What I find interesting is that White Americans are leaning so strongly Republican on recent figures. This really is a important trend. I'm willing to bet 1 to 5 odds that in 2020 US Whites will be voting 70%+ Republican unless the party fragments.
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Why do 90% of black people vote for Democrats?
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Last edited by Heraclitus; October 16, 2011, 10:55.Modern man calls walking more quickly in the same direction down the same road “change.”
The world, in the last three hundred years, has not changed except in that sense.
The simple suggestion of a true change scandalizes and terrifies modern man. -Nicolás Gómez Dávila
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I'm not saying they did it to 'protect' Irish Catholics, but really, when you obviously know so little about the end of the war in Ireland, Partition and the Irish Civil War, why do you go on about it ?Originally posted by Ben Kenobi View PostRight, as if it didn't serve the desires of the Protestant UK to divide Catholic Ireland to preserve an outpost of Protestants.
But sure, they did it to protect the Irish Catholics. 

I clearly don't think that, don't be stupid, and don't put words in my mouth. I said you haven't addressed whether or not the government of Eire wants a sizable Protestant minority in its territory. As for assimilation- you mean the Irish citizens and their ancestors who belonged to the Anglican Church in Ireland and others. As they already lived in what was to become Eire, they were hardly a new minority.They've assimilated a considerable protestant minority in the Pale already. They would be adding a considerable number of Catholics. You seem to think that Northern Ireland is all protestant, when that's never been the case.
You've already said that the cost of the new population would be paid for out of itself. I've just pointed out that Northern Ireland's taxation does not now cover its running costs. As well as being ignorant of Northern Ireland's economy, you seem clueless about Eire's.Which would no longer be necessary in the event that they were to join Eire. That's the best thing that could happen to Northern Ireland is to lose the subsidies, and be connected to the rest of the Irish Economy
Par for the course.
Proof please.They've declined by a third.
I see you've resorted to out and out lies now. Where have I said or suggested that ? I don't support extremists of any religion.Of course not, because you don't consider what the Orange Order does as terrorism.
Only if you choose to misrepresent me, which you do. Your opinions on Ireland, Partition and the economy of the two states have zero merit, because they're based on wishful thinking and a keen disregard for facts.Ergo, your opinion on this issue has zero merit.
Nobody refers to the 'Pale' anymore. Again, you'd be wrong.Again, we've not seen terrorism elsewhere in Ireland where there is a Catholic majority, even in areas with significant protestant minorities, such as in the pale.
sh, Liam 13 October 1970, (35) nfNIRI
Status: Saor Eire (SE), Killed by: Saor Eire (SE)
Died in premature bomb explosion on railway embankment at the rear of McKee Irish Army base, off Blackhorse Avenue, Dublin.
she, John 17 May 1974, (27) nfNIRI
Status: Civilian (Civ), Killed by: Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF)
Killed when car bomb exploded Talbot Street, Dublin.
Having a Catholic majority or an increase in Catholic births doesn't prevent terrorism.
Actually Catholic terrorists and their supporters have been active throughout Western Europe and in North America.It's only in Northern Ireland, where you have a significant Catholic minority ruled by the UK, that you see violence.
Looking from this side of the Atlantic, it looks to me as though you're clueless, and rely on lies and fantasy.Looking from the outside in, it would seem to me that while Catholics as a majority tolerate and assimilate protestants, the converse is not true.Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.
...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915
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The most popular book would be the Authorized Version. King James was following the example of Henry VIII who was the first English monarch to decree and authorized translation of the Bible into the vernacular.Originally posted by Ben Kenobi View PostThe most popular books ever in the English language were published at his behest. To argue that Elizabeth gave England her language is to forget that the bible is not the Queens, but King James.
There were at least six translations into English of part or all of the Bible during Tudor times, the most famous being Coverdale's and Tyndale's.
When the Hampton Court Conference was ordered to make : 'one uniforme translation' they were tasked to base this on the previous English versions, translating anew, but comparing work wit the other vernacular bibles.
Tyndale's translation of the Pentateuch and the New Testament underpins the Authorized Version:
Luke, 20: 22-2522 Ys it laufull for vs to geve Cesar tribute or no?
