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  2. Toby Jug - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toby_Jug

    There are competing theories for the origin of the name "Toby Jug". [4] Although it has been suggested that the pot is named after Sir Toby Belch in Shakespeare's play Twelfth Night, or Uncle Toby in Laurence Sterne's Tristram Shandy, the most widely accepted theory is that the original was a Yorkshireman, Henry Elwes, 'famous for drinking 2,000 gallons of strong stingo beer from his silver ...

  3. Mug - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mug

    A mug made on a potter's wheel in the Late Neolithic Period (c. 2500 –2000 BCE) in Zhengzhou, China. Though today mugs are associated with hot drinks, milk and soft drinks, many early mugs appear to have been mostly used for beer or other alcoholic drinks, and were often larger than modern mugs.

  4. Moustache cup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moustache_cup

    In the opening scene of the 1931 short comedy film Be Big!, Oliver Hardy, while packing for a trip to Atlantic City, coyly asks his wife if she packed his moustache cup. In Episode 15 of Season 4 of the television series The Andy Griffith Show , Aunt Bee receives one as a gift from a local farmer, Mr. Frisby.

  5. Pythagorean cup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythagorean_cup

    Cross section of a ceramic Pythagorean cup. A Pythagorean Cup (also known as a Pythagoras Cup, Greedy Cup, Cup of Justice, Anti Greedy Goblet or Tantalus Cup) is a practical joke device in a form of a drinking cup, credited to Pythagoras of Samos.

  6. Coffee cup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffee_cup

    As the drip coffee, invented in France in the 18th century, gained popularity, the need for tall cups disappeared, so Sèvres porcelain pioneered shorter cups. [2]: 232 Handles first appeared on the Meissen tall cups in the 1710s (some Oriental cups had handles, but these were made from silver). Handles became common by the 1730s.

  7. Tiki mug - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiki_mug

    What many would consider to be the earliest US "tiki mugs" were ceramics in the shape of a skull or an ordinary ceramic vessel with a hula girl-related motif. Mugs meant to emulate a tiki carving, what some would consider to be a "true" tiki mug, did not come to the United States until the late 1950s. [4]

  8. Tankard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tankard

    In recent centuries tankards were typically made of silver or pewter, but can be made of other materials, for example glass, wood, pottery, or boiled leather. [1] A tankard may have a hinged lid, and tankards featuring glass bottoms are also fairly common. Tankards are shaped and used similarly to beer steins.

  9. Shakespearean history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shakespearean_history

    In short, though Shakespeare "often accepts the moral portraitures of the chronicles which were originally produced by political bias, and has his characters commit or confess to crimes which their enemies falsely accused them of" (Richard III being perhaps a case in point), [32] his distribution of the moral and spiritual judgements of the ...