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Since legend has it that he was born near modern-day Tel Aviv, and lived and died in what is modern day Istanbul, I'd have thought a choice between the two flags below was more suitable.
Actually, St George helped promote and defend Christanity against Roman beliefs during the 3rd Century AD, which is probably why Henry V chose him as the patron saint of England after we won the battle of Agincourt. Also he was tough, stood (and died) for his beliefs and he was a born leader - all the things the 3 main political party leaders are not nowadays
Happy st georges day everyone. Proud to be an Englishman, proud of my country's history and my Anglo-Saxon ancestry. There will always be an England.
I challenged my daughters Primary School Teacher on what they we telling the children regarding St Georges day or what they were doing to celebrate, I was told they will do nothing because it would be unfair to discriminate on the non English/ Christian pupils.
Boomstick wrote:QuoteHappy st georges day everyone. Proud to be an Englishman, proud of my country's history and my Anglo-Saxon ancestry. There will always be an England.I thought the genetic studies reckoned that we were predominantly Celtic, with dashes of Angle, Jute, Saxon, French and Viking (immigrants the lot of em) chucked in. As I've mentioned on here before, in my case, my family name is an old French word for a German, I was born in the shadow of a Norman castle. My mother's family are Irish. Iwent to school in what originally was an old Viking settlement and I married a half-Italian lass. I'm as English as thee, mind, but that hardly equates to Anglo-Saxon.
Nope. The Angles, Jutes and Saxons were the Germanic tribes that formed the people known as the Anglo Saxons. The Celts fcuked off to Scotland, wales, britanny and to a lesser extent Cornwall, when the Anglo saxons started throwing their weight around. Oh and the bloke who built the current castle at conisbrough was an English nobleman. (If thats the castle your on about). All that said, i'm still open to the possibility of having a bit of Norman or Norse blood in me. I wouldnt mind getting one of those genetic tests to find out.
Just want to say I am proud to be english; I'm proud of our history, our heritage, our education system, our NHS and our forces.I also don't class myself as British, does anyone else? If people abroad asked me which country I was from, I would never say \"the UK\" or britain?
Nobody knows our true lineage in reality. We may be Huns, Vandals, Goths, Celts, Norse, Moorish, Saxons, Germanic....but what the history books will state is that before these set foot on any of Englands green and pleasant lands, there was a form of caravan, flat back truck and white van settled in before them.
Ok I will join this thread even though David is my patron saint and not George Living abroad as I do and being a boring pedant I always say I am 'British but not English' since the average Dutchman hasn't a clue about Wales. Mind you I have ample chance for revenge since 'Holland' is not the same as The Netherlands. Holland is actually the combination of only 2 of the 12 Dutch provinces - North and South Holland and their inhabitants, when asked what country they come from, often say they come from Holland to the annoyance of the other 10 provinces. That's how I feel when Dutch people say British - oh you mean English.I have no problem someone saying they are English first as long as they do not deny also being British, in fact I am even more happy if they say they are People's Republic of South Yorkshire first. I tell my daughter she was born in The Netherlands, is 50% Irish, 25% Welsh and 25% People's Republic of South Yorkshire reflecting her grandparents and she is comfortable with that. The decisive point for me with my 50/50 parental split is that I was born in Wales and it's where I first lived. My Allegiance to Doncaster and Doncaster Rovers is lifelong, indisputable, and stems from where my formative educational years were spent. It's a cosmopolitan world and I see that as an enormously positive thing.
Oh, I know I am British, don't get me wrong, and I also know it says it on my passport BST But I see myself as more english than British, if you get what I mean? ie I'm not part engish, part welsh, part scottish, or even a combination of the 3.And if you asked 99% of welsh or scottish people, they wouldn't say they were British either.Infact, if you ask most people from most countries outside of Europe, and you said you were from Britain, they would probably say \"ah, you mean the UK\"? Then you have to go into length conversation about the difference between UK, Britain, England, Yorkshire, South Yorkshire, Doncaster, Thorne...
my family name is an old French word for a German
Surely the point is that Diwhali and Eid are religious festivals, thus celebrated like Christmas and Easter. As a retired Head in a London school I can say all were celebrated, especially the Christian ones, St George's Day was an assembly topic, it's not a religious festival, a bit like other patron saints here.Interestingly when we had to do our admission forms with parents, no-religion was the second highest part filled in. Often, Asian kids of all religions and generations knew more about Chrisianity than the indigenous population whose parents chose the no-religion category.