23 He perceaved their craftynes and sayde vnto them: why tept ye me?
24 Shewe me a peny. Whose ymage and superscripcio hath it? They answered and sayde: Cesars.
25 And he sayde vnto them: Geve then vnto Cesar that which belongeth vnto Cesar: and to God that which pertayneth to God.
Authorized Version:
22: Is it lawful for us to give tribute unto Caesar, or no?
23: But he perceived their craftiness, and said unto them, Why tempt ye me?
24: Shew me a penny. Whose image and superscription hath it? They answered and said, Caesar's.
25: And he said unto them, Render therefore unto Caesar the things which be Caesar's, and unto God the things which be God's.
The Authorized Version has a vocabulary of about 8 000 words. Shakespeare, about 30 000. H eof course began his career in Elizabeth's reign. Another major contributor to the English language was Cranmer's 'Book Of Common Prayer'- in use at daily services, and on the important occasions in people's lives- births, deaths, marriages.
Cranmer was of course another product of Tudor times.
Compensating some monks and nuns, and freeing up a large number of people for gainful employment, thus helping lower wages and aid the economy.As opposed to the Tudors who dissolved the monasteries,
As did every other European state at the time. Hardly remarkable.executed their own citizens
Some priests were executed for treason or heresy. Easier after the Papal Bull 'released' them from their duty to their sovereign. Edward Tudor's reign saw only two such deaths. Mary (the Catholic) Tudor's saw 280.killed the priests,
How does one 'rape' a nunnery ? Please give examples of Tudor rapes of nunneries.raped the nunneries
This is an opinio, unsupported by fact. Henry VII built the first dry dock for the English navy. Henry VIII expanded the naval bases and built new fortifications around the country :England was far stronger prior to the Tudors than after.
The population increased and the economy grew under the Tudors- the world became smaller, thanks to Chancellor, Cabot, Willoughby and Frobisher.
Most of the empire in France was lost during the reign of Henry VI of Lancaster. Guines and Calais were lost during the reign of Mary Tudor, as a by-product of her marriage to Philip of Spain.She even had an empire in France, but it was under the Tudors that Calais itself was lost
Under the other Tudors, trade with Russia and India was established, Spain, Scotland and France defeated. Guisnes and Calais don't constitute an empire in anyone's book.
Because it didn't.So I'm just not seeing why we celebrate the reign of a dynasty where England declined.
The union of Scotland and England was not political, but personal; under his son, they were rapidly disunited. He lost his kingdoms and his head. His son, James II, kept his head but lost his throne. Not a resounding story of success. The foundations of empire (from a military point of view) owe more to the Commonwealth- Cromwell's forces seized Jamaica, and defeated the Spanish and Dutch in Europe.Under James, Scotland and England were united and the foundations of the Empire began that would lay across the entire world.Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.
...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915
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Again, the work was undertaken by King James, and it was his version that became the most popular. If the other, earlier versions had been as noteworthy, they would not have been superceded by the King James version.The most popular book would be the Authorized Version.
If you want to get into the second most popular, then you'll be looking at Challoner, not Tyndale.
Uh, no. He didn't compensate them a dime. It was pure theft. The land and buildings went to the Crown and helped fund Henry's extravagances.Compensating some monks and nuns
The lands were more productive under the monks than under Henry. All the dissolution did, was finance the Crown and impoverish the people. Great for the Tudors, a terrible deal for England.and freeing up a large number of people for gainful employment, thus helping lower wages and aid the economy.
Then why is Mary remarkable but Elizabeth is not?As did every other European state at the time. Hardly remarkable.
According to Elizabeth, celebrating a Catholic mass constituted treason.Some priests were executed for treason or heresy.
Elizabeth did that, not the Pope. As soon as she started persecuting Catholic priests for celebrating Mass, she immediately crossed the line. Render unto Caesar? The priests have a religious duty and obligation to their charges to provide for them the celebration of mass. A priest cannot cease to do so while remaining a priest.Easier after the Papal Bull 'released' them from their duty to their sovereign.
And Elizabeth saw upwards of 300, we don't even know them all because she didn't bother to keep accurate count. She didn't care how many Catholics were executed, provided they were Catholic.Edward Tudor's reign saw only two such deaths. Mary (the Catholic) Tudor's saw 280.
Uh, you seize the nuns and take them out of the nunnery and then you rape them. I take it that english isn't your first language?raped the nunneries How does one 'rape' a nunnery ? Please give examples of Tudor rapes of nunneries.
