connections to become England's Master of the Mint. He had to supervise a new coinage.

The old silver and gold coins kept shrinking -- people would use scissors to snip around the outsides of the coins. So Newton invented Milling -- the ribbed circumference of coins, so you can tell immediately if it's the original size or has been snipped and shrunk.


A counterfeiter and confidence man accused Newton of corrupting the currency. He probably thought Newton was a silly old Dreamer and no match for the confidence man's clever attacks.

Newton defended his new coins very effectively. When it was all over, he was still Master of the Mint. And the confidence man -- well, counterfeiting and Monkey Business with the national Money is considered High Treason, and the punishment for that was to be Drawn and Quartered. That must have hurt.

In an earlier Vleeptron post I showed the Euro coin found in Spain with Homer Simpson's image on it. This counterfeiter has a lot of talent, but I don't think he has much business sense or much of a future as a counterfeiter.

6 comments:

patfromch said...

Actually this one went out of use some years back, but much to my surprise I still see one of those in my wallet every now and then. Unfortunetly those occasions are getting very rare but if one passes my wallet I will refrain from spending it.

Forget the Hotel. Bad research on my part. This Hotel has nothing whatsoever to do with Euler, it was founded by someone with the same name, an online family tree is not revealing wether this was someone from the Basel line, the only one I found only lists Euler's line in St. Petersburg.. The online brochure of the hotel does not mention Leonhard Euler at all.

I passed there so nay times in 10 flaming years thinking this has to do with Euler somehow. Euler was born in Basel, but only spent 20 years there. I thought it would be neat to name a Hotel after one of their most famous citizens as a sort of honor. Bloody Jung and his bloody association theory ! (Jung was also from Basel, the city has also failed to honor him). And I guess I am not the only one who has been fooled.

Doesn't matter anyway. At the rates they charge I would spend my money somewhere else.

But I have some good news for you as a stamp afficionado.

This memorial stamp was released in 2007 by our dearest swiss postal service
http://www.swisspost.com/en/print/ph_euler_big.jpg

Maybe I can still get you one of these. I could also try to find the comic book that was released in 2007.

Vleeptron Dude said...

so ... i would make my reservations, fly to Basel, unpack my bags in my room in a hotel named for MARVIN EULER???

I am unplugging the link to the Hotel Marvin Euler NOW!

Thanks for the stamp! And yes, if it doesn't send you to the poorhouse, keep the next Euler 10f you get and frame it and hang on the wall.

btw congrats on your school plans. All students at all times are broke, this is the Historical Romance of being a student.

a Leonhard Euler comic book????? This could be better than the Spinoza Action Figure!

patfromch said...

Incidently I was down at the Post Office this pm and they gave me some info on how I could backorder older commemorative stamps. Let's hope they still got at least one left.....

That comic about Euler has also been translated into english
http://www.springer.com/birkhauser/historyofscience/book/978-3-7643-8332-9

As for that 10 CHF bill I didn't mean that I rarely see one of them in general. It is just that I rarely see the on with Euler on.

patfromch said...

Incidently the name is not Marvin but Abraham. Abraham Euler. Funny that, the St Petersburg lineage of the family is well documented, as for the ramaining Basel lineage the internet remains silent. usually the citizens of this city brag on how much culture and science they have in this city. But when it comes to honor theier greatest sons, epic fail. No Euler Square, no Jung statue. Pff...

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