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Happy St George's day

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Mr Palaceman Flag 23 Apr 18 3.08pm Send a Private Message to Mr Palaceman Add Mr Palaceman as a friend

And they have called him Palace, apparently...

COYP...

 


"You can lead a horse to water but a pencil must be lead"

Stan Laurel

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Mr Palaceman Flag 23 Apr 18 3.10pm Send a Private Message to Mr Palaceman Add Mr Palaceman as a friend

[Link]

 


"You can lead a horse to water but a pencil must be lead"

Stan Laurel

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croydon proud Flag Any european country i fancy! 23 Apr 18 3.22pm

Originally posted by Mr Palaceman

And they have called him Palace, apparently...

COYP...

Apparently not, although he will have the choice to live in one or two, apparently,,,,,

 

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Stirlingsays Flag 23 Apr 18 3.34pm Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

Originally posted by croydon proud

Apparently not, although he will have the choice to live in one or two, apparently,,,,,

 


'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen)

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ex hibitionist Flag Hastings 23 Apr 18 4.53pm Send a Private Message to ex hibitionist Add ex hibitionist as a friend

Qu. Who was the first king of England?

Qu. How many kings of England have had the name Edward?

 

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steeleye20 Flag Croydon 23 Apr 18 4.58pm Send a Private Message to steeleye20 Add steeleye20 as a friend

Originally posted by ex hibitionist

Qu. Who was the first king of England?

Qu. How many kings of England have had the name Edward?

1) Egbert

2) Eight as in Edward VIII

Stand to be corrected though.....

 

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elgrande Flag bedford 23 Apr 18 5.34pm Send a Private Message to elgrande Add elgrande as a friend

Originally posted by steeleye20

It is a mythological symbol, as you say.

For historical English culture well give me someone English who contributed so much to our culture, like Shakespeare.

That would be a great day to celebrate, and with so much content.

Well if you have a Shakespeare day,we won't have to change the date....born and died on the 23rd of April.

 


always a Norwood boy, where ever I live.

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ex hibitionist Flag Hastings 23 Apr 18 8.45pm Send a Private Message to ex hibitionist Add ex hibitionist as a friend

Originally posted by steeleye20

1) Egbert

2) Eight as in Edward VIII

Stand to be corrected though.....

Some quote Egbert as he united the Angles and Saxons in the early 9th century against the Danes - and his coronation used the King's Stone - but it was properly Alf the Great's grandson Athelstan, who joined the south and north together c.945 AD - the Danes submitted to a king of all England - but the point is you'd think more than a handful of people in the country would know this - that it would be common knowledge, but even with all these george cross merchants, hardly any b*gger knows, very strange, but living in Hastings has made me ponder on how our history begins with 1066.

Similarly there have been 11 English kings called Edward, but the anglo saxon ones are strangely ignored, we start with that sc*mbag longshanks who came up with hanging, drawing and quartering which was barbaric even by the standards of those times. The confessor, the elder (Alf's boy and athelstan's old man) and the martyr (knocked off by Aethelred the Unready so he could kill loads of Danes) are the missing three. English day?! Almost nobody here knows our own bl**dy history.

 

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Stirlingsays Flag 23 Apr 18 9.09pm Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

Originally posted by ex hibitionist

Some quote Egbert as he united the Angles and Saxons in the early 9th century against the Danes - and his coronation used the King's Stone - but it was properly Alf the Great's grandson Athelstan, who joined the south and north together c.945 AD - the Danes submitted to a king of all England - but the point is you'd think more than a handful of people in the country would know this - that it would be common knowledge, but even with all these george cross merchants, hardly any b*gger knows, very strange, but living in Hastings has made me ponder on how our history begins with 1066.

Similarly there have been 11 English kings called Edward, but the anglo saxon ones are strangely ignored, we start with that sc*mbag longshanks who came up with hanging, drawing and quartering which was barbaric even by the standards of those times. The confessor, the elder (Alf's boy and athelstan's old man) and the martyr (knocked off by Aethelred the Unready so he could kill loads of Danes) are the missing three. English day?! Almost nobody here knows our own bl**dy history.

Enough know.....I'm regularly pleasantly surprised when I do a pub quiz.

Still most people have to work hard to keep their heads above water. I'm not sure we should knock them that hard for not being that interested in native medieval history.

 


'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen)

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steeleye20 Flag Croydon 23 Apr 18 9.11pm Send a Private Message to steeleye20 Add steeleye20 as a friend

Originally posted by ex hibitionist

Some quote Egbert as he united the Angles and Saxons in the early 9th century against the Danes - and his coronation used the King's Stone - but it was properly Alf the Great's grandson Athelstan, who joined the south and north together c.945 AD - the Danes submitted to a king of all England - but the point is you'd think more than a handful of people in the country would know this - that it would be common knowledge, but even with all these george cross merchants, hardly any b*gger knows, very strange, but living in Hastings has made me ponder on how our history begins with 1066.

Similarly there have been 11 English kings called Edward, but the anglo saxon ones are strangely ignored, we start with that sc*mbag longshanks who came up with hanging, drawing and quartering which was barbaric even by the standards of those times. The confessor, the elder (Alf's boy and athelstan's old man) and the martyr (knocked off by Aethelred the Unready so he could kill loads of Danes) are the missing three. English day?! Almost nobody here knows our own bl**dy history.

It never really occurred to me at school that much of history is hand-me-down and legend but, who was there to report events and how?

Also in more modern times where there is a means of recording, it is not necessarily accurate and reflects the opinion and society view of the time and the person reporting.

I loved history but will have to concede that much of it is 'bunk'.....

There is an excellent series by Dr.Lucy Worsley on TV where she takes often quite recent history and exposes it as all fibs.

Regards.....


 

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ex hibitionist Flag Hastings 23 Apr 18 10.04pm Send a Private Message to ex hibitionist Add ex hibitionist as a friend

fine woman Lucy Worsley - I'm not knocking people for being reluctant medievalists, but "who's the first King of England?" - strange that so few know, in other countries they'd be on the bank notes, national holiday and all that, and it's not even a straight answer. And I too have my gripes with history, esp the old thing if someone's got 'great' after their name it normally signifies they're a genocidal maniac.

 

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Stirlingsays Flag 23 Apr 18 10.18pm Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

'There is a forgotten, nay almost forbidden word, which means more to me than any other. That word is England.' (Winston Churchill)

 


'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen)

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