Compare Tudor England with Plantagenet England and with Jacobite England. The only time that England was not an empire was in Tudor times. and prior to that, in the times of the Saxons. Tudor England was very weak.Henry VII built the first dry dock for the English navy. Henry VIII expanded the naval bases and built new fortifications around the country :
And England under the Plantagenets was England + France, and probably the largest world power. She would go on the be the world power once the Tudors were gone. Again, Tudor England was just about the weakest point in English history since the Confessor.The population increased and the economy grew under the Tudors- the world became smaller, thanks to Chancellor, Cabot, Willoughby and Frobisher.
It was lost because Henry VIII spent every dime his father collected on extravagancies that his father had husbanded. Back then England's glory days were in the past. It took the Jacobites to change this and form an Empire spanning the world. Imagine if Elizabeth had married? We'd be speaking French.Most of the empire in France was lost during the reign of Henry VI of Lancaster. Guines and Calais were lost during the reign of Mary Tudor, as a by-product of her marriage to Philip of Spain.
No, because people today aren't taught about the Angevin Empire.Because it didn't.
All starts with James VI and I. There was no one else. Had Charles not been executed the blight of the interregnum would have been averted.The union of Scotland and England was not political, but personal; under his son, they were rapidly disunited. He lost his kingdoms and his head. His son, James II, kept his head but lost his throne. Not a resounding story of success. The foundations of empire (from a military point of view) owe more to the Commonwealth- Cromwell's forces seized Jamaica, and defeated the Spanish and Dutch in Europe.
It's an interesting world view that you have, Molly, where you celebrate the tyrants and ignore the best rulers.Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
"Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
2015 APOLYTON FANTASY FOOTBALL CHAMPION!
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They didn't retake Anatolia for the Byzantines. They invaded lands in the Middle East that had been part of Sunni Islam or Fatimid Shi'ite Islam for quite some time- over 300 years in some cases. In any case, the Crusaders weren't truly fighting for Orthodox or Coptic or Jacobite Christianity.Originally posted by Ben Kenobi View PostYes, they took the Christian lands that had fallen to the Turks.
And at one time they were ruled by the Achaemenids. The Alexander of Macedon, his successors, then the Sassanids, Byzantines, etc. Having a population part Christian does not make you a Christian city. It certainly didn't make them belong to Western Christianity or the French, or Germans.Or perhaps we should forget about the fact that Alexandria and Antioch and Jerusalem were all once nearly as prominent as Rome
Irrelevant. Either Catholicism is a religion of peace, or it isn't. Slaughtering Jews is hardly a peaceful act. The Fatimid governor didn't kill the Christian population of Jerusalem- he let them go. The Fatimids had good relations with their religious minorities, and had proposed an anti-Turk alliance- which was refused by the Crusaders.Indeed. What was the population of Jerusalem when the Muslims first sacked it?
No I don't. You assume that because the lands were once ruled over three hundred years before by a Christian power that they should be taken from their new rulers by force. As I've shown (through my greater knowledge of the area's history) the lands in question had been a battleground between the Zoroastrian Sassanid Empire and the Orthodox Byzantine Empire before Islam conquered them. In fact, Jerusalem and Antioch had only recently changed hands before the Muslim conquest in the 7th Century.And you show your ignorance of antiquity. Yes, the lands were Christian, and the Christians have every right to stand up and defend themselves. But I suppose the Copts do not exist in your history.
When the Crusaders eventually reached Egypt proper, they also indiscriminately killed Coptic Christians. Who had already demonstrated in previous centuries their lack of fondness for Byzantine rule ( the Copts being Monophysite schismatics).
You don't know much about it, do you ? It was partly a religious war, but Cardinal Richelieu preferred to support France and not the Pope or his fellow Catholic Habsburgs, for his own reasons.If it was a religious war, then why did Catholic France intervene in favor of the Protestants?
I'm sorry, that's your area of expertise.Again, you lie
Execution of priests for treason has what to do with recusancy ? The conflict with some English Catholics was a process, it didn't happen all at once. Give figures for those banished from Emgland for their Catholicism.Many priests were executed and many who chose to practice Catholicism were banished from England.
