A Problem Of Royal Proportions
up vote
5
down vote
favorite
One day, while enjoying a trip in one of his kingdom's cities, the amnesiac king of Country X forgets the identity of his sole son and heir. Three men from the empire rush to send letters to the king--all claim to be of royal blood.
First claimant:
Father; do you remember the days we spent playing chess against each other? We spent entire afternoons with only each others' company honing each others' skills.
Second claimant:
Your majesty; do you remember the speech we gave together at the city hall? You praised the younger me for having the courage to speak in public.
Third claimant:
My liege; do you recall that day on late Mother's birthday, when I broke her favorite antique vase? To teach me a lesson, you made me clean the mess myself.
After inspecting all three letters, the king visits the royal library to read, as he often does. When he returns to his chambers that night, he quickly pens a letter to one of the claimants and has the other two arrested. Which person does he decide is the prince?
logical-deduction story
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
favorite
One day, while enjoying a trip in one of his kingdom's cities, the amnesiac king of Country X forgets the identity of his sole son and heir. Three men from the empire rush to send letters to the king--all claim to be of royal blood.
First claimant:
Father; do you remember the days we spent playing chess against each other? We spent entire afternoons with only each others' company honing each others' skills.
Second claimant:
Your majesty; do you remember the speech we gave together at the city hall? You praised the younger me for having the courage to speak in public.
Third claimant:
My liege; do you recall that day on late Mother's birthday, when I broke her favorite antique vase? To teach me a lesson, you made me clean the mess myself.
After inspecting all three letters, the king visits the royal library to read, as he often does. When he returns to his chambers that night, he quickly pens a letter to one of the claimants and has the other two arrested. Which person does he decide is the prince?
logical-deduction story
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
favorite
up vote
5
down vote
favorite
One day, while enjoying a trip in one of his kingdom's cities, the amnesiac king of Country X forgets the identity of his sole son and heir. Three men from the empire rush to send letters to the king--all claim to be of royal blood.
First claimant:
Father; do you remember the days we spent playing chess against each other? We spent entire afternoons with only each others' company honing each others' skills.
Second claimant:
Your majesty; do you remember the speech we gave together at the city hall? You praised the younger me for having the courage to speak in public.
Third claimant:
My liege; do you recall that day on late Mother's birthday, when I broke her favorite antique vase? To teach me a lesson, you made me clean the mess myself.
After inspecting all three letters, the king visits the royal library to read, as he often does. When he returns to his chambers that night, he quickly pens a letter to one of the claimants and has the other two arrested. Which person does he decide is the prince?
logical-deduction story
One day, while enjoying a trip in one of his kingdom's cities, the amnesiac king of Country X forgets the identity of his sole son and heir. Three men from the empire rush to send letters to the king--all claim to be of royal blood.
First claimant:
Father; do you remember the days we spent playing chess against each other? We spent entire afternoons with only each others' company honing each others' skills.
Second claimant:
Your majesty; do you remember the speech we gave together at the city hall? You praised the younger me for having the courage to speak in public.
Third claimant:
My liege; do you recall that day on late Mother's birthday, when I broke her favorite antique vase? To teach me a lesson, you made me clean the mess myself.
After inspecting all three letters, the king visits the royal library to read, as he often does. When he returns to his chambers that night, he quickly pens a letter to one of the claimants and has the other two arrested. Which person does he decide is the prince?
logical-deduction story
logical-deduction story
asked Nov 17 at 8:35
1848
1,75116
1,75116
add a comment |
add a comment |
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
up vote
8
down vote
accepted
I believe that it is...
the second claimant.
Why?
You say that the king went to the royal library, where he found out who the correct claimant was. The first and third claimants both refer to personal incidents, which probably weren't published in any book. However, the speech that the king and his son gave was probably published in some book that the royal librarian has stocked, so after reading that book and seeing the speech, he remembers that he and his son gave that exact speech printed there.
2
Anyone who listened to the speech could have known that.
– Philipp
Nov 17 at 16:37
Yeah @1848 how does this prove that this is his son?
– JGibbers
Nov 18 at 7:08
Thanks for the feedback! I'm sorry if the puzzle felt overtly vague :( (rot 13) Zl vqrn jnf gung bayl gur frpbaq eryngvba jvgu gur xvat vf irevsvnoyr. Cerfhznoyl gur xvat nyfb pebff-ersreraprq gur fraqre'f anzr jvgu gur arjfcncre ercbegf. V gubhtug nobhg vapyhqvat n yvar fnlvat gung jr pna nffhzr gung gur anzrf ba gur yrggref ner nhguragvp, ohg V sryg gung zvtug tvir gbb zhpu bs n uvag njnl.
