then force marched a couple of hundred miles to try to repel the Normans the English still might have won had the English King not had the
extreme bad sense to get himself killed during the battle.
frank theriault wrote:
1066.
William the Conqueror. He was French. Came across the Channel (that would be pre-chunnel, I believe), and defeated whoever was on the throne at the time, in the Battle of Hastings, thus becoming King of England.
It's why in English, the animals have English names (cows, pigs, sheep), but the food from them is derived from French (beef from boeff, pork from porc, mutton from mouton).
cheers, frank
"The optimist thinks this is the best of all possible worlds. The pessimist fears it is true." -J. Robert Oppenheimer
From: Keith Whaley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
And, without my having to read The Last of The Plantagenets, how did a French
king/duke/whatever, become a monarch in England?
I know it's a bit convoluted, but in a few sentences...?
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