The Huguenots who left France after the Revocation numbered almost a quarter of a million. They contributed greatly to the British and Dutch economies, and were also warmly welcomed by Brandenburg- which left its former alliance with France. Of course the same thing happened with the Spanish expulsion of the Marranos and Moriscoes. Catholic monarchs, eh?
Hogwash.As did Henry's
Huguenots and Sephardic Jews financed William of Orange's voyage to England. France lost its ally James II thanks to William. Who also went on to lead an alliance against France. Huguenots featured prominently in the new English army, at the Boyne and at Oudenarde.And England's loss was France's gain.
Idiot.
Almost too stupid for words. Heard of the repeated bankruptcies of the Crown of Spain ? What happened to the Spanish economy ? Spanish goods went from being carried by Spanish vessels to being carried by Dutch and English ships.And England's loss also the gain of Spain.
Given you haven't stated what part of England's population was devoutly Catholic under the Tudors, I don't see how you can assert this. Catholic France certainly did have Holy Wars over faith. England didn't. England didn;t have a St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre. Nor did it have a mass expulsion comparable to Spain's loss of Jews or Moriscoes, or France's of Huguenots.The difference is that Catholic France did not try to persecute the majority of their population as the Tudors did
They didn't have the vote when most people didn't have the vote. I refer you to the Reform Act, 1832.It's persecution simply because of their creed.
People were not expelled en masse. You have to prove this, not simply repeat it. Priests were executed- for treason.They were expelled, en masse, and the priests were executed.
I notice you don't refer to any specific examples or dates. The Bull released Catholics from their allegiance to their monarch; ergo, they were now easily assumed to be traitors. You make no distinction between the Queen and her counsellors, nor do you refer to her attempts to ameliorate Parliament's attitude towards Catholics.Already cited, and the persecution of English Catholics did not begin with her. Nor was her persecution started after the Papal Bull. The Papal Bull spells out her persecution of Catholics prior to it's issuance. Again, you lie.
That's because you're ignorant and a bigot.Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.
...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915
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Having trouble keeping the lies straight? You just said that the division was done to protect Irish Catholics. Balderdash. It was done to preserve the protestant parts of Ulster, which is why the division is purely sectarian and will vanish along with the sectarianism. It has no basis in economic or geogaphical fact.I'm not saying they did it to 'protect' Irish Catholics
The fact of the matter is that they would be bringing in more Catholics than protestants. Even if they were reluctant to increase the total number of protestants, they would still gain the benefit of having more Catholics.I clearly don't think that, don't be stupid, and don't put words in my mouth.
Again, you can't keep the lies straight. You said that Eire does not want them. Full stop.I said you haven't addressed whether or not the government of Eire wants a sizable Protestant minority in its territory.
Assimilated in this case means that those areas have became significantly more Catholic over the years. So, given the model of the pale, I fail to see why the same would not happen over time with a united Ulster. The only point to the Church of Ireland was to a United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Now that the latter no longer exists there's not much need for the former.As for assimilation- you mean the Irish citizens and their ancestors who belonged to the Anglican Church in Ireland and others. As they already lived in what was to become Eire, they were hardly a new minority.
Indeed, adopting Eire taxation policies would be beneficial to Ulster. I don't see why they would perpetuate subsidies that really have no point in a united Ireland. There's no need to own a backwards outpost in Ireland anymore. Yes, you are right that they don't cover the running costs, which is why you slash the costs and bring them in line with the rest of Ireland. Or do you believe that nothing of value is produced in Ulster? It has the potential to be the most prosperous part of Ireland with competent administration.You've already said that the cost of the new population would be paid for out of itself.
In the same source you've already cited.They've declined by a third. Proof please.
The 1961 Census states that Presbyterians comprised 29 percent of the population of Northern Ireland. As of 2001, they comprised 20.7 percent of the population. Do you not read your own sources? As I said, declined by a third.
That's the first you've said that. One could be forgiven looking at your previous posts from assuming that the Orange Order doesn't even exist. Look, yes, the Catholics are responsible, but they are not the only ones responsible for the troubles. There is a long history in Ireland of antagonism, and the Irish have cause for their skepticism to English policies intended to wipe them out.I see you've resorted to out and out lies now. Where have I said or suggested that ? I don't support extremists of any religion.
Given that you aren't even aware of what your own sources are saying, that's rather rich. At least one of us is reading them.Your opinions on Ireland, Partition and the economy of the two states have zero merit, because they're based on wishful thinking and a keen disregard for facts.