– 1848
Nov 19 at 1:34
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
I feel like this riddle may be a tad too vague but I'm going with
The first claimant.
Why:
Because he went to the library and saw he had dozens and dozens of chess books in his private collection. Something only those close to him would know. The speech is a public incident that many people knew about so any of them could claim it for themselves
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
I think he decides that the
third
claimant is telling the truth. My reasoning:
The king has amnesia, but the first and second claimants refer to scenarios where the king must have used his memory: Improving at chess and rehearsing a public speech.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
I feel like it is
The second claimant
Because
He uses "Your Majesty" and refers to himself as "the younger me", both with the air of formality that one might expect from royalty.
Also
The Third claimant uses "My Liege" which is a feudal relationship between lord and vassal. He also refers to "Mother" with no royal title
And
The First claimant uses "Father", which is rather informal for a royal to use in a letter.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
I think the heir is the
third claimant. The king is amnesiac so he wouldn't have gotten better at chess through practice.
He wouldn't remember speeches either for the same reason. But the third claimant claims he broke a vase. That vase could've been placed in the library where the king spends large amounts of time. The king would've have remembered the vase, and then it would be easy to confirm with any of his servants whether the vase-breaking incident had happened or not.
add a comment |
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
8
down vote
accepted
I believe that it is...
the second claimant.
Why?
You say that the king went to the royal library, where he found out who the correct claimant was. The first and third claimants both refer to personal incidents, which probably weren't published in any book. However, the speech that the king and his son gave was probably published in some book that the royal librarian has stocked, so after reading that book and seeing the speech, he remembers that he and his son gave that exact speech printed there.
2
Anyone who listened to the speech could have known that.
– Philipp
Nov 17 at 16:37
Yeah @1848 how does this prove that this is his son?
– JGibbers
Nov 18 at 7:08
Thanks for the feedback! I'm sorry if the puzzle felt overtly vague :( (rot 13) Zl vqrn jnf gung bayl gur frpbaq eryngvba jvgu gur xvat vf irevsvnoyr. Cerfhznoyl gur xvat nyfb pebff-ersreraprq gur fraqre'f anzr jvgu gur arjfcncre ercbegf. V gubhtug nobhg vapyhqvat n yvar fnlvat gung jr pna nffhzr gung gur anzrf ba gur yrggref ner nhguragvp, ohg V sryg gung zvtug tvir gbb zhpu bs n uvag njnl.
– 1848
Nov 19 at 1:34
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
accepted
I believe that it is...
the second claimant.
Why?
You say that the king went to the royal library, where he found out who the correct claimant was. The first and third claimants both refer to personal incidents, which probably weren't published in any book. However, the speech that the king and his son gave was probably published in some book that the royal librarian has stocked, so after reading that book and seeing the speech, he remembers that he and his son gave that exact speech printed there.
2
Anyone who listened to the speech could have known that.
– Philipp
Nov 17 at 16:37
Yeah @1848 how does this prove that this is his son?
– JGibbers
Nov 18 at 7:08
Thanks for the feedback! I'm sorry if the puzzle felt overtly vague :( (rot 13) Zl vqrn jnf gung bayl gur frpbaq eryngvba jvgu gur xvat vf irevsvnoyr. Cerfhznoyl gur xvat nyfb pebff-ersreraprq gur fraqre'f anzr jvgu gur arjfcncre ercbegf. V gubhtug nobhg vapyhqvat n yvar fnlvat gung jr pna nffhzr gung gur anzrf ba gur yrggref ner nhguragvp, ohg V sryg gung zvtug tvir gbb zhpu bs n uvag njnl.
– 1848
Nov 19 at 1:34
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
accepted
up vote
8
down vote
accepted
I believe that it is...
the second claimant.
Why?
You say that the king went to the royal library, where he found out who the correct claimant was. The first and third claimants both refer to personal incidents, which probably weren't published in any book. However, the speech that the king and his son gave was probably published in some book that the royal librarian has stocked, so after reading that book and seeing the speech, he remembers that he and his son gave that exact speech printed there.
I believe that it is...
the second claimant.
Why?
