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It was first recorded in an ancient Egyptian Temple hundreds of years ago.
India is generally credited with the earliest recorded use.
it is some thing that we use every day
The origins of the bo-shuriken in Japan are still unclear. Its earliest recorded use was in the 17th century.
There is evidence of drug use in the early neolithic (11,000 to 850 BCE) See Links
In Exodus 5:7 it is recorded that the Egyptians withheld straw from the Israelites for their brick making. This is the earliest recorded use of fiber reinforcement of a ceramic.
Lacquer has been in use for thousands of years; the earliest form is derived from the secretion of the lac bug. The inventor is not recorded by history.
The earliest record of the Catholic religion are the letters of St. Paul. The first recorded use of the word "Catholic" to designate the Church that Christ founded is in the letter of St. Ignatius of Antioch, the second Bishop of that See after St. Peter.
A surname is a family name. Please enter your surname in the first box on the form.
The earliest recorded use in Modern English is in Sir Walter Scott's Old Mortality, 1816: "Poor Richard was to me as an eldest son, the apple of my eye."
The earliest recorded use of the word, 'parrot' was in 1525. It was from the French word, 'perrot', which was a short form for the name, 'Pierre', or it could have come from the word, 'parroquet' (parakeet).
Harrell was established as a surname in England by Normans following the conquest in 1066; the earliest recorded use is in an abbey charter in 1154 where it is spelled "Horel". The surnname appears to be derived from the Old French verb "hurer" meaning to bristle or stand up, and was most likely a nickname for someone with a good head of hair. Harrell may be recorded as one of several variants such as Hurran, Hurren, Harrill, Horrell, Horel, Hurrell, Arrell and Orrell. Harrell is not related in meaning or etymology to the given name Harold, which is from Old Norse, meaning army commander.The surname Harrell also appears in Ireland where it may be an anglicized form of the Gaelic name Ó hEarghail 'descendant of Earghal'. Earghal was a given name with the same etymology as Fearghal, which may be anglicized as Fergal but is also the source of the surname Farrell. Fearghal was a popular given name for boys meaning manly or valorous in early Ireland.