0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
I just feel sorry for Peter Odemwingie in all this. He never even got chance to pick up his award for 'Longest Time Spent In A Carpark' before Richard III cruely took it away from him!
Quote from: Belle Vue Popside on February 05, 2013, 03:37:48 pmI just feel sorry for Peter Odemwingie in all this. He never even got chance to pick up his award for 'Longest Time Spent In A Carpark' before Richard III cruely took it away from him! Take it you can't be arsed about the story at all then BVP ?
He was possibly nowhere near as bad as he was painted so maybe now his remains have been found we might get a more balanced view.I'd like to see him buried at York personally.
Sorry I disagree, who wants to be associated with losers? And it would set a bad precedent - just think about who the current incumbent is and if you really want to be associated with him?
I did hear a rumour that NCP had sent a bill to Buckingham Palace for £1.2 million
Couldn't resist.I agree (as I posted on poy) get him into York Minster, but there was something said on the news at dinnertime that a condition of the excavation happening was that if it proved to be Richard he would be reburied in Leicester, totally disregarding what it appears Richard wanted
Edwin King of the Northumbrians, killed in the battle of Hatfield Chase is reputed to have been buried in Sherwood Forest at a place called Edwinstowe, I think that is the most Northerly location of a Kings grave
hamlet, jesus, peter pan and oliver twist were also found in the same car parl....it was a multi story carpark
Quote from: Filo on February 05, 2013, 07:05:09 pmEdwin King of the Northumbrians, killed in the battle of Hatfield Chase is reputed to have been buried in Sherwood Forest at a place called Edwinstowe, I think that is the most Northerly location of a Kings grave I think you're right King John is at Worcester and that's the furthest north it goes providing you ignore some of the Danish kings who were buried in Denmark i.e. Svein Forkbeard. It seems the North/South divide has always existed even in this area. Most burials in the last 1500 years have been either in Westminster, Winchester or France with some of the Hanoverians and Danes in Germany and Denmark respectively.He belongs in York and I can see this argument intensifying ....
Quote from: hoolahoop on February 05, 2013, 08:00:00 pmQuote from: Filo on February 05, 2013, 07:05:09 pmEdwin King of the Northumbrians, killed in the battle of Hatfield Chase is reputed to have been buried in Sherwood Forest at a place called Edwinstowe, I think that is the most Northerly location of a Kings grave I think you're right King John is at Worcester and that's the furthest north it goes providing you ignore some of the Danish kings who were buried in Denmark i.e. Svein Forkbeard. It seems the North/South divide has always existed even in this area. Most burials in the last 1500 years have been either in Westminster, Winchester or France with some of the Hanoverians and Danes in Germany and Denmark respectively.He belongs in York and I can see this argument intensifying ....Richard III father was born at Conisbrough Castle, so you could make a case for his burial there
Quote from: Filo on February 05, 2013, 08:10:13 pmQuote from: hoolahoop on February 05, 2013, 08:00:00 pmQuote from: Filo on February 05, 2013, 07:05:09 pmEdwin King of the Northumbrians, killed in the battle of Hatfield Chase is reputed to have been buried in Sherwood Forest at a place called Edwinstowe, I think that is the most Northerly location of a Kings grave I think you're right King John is at Worcester and that's the furthest north it goes providing you ignore some of the Danish kings who were buried in Denmark i.e. Svein Forkbeard. It seems the North/South divide has always existed even in this area. Most burials in the last 1500 years have been either in Westminster, Winchester or France with some of the Hanoverians and Danes in Germany and Denmark respectively.He belongs in York and I can see this argument intensifying ....Richard III father was born at Conisbrough Castle, so you could make a case for his burial thereNow I never knew that and feel as though I should have. Did you know it was once owned by King Harold and the name means ''home of the king'' or summat like that.
I'd stick him i Westminster Abbey. With a bloody great sarcophagus. And in a place that overlooks the bloody Tudors. Show the cheating buggers they can't win in the end.BobG
Quote from: BobG on February 05, 2013, 09:01:32 pmI'd stick him i Westminster Abbey. With a bloody great sarcophagus. And in a place that overlooks the bloody Tudors. Show the cheating buggers they can't win in the end.BobGAye, stick him on top of Henry Tudor!
Quote from: hoolahoop on February 05, 2013, 08:37:14 pmQuote from: Filo on February 05, 2013, 08:10:13 pmQuote from: hoolahoop on February 05, 2013, 08:00:00 pmQuote from: Filo on February 05, 2013, 07:05:09 pmEdwin King of the Northumbrians, killed in the battle of Hatfield Chase is reputed to have been buried in Sherwood Forest at a place called Edwinstowe, I think that is the most Northerly location of a Kings grave I think you're right King John is at Worcester and that's the furthest north it goes providing you ignore some of the Danish kings who were buried in Denmark i.e. Svein Forkbeard. It seems the North/South divide has always existed even in this area. Most burials in the last 1500 years have been either in Westminster, Winchester or France with some of the Hanoverians and Danes in Germany and Denmark respectively.He belongs in York and I can see this argument intensifying ....Richard III father was born at Conisbrough Castle, so you could make a case for his burial thereNow I never knew that and feel as though I should have. Did you know it was once owned by King Harold and the name means ''home of the king'' or summat like that.The castle in it`s present structure was built by a Plantganet on the site of a Norman castle, before the Norman Conquest King Harold held the manor of Conisbrough
Given that Richard III was a pre reformation monarch, and thus a catholic, should he really be buried in an Anglican cathedral?I`m sure that he would n`t have wanted to be buried in a faith that was created by a Tudor