What would you call the areas with substantial Protestant settlement around the time of Cromwell? Oh right, the Pale. Why might it not be referred to? Because it's been assimilated into Ireland as a whole. Just as we won't really understand 'Northern Ireland'.Nobody refers to the 'Pale' anymore. Again, you'd be wrong.
So why then is the bulk of the terrorism in Catholic minority areas? Could it be that they protestants are responsible for much of it and are trying to keep them down? That tends to be the English policy towards Catholics as a whole, does it not? Last I checked a Catholic could not even inherit the throne. Despite the fact that the original House was in fact Catholic. That would be like the Russians requiring Catholic kings. At least the Russians value their origins.Having a Catholic majority or an increase in Catholic births doesn't prevent terrorism.
For certain values of active. I'd wager that they are the third most active in the British Isles by creed. Want to guess number one and number two?Actually Catholic terrorists and their supporters have been active throughout Western Europe and in North America.Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
"Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
2015 APOLYTON FANTASY FOOTBALL CHAMPION!
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Yes, they did retake parts of Anatolia for the Byzantines. First Crusade started at Nicaea. I guess in your history they got of the boat and that German dude drowned and the English dude kicked butt with the French dude? 3rd Crusade.They didn't retake Anatolia for the Byzantines.
Nicaea was ruled for 300 years by the Fatimids? What kind of history do they teach over there?They invaded lands in the Middle East that had been part of Sunni Islam or Fatimid Shi'ite Islam for quite some time
Right, that's because Marx said so. IIRC, doesn't Marx believe there is no such thing as spirituality? That would kind of put a damper on the Crusades. Gosh, I'm going to sail halfway across the world, leaving my family behind, driving myself penniless, fighting the saracens only to die in a pisspot in a unmarked desert grave. Money, dear boy!In any case, the Crusaders weren't truly fighting for Orthodox or Coptic or Jacobite Christianity.
Really? Let's ask the Persians what they think of Islam.Or perhaps we should forget about the fact that Alexandria and Antioch and Jerusalem were all once nearly as prominent as Rome And at one time they were ruled by the Achaemenids.
Gosh, Zoroasterianism is just *thriving*. Good thing there's no longer any Shah anymore eh. Praise Carter!
One would argue then that Constantinople isn't a Christian city either. Look, facts are facts. Back then those cities were extremely significant, because they were the locations of Christian Patriarchates. Less so known today, but that is simply because it isn't taught anymore. Which is why they were targets for Crusades. How else are you going to explain Damietta? Questing for Oil?Having a population part Christian does not make you a Christian city.
True. But we have Islam to thank for that. Christianity is no less Eastern, but it is unfortunate that the Muslims still are bound and determined to eradicate those who have stayed. They won't succeed, but they'll certainly try.It certainly didn't make them belong to Western Christianity or the French, or Germans.
Maybe to you. Apparently it's only relevant when Christians retake it.Indeed. What was the population of Jerusalem when the Muslims first sacked it? Irrelevant.
Neither is slaughtering Christians. I don't see why Christians shouldn't stand up for their brothers and sisters who are being attacked, and yes, that includes Jews in Israel. But apparently your love for them only goes so far.Either Catholicism is a religion of peace, or it isn't. Slaughtering Jews is hardly a peaceful act.
And today they Muslims are torching the churches that have existed in Egypt since the Fatimids. Thank God for those tolerant Muslims eh? My gosh. I would have hardly expected you to be arguing that it's the Muslims we should be looking up to as a model for how to treat religious minorities. Maybe we should go ask those Persians again!The Fatimid governor didn't kill the Christian population of Jerusalem- he let them go. The Fatimids had good relations with their religious minorities, and had proposed an anti-Turk alliance- which was refused by the Crusaders.
So if Napoleon succeeded you'd call yourself a proud Frenchman? Or am I allowed to argue that France is France and England is England, based on history that goes far further than the Napoleonic wars? Which is it?You assume that because the lands were once ruled over three hundred years before by a Christian power that they should be taken from their new rulers by force.
Which is why you are holding up Islam as the model for religious tolerance, given what they did to the Persians? You have a selective memory.As I've shown (through my greater knowledge of the area's history) the lands in question had been a battleground between the Zoroastrian Sassanid Empire and the Orthodox Byzantine Empire before Islam conquered them. In fact, Jerusalem and Antioch had only recently changed hands before the Muslim conquest in the 7th Century.
