Your use of this song to bring attention to the Richmond Sixteen (I was myself ignorant) is brilliant, and much appreciated.
@zoetropo13 жыл бұрын
Geoffrey of Monmouth's "King Arthur" is based on Alan Rufus (c.1040-4 August 1093/94), Earl of Richmond, Earl of East Anglia, and builder of Richmond Castle, Swavesey Abbey in Cambridgeshire and St Mary's Abbey York. Alan Rufus was interred at Bury St Edmunds by the abbot and royal physician Baldwin. Alan served as Duke William of Normandy's palace guard captain and chief emissary to Ponthieu and England during the period (c.1064-1066) depicted in the Bayeux Tapestry. He probably was well-acquainted with the Red Lady of Brittany who composed the Lay of the Beach in commemoration of William the Conqueror's vacation at Barfleur circa 1078. According to the Domesday survey of 1086, Alan Rufus was unique among the post-Conquest magnates in that he retained large numbers of native English lords, while minimising the Norman presence on his estates. He also brought William the Conqueror up to York to apologise in person for the Harrying of 1069-70. According to a charter from St Mary's, Alan's brother Stephen (c.1056/1060-1136), Count of Tréguier, opened England's first Parliament in 1089 at York. Stephen is buried in Brittany, except for his heart which is buried at York. Stephen's grandson Conan IV built the keep at Richmond castle; another grandson of his, William de Tancarville, trained and knighted William Marshal.
@jeffreym683 жыл бұрын
The story is a difficult one. It's a distressing thing to do to someone dedicated to peace.
@nonitathomas46202 жыл бұрын
Far and wide as the eye can wonder Heath and bog are everywhere Not a bird sings out to cheer us Oaks are standing gaunt and bare. We are the peat bog soldiers, Marching with our spades to the moor. Up and down the guards are marching, No one, no one can get through. Flight would mean a sure death facing, Guns and barbed wire block our view. We are the peat bog soldiers, Marching with our spades to the moor. But for us there is no complaining, Winter will in time be past. One day we shall rise rejoicing. Homeland, dear, you're mine at last. Then we're the peat bogs soldiers, March no more with spades to the moor.
@zoetropo13 жыл бұрын
2:15 'Norman' control? There were _no_ Normans in Richmondshire, aside from one vill on the eastern fringe owned by King William and one vill on the southern edge owned by the king's half-brother Count Robert of Mortain. All of the nearly 400 other vills were managed either by the Breton leader Alan Rufus and his half-brothers or by the many English locals whom Alan retained or promoted. Notable examples include Orm and the sons of Gamel: Orm and Gamel were the lords who complained to Earl Harold and King Edward about Tostig's misrule as Earl of Northumbria. According to one account, Tostig killed Gamel in anger at his outspokenness. In Richmondshire proper, there was no royal sheriff. The sheriff was appointed from the natives and he and the law court were paid for by the very first sheriff's levy in return for Alan exempting the population from the onerous Danegeld.
@justincrittenden86854 жыл бұрын
I have to admit, the song sounds better in German.