Well noted Capn! It seems stacking of cannon balls was common overall in static settings as there would be no dynamics causing shifts of the stack.
It seems the naval setting is simply a popular conduit for popular adaptions of phrases, sayings and various colloquial figurative metaphors etc. from the days of trade in the age of sail.
The incredibly tenuous root of the entire 'brass monkey' thing goes back to the sayings of Confucious, which likely entered the western culture through various channels linked to trade with the East. 'Hear no evil; speak no evil; see no evil" ended up related to monkeys via (as often the case) translation errors and play on word aspects common in colloquial speech.
This led to the popular brass monkey figures sometime early in 19th c. which became well known and the expressions referring to various anatomical elements ....mostly hair, nose etc. The 'balls' of course ended up in the baser maritime slang.
Here of course, colorful language was often applied to the key dynamic of weather notable to ships and the sailors.
It is typically fascinating to see the aspects of the general application of these kinds of colloquialisms and to the case of 'collectors terms' which add so much 'dimension' to our study of historical arms.
Regarding the brass monkeys etc. the root of all these variations was likely the proverbs of Confucious and his THREE WISE MONKEYS....but gotta admit these idioms are a lot more colorful than some boring proverb from Confucious. We have a lot of 'em here in Texas!
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