Anything positive about Christianity, never happened. A muslim helps a child? Wow, big news! Have to make sure people know about *that*.
Except that they are actually in accordance with what the Church teaches. Might want to catch up with ol' Papa Benedict. He's a step ahead of you. Man, even 84 year old dudes are passing you by...When the Crusaders eventually reached Egypt proper, they also indiscriminately killed Coptic Christians. Who had already demonstrated in previous centuries their lack of fondness for Byzantine rule ( the Copts being Monophysite schismatics).
So, it WASN"T a religious war. Thanks Molly! Glad to see that your narrative is wrong, as usual.You don't know much about it, do you ? It was partly a religious war, but Cardinal Richelieu preferred to support France and not the Pope or his fellow Catholic Habsburgs, for his own reasons.
You're looking at the colonies of Nova Scotia, (New Foundland), significant numbers of folks in Manitoba, some in Ontario.Execution of priests for treason has what to do with recusancy ? The conflict with some English Catholics was a process, it didn't happen all at once. Give figures for those banished from Emgland for their Catholicism.
Then you're looking at George Calvart, and his bunch.
Not to mention the Catholics in Australia and New Zealand, as well as on the continent, in Savoy and in France. So, yeah. I'll see what I can find. I'm interested in the question myself, putting a total number on those who left England to settle elsewhere.
And Catholics served at Yorktown.Idiot.
Under Henry VII? Same as in France at the time. England was a Catholic country, just like France (which is why they had problems), during the Babylonian captivity when the Papacy was inGiven you haven't stated what part of England's population was devoutly Catholic under the Tudors
England did have a holy war over Faith. You just don't regard it as a 'holy war'. That's the problem. They, had, in fact, several wars over religion. The last of which was the Glorious Revolution. Very much a religious war. Everything from Henry VII to George I was a Holy War, over the Catholic question, in one form or another. Even the Gordion riots were a part of this.I don't see how you can assert this. Catholic France certainly did have Holy Wars over faith. England didn't.
The reason you don't get this is because you don't see things from the Catholic perspective.
Yes, they did have St. Bartholomew's Day massacre. And their 'mass expulsion', was primarily to the Colonies. That was kind of the whole point of them.England didn;t have a St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre. Nor did it have a mass expulsion comparable to Spain's loss of Jews or Moriscoes, or France's of Huguenots.
Balderdash. Emancipation was passed because they could be arrested simply for practicing their faith and asserting they were Catholic as late as 1832. BY the laws on the book, not to mention the Test act which prohibited many industries to Catholics.They didn't have the vote when most people didn't have the vote. I refer you to the Reform Act, 1832.
And yes, they were expelled, en masse.
I cited the damn Bull, which refers to Elizabeth having executed Priests. Ergo, it was written after she had done so. This is not hard, Molly. Are you really trying to assert that the Bull drove the persecution and not the other way around?I notice you don't refer to any specific examples or dates. The Bull released Catholics from their allegiance to their monarch
Elizabeth I executed priests for no other reason than the fact that they celebrated mass. End stop. Hence the bull, releasing, not just the priests, but all the faithful in England from their duties to their sovereign.
No, I happen to be a historian who refuses to whitewash Elizabeth's history.That's because you're ignorant and a bigot.Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
"Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
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Again, you appear to be having some cognitive difficulties. Look at what I wrote:Originally posted by Ben Kenobi View PostAgain, the work was undertaken by King James, and it was his version that became the most popular. If the other, earlier versions had been as noteworthy, they would not have been superceded by the King James version.
If you want to get into the second most popular, then you'll be looking at Challoner, not Tyndale.
I'm not talking about which particular book is the best seller. I'm talking about a new vocabulary, new phrases, for new ideas and experiences. England was opened to Humanism and the Renaissance in Tudor times:The Tudor 'ruin' managed to provide England with a world language, not a an off-shore European one. A world literature, in Shakespeare, Elizabethan drama, the Bible (based in many aspects upon work by Miles Coverdale and William Tyndale)
Ch.11, Early Modern English from 'The English Language' by David CrystalThe story of English becomes more definite in the 16th Century, with more evidence available about the way language was developing, both in th etexts themselves, and in a growing number of observations dealing with the grammar, vocabulary and writing system. In this century, scholars seriously got down to talking about the English language.
