Quizzes at Fun Trivia Fun Trivia | quizzes Quizzes | games Games | community People | services Services | help Help | me Me
New Player - Log In
Currently 11644 players online.   Trivia games, quizzes, and contests - FREE !     Get Started! quiz register

Guild-y Places - International Edition

Created by musicmonkeyman

Fun Trivia : Quizzes : World Sites
Guildy Places  International Edition game quiz
"The far flung members of the Quiz Maker's Guild bring you a quiz that spans the world (or at least three of its continents)."

15 Points Per Correct Answer - No time limit  



1. In 1962, US astronaut John Glenn became the first American to orbit the earth. The people of the most geographically isolated capital city in the world turned on as many lights as possible as he passed overhead, causing him to dub it "the city of lights". What is the name of this city?
    Perth
    Darwin
    Adelaide
    Hobart


2. The nomadic aboriginal people of the Canadian prairies didn't leave much concrete evidence of their thousands of years here. A few rock paintings, some teepee rings and medicine wheels, and, not far from the little town of Viking, Alberta, the Ribstones. The two large rocks were carved, who knows how long ago, into the representation of the ribs of an animal that had great significance and meaning to the Cree and Blackfoot of this area, and to their ancestors. What animal was this?
    Raven
    Wolf
    Orca
    Bison


3. A plastic lawn chair by any other name would still spell a seat. During my recent stay in Greece, I discovered that plastic lawn chairs in Greece are virtually indistinguishable from the American plastic lawn chair. The name, however, is an exercise in ethnography, demography, 'insertgreekwordhere'graphy...What do the Greeks call plastic lawn chairs?
    Easily destructible chairs
    Athena chairs
    Plastic chairs
    Gypsy chairs


4. My hometown is Brighton in the county of East Sussex, located on England's south coast. At just over 50 miles distance from the capital, Brighton is often called "London by the Sea". Which of these facts about Brighton is NOT true?
    Brighton is famed for its seafront tower and boasts the UK’s tallest roller coaster (as of 2005) located at the city’s Pleasure Beach.
    In 1984 the IRA (Irish Republican Army) bombed Brighton's Grand hotel where leading members of the governing Conservative Party were staying.
    In the 16th century Brighton, then a fishing village called Brighthelmstone, was burned to the ground by French invaders.
    Among its many attraction Brighton boasts the oldest operational electric railway in the world.


5. Near the end of the 14th century, the citizens of a French city constructed a candle as long as the circumference of its walls, almost 4km long! It was stored on a spool, and was unrolled as it burned. Which city was this?
    Toulouse
    Montpellier
    Marseilles
    Lyons


6. Metallica released a recording of "Whiskey In The Jar" in 1999. Of course, this was a re-recording of the 1972 version of the song made well-known by Thin Lizzy. However, there is a lesser-known release of this song by an Australian group from the 60s that pre-dates the above renditions. Who performed it?
    The Seekers
    The Easybeats
    The Bee Gees
    Billy Thorpe & The Aztecs


7. On Canada's Vancouver Island, one can enjoy a delightful stroll through the gardens that Jennie Butchart created in order to hide the scars that had resulted from her husband's obsession. To what was Robert Butchart introduced on his honeymoon that set in motion the events that led to the creation of Butchart Gardens?
    Cocaine
    Marijuana
    Heroin
    Portland cement


8. Canberra is both the capital city and seat of Government of Australia. As such it is the butt of many jokes and is often damned (especially by non-residents and sullen local teenagers) as being 'soulless'. Perhaps this is why there is much speculation about the underlying symbolism employed by architect Walter Burley Griffin when he infamously won the international competition to design Canberra in 1912. Griffin and his draftsman wife Marion Mahony were known to be advocates of spiritual freedom, espousing ideas seen as the forerunners to 'new age' thinking. So it is somewhat ironic that the National Trust Listed municipal building that remains as an example of the great architect's work (not even located in Canberra but in Sydney!) is what type of structure?
    Public Toilet
    Garbage Incinerator
    Tourist Information Centre
    Social Security Office


9. Alphonse Daudet wrote about this town in the Provence region of France along the Rhone in 'Tartarin de Tarascon'. How did the town get its name?
    It was named after a wild bird common in that region called the 'Tarrasca' in Provencal.
    A legend of a dragon called the Tarasque who Sainte Marthe fought with in the first century AD.
    It was named after the little-known St Tarrascon for saving them from a flood.
    It was named for the Tarot cards practiced there by Tsigane populations.


10. One thing I liked best about my former life in England was the undeniable and constant presence of ghostly activity. Seemed one couldn't swing a ferret without hitting one or more of the disembodied spirits standing around. So, here's a ghostly question for fellow fans of the paranormal. Of the countless "haunted' places that pepper the British Isles, which of the following famous private residences was known throughout the late 1800s and early 1900s as the "most haunted house in England"?
    Borley Rectory
    Windsor Castle
    Greyrigg Hall
    Raynham Hall


Copyright, FunTrivia.com. All Rights Reserved.
Legal / Conditions of Use