You say that the king went to the royal library, where he found out who the correct claimant was. The first and third claimants both refer to personal incidents, which probably weren't published in any book. However, the speech that the king and his son gave was probably published in some book that the royal librarian has stocked, so after reading that book and seeing the speech, he remembers that he and his son gave that exact speech printed there.
answered Nov 17 at 8:45
gparyani
46212
46212
2
Anyone who listened to the speech could have known that.
– Philipp
Nov 17 at 16:37
Yeah @1848 how does this prove that this is his son?
– JGibbers
Nov 18 at 7:08
Thanks for the feedback! I'm sorry if the puzzle felt overtly vague :( (rot 13) Zl vqrn jnf gung bayl gur frpbaq eryngvba jvgu gur xvat vf irevsvnoyr. Cerfhznoyl gur xvat nyfb pebff-ersreraprq gur fraqre'f anzr jvgu gur arjfcncre ercbegf. V gubhtug nobhg vapyhqvat n yvar fnlvat gung jr pna nffhzr gung gur anzrf ba gur yrggref ner nhguragvp, ohg V sryg gung zvtug tvir gbb zhpu bs n uvag njnl.
– 1848
Nov 19 at 1:34
add a comment |
2
Anyone who listened to the speech could have known that.
– Philipp
Nov 17 at 16:37
Yeah @1848 how does this prove that this is his son?
– JGibbers
Nov 18 at 7:08
Thanks for the feedback! I'm sorry if the puzzle felt overtly vague :( (rot 13) Zl vqrn jnf gung bayl gur frpbaq eryngvba jvgu gur xvat vf irevsvnoyr. Cerfhznoyl gur xvat nyfb pebff-ersreraprq gur fraqre'f anzr jvgu gur arjfcncre ercbegf. V gubhtug nobhg vapyhqvat n yvar fnlvat gung jr pna nffhzr gung gur anzrf ba gur yrggref ner nhguragvp, ohg V sryg gung zvtug tvir gbb zhpu bs n uvag njnl.
– 1848
Nov 19 at 1:34
2
2
Anyone who listened to the speech could have known that.
– Philipp
Nov 17 at 16:37
Anyone who listened to the speech could have known that.
– Philipp
Nov 17 at 16:37
Yeah @1848 how does this prove that this is his son?
– JGibbers
Nov 18 at 7:08
Yeah @1848 how does this prove that this is his son?
– JGibbers
Nov 18 at 7:08
Thanks for the feedback! I'm sorry if the puzzle felt overtly vague :( (rot 13) Zl vqrn jnf gung bayl gur frpbaq eryngvba jvgu gur xvat vf irevsvnoyr. Cerfhznoyl gur xvat nyfb pebff-ersreraprq gur fraqre'f anzr jvgu gur arjfcncre ercbegf. V gubhtug nobhg vapyhqvat n yvar fnlvat gung jr pna nffhzr gung gur anzrf ba gur yrggref ner nhguragvp, ohg V sryg gung zvtug tvir gbb zhpu bs n uvag njnl.
– 1848
Nov 19 at 1:34
Thanks for the feedback! I'm sorry if the puzzle felt overtly vague :( (rot 13) Zl vqrn jnf gung bayl gur frpbaq eryngvba jvgu gur xvat vf irevsvnoyr. Cerfhznoyl gur xvat nyfb pebff-ersreraprq gur fraqre'f anzr jvgu gur arjfcncre ercbegf. V gubhtug nobhg vapyhqvat n yvar fnlvat gung jr pna nffhzr gung gur anzrf ba gur yrggref ner nhguragvp, ohg V sryg gung zvtug tvir gbb zhpu bs n uvag njnl.
– 1848
Nov 19 at 1:34
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
I feel like this riddle may be a tad too vague but I'm going with
The first claimant.
Why:
Because he went to the library and saw he had dozens and dozens of chess books in his private collection. Something only those close to him would know. The speech is a public incident that many people knew about so any of them could claim it for themselves
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
I feel like this riddle may be a tad too vague but I'm going with
The first claimant.
Why:
Because he went to the library and saw he had dozens and dozens of chess books in his private collection. Something only those close to him would know. The speech is a public incident that many people knew about so any of them could claim it for themselves
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
I feel like this riddle may be a tad too vague but I'm going with
The first claimant.