The Authorized Version, from a linguistic point of view, has a smaller vocabulary than Shakespeare, and preserves older words and phrases, that by the 1620s were already dying out or to be found only in isolated areas. Hardly surprising, given that Tyndale's New Testament predated the Authorized by almost a century.Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.
...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915
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If in doubt, rely on invective. You've already accused me on no evidence at all of ignoring or treating Protestant terrorism differently from Catholic terrorism. I distrust and dislike all religious fanatics.Originally posted by Ben Kenobi View PostHaving trouble keeping the lies straight?
Then quote what I said. The Republicans in the South were faced with an unenviable choice- endure more bloodshed and warfare, or get the best deal possible. The best deal was the Partition, which did save Irish Catholics in the South from a longer war with the British.You just said that the division was done to protect Irish Catholics
The fact of the matter is that they would be bringing in more Catholics than protestants.Again, you can't keep the lies straight. You said that Eire does not want them. Full stopGive us some figures, not an opinion. I've already shown (the Economist article) that Northern Ireland costs more to run that it provides in revenue. You have yet to show, with figures, how Eire would provide for its new population. Because you don't have any figures.Indeed, adopting Eire taxation policies would be beneficial to Ulster.
Show me where ? Otherwise, you are again bearing false witness. One of us is a liar, and it isn't me.
Again, you first misrepresented me, and you continually fail to address what the Irish government wants and how it would all be paid for. Facts, not broad assumptions and opinions please.
I don't support female genital mutilation either, or first degree murder, or the death penalty. To point out that Catholics have committed acts of terror and mass murder when you are disingenuously calling it a religion of peace, it is not necessary to go through every other religious denomination's chequered history. It is either a religion of peace or it isn't. As I've said, 'and so do they' is neither justification nor excuse.That's the first you've said that
The issue is not responsibility for the Troubles, the issue is, are Catholics violent ? Do they kill ? Do they plant bombs which kill indiscriminately ? Do they torture, and carry out punishment beatings and kneecappings ? If the answer to all these is yes, which it is, then as adherents of a supposed 'religion' of peace, they're failing.Look, yes, the Catholics are responsible, but they are not the only ones responsible for the troubles.
You haven't posted any figures or sources for your opinions on Ireland. How could I read yours ? It's all just vague waflle and fantasy.At least one of us is reading them.
Mediaeval times and later, you twit. The first mention of the Pale in Ireland is in 1446. Your lack of knowledge is all too apparent. There was also a Pale in Calais. It refers to the area under direct rule from England. And as I've said, nobody refers to it anymore.What would you call the areas with substantial Protestant settlement around the time of Cromwell? Oh right, the Pale.
Please how us your evidence for this.So why then is the bulk of the terrorism in Catholic minority areas?
Yes, because there were so many other options available. I bet they were even Caucasian.Last I checked a Catholic could not even inherit the throne. Despite the fact that the original House was in fact Catholic
Not interested in your wagers and guesswork. Some more facts, dates and figures would be useful, because so far you're pitiably short in them, and long on rhetoric and windbaggery.I'd wager that they are the third most active in the British Isles by creed. Want to guess number one and number two?Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.
...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915
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If you are arguing with Ben, you should assume all of the following:
1. that he wont read what you say
2. that he wont understand what you said (see point 1)
3. that he wont argue against what you actually said, just an army of strawmen (see point 2)
4. that he wont have facts to back up his points
5. that he wont understand any facts you provide (see points 1, 2 and 3)
6. that he wont understand or follow any basic logical argument
7. that he wont provide any logical argument
8. that he will lie
He's demonstrated again and again. So it really is pointless to discuss anything with him.Jon Miller: MikeH speaks the truth
Jon Miller: MikeH is a shockingly revolting dolt and a masturbatory urine-reeking sideshow freak whose word is as valuable as an aging cow paddy.
We've got both kinds
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QUOTE=Ben Kenobi;6037334]Yes, they did retake parts of Anatolia for the Byzantines. [/QUOTE]
Locate Nicaea on a map. Locate Anatolia. The Crusaders didnt retake Anatolia for the Byzantines. A part is not the whole and never has been. Do read something on the Crusades- try Steven Runciman