Why:
Because he went to the library and saw he had dozens and dozens of chess books in his private collection. Something only those close to him would know. The speech is a public incident that many people knew about so any of them could claim it for themselves
I feel like this riddle may be a tad too vague but I'm going with
The first claimant.
Why:
Because he went to the library and saw he had dozens and dozens of chess books in his private collection. Something only those close to him would know. The speech is a public incident that many people knew about so any of them could claim it for themselves
answered Nov 17 at 11:25
JGibbers
1,9001523
1,9001523
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
I think he decides that the
third
claimant is telling the truth. My reasoning:
The king has amnesia, but the first and second claimants refer to scenarios where the king must have used his memory: Improving at chess and rehearsing a public speech.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
I think he decides that the
third
claimant is telling the truth. My reasoning:
The king has amnesia, but the first and second claimants refer to scenarios where the king must have used his memory: Improving at chess and rehearsing a public speech.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
I think he decides that the
third
claimant is telling the truth. My reasoning:
The king has amnesia, but the first and second claimants refer to scenarios where the king must have used his memory: Improving at chess and rehearsing a public speech.
I think he decides that the
third
claimant is telling the truth. My reasoning:
The king has amnesia, but the first and second claimants refer to scenarios where the king must have used his memory: Improving at chess and rehearsing a public speech.
answered Nov 17 at 14:18
Elias Riedel Gårding
1213
1213
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
I feel like it is
The second claimant
Because
He uses "Your Majesty" and refers to himself as "the younger me", both with the air of formality that one might expect from royalty.
Also
The Third claimant uses "My Liege" which is a feudal relationship between lord and vassal. He also refers to "Mother" with no royal title
And
The First claimant uses "Father", which is rather informal for a royal to use in a letter.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
I feel like it is
The second claimant
Because
He uses "Your Majesty" and refers to himself as "the younger me", both with the air of formality that one might expect from royalty.
Also
The Third claimant uses "My Liege" which is a feudal relationship between lord and vassal. He also refers to "Mother" with no royal title
And
The First claimant uses "Father", which is rather informal for a royal to use in a letter.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
I feel like it is
The second claimant
Because
He uses "Your Majesty" and refers to himself as "the younger me", both with the air of formality that one might expect from royalty.
Also
The Third claimant uses "My Liege" which is a feudal relationship between lord and vassal. He also refers to "Mother" with no royal title
And
The First claimant uses "Father", which is rather informal for a royal to use in a letter.
I feel like it is
The second claimant
Because
He uses "Your Majesty" and refers to himself as "the younger me", both with the air of formality that one might expect from royalty.
Also
The Third claimant uses "My Liege" which is a feudal relationship between lord and vassal. He also refers to "Mother" with no royal title
And
The First claimant uses "Father", which is rather informal for a royal to use in a letter.
answered Nov 17 at 13:16
SteveV
4,115423
4,115423
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
I think the heir is the
third claimant. The king is amnesiac so he wouldn't have gotten better at chess through practice.
He wouldn't remember speeches either for the same reason. But the third claimant claims he broke a vase. That vase could've been placed in the library where the king spends large amounts of time. The king would've have remembered the vase, and then it would be easy to confirm with any of his servants whether the vase-breaking incident had happened or not.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
I think the heir is the
third claimant. The king is amnesiac so he wouldn't have gotten better at chess through practice.
He wouldn't remember speeches either for the same reason. But the third claimant claims he broke a vase. That vase could've been placed in the library where the king spends large amounts of time. The king would've have remembered the vase, and then it would be easy to confirm with any of his servants whether the vase-breaking incident had happened or not.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
I think the heir is the
third claimant. The king is amnesiac so he wouldn't have gotten better at chess through practice.
He wouldn't remember speeches either for the same reason. But the third claimant claims he broke a vase. That vase could've been placed in the library where the king spends large amounts of time. The king would've have remembered the vase, and then it would be easy to confirm with any of his servants whether the vase-breaking incident had happened or not.
I think the heir is the
third claimant. The king is amnesiac so he wouldn't have gotten better at chess through practice.
He wouldn't remember speeches either for the same reason. But the third claimant claims he broke a vase. That vase could've been placed in the library where the king spends large amounts of time. The king would've have remembered the vase, and then it would be easy to confirm with any of his servants whether the vase-breaking incident had happened or not.
answered Nov 17 at 17:35
Caffeineguy152
112
112
add a comment |
add a comment |
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fpuzzling.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f75363%2fa-problem-of-royal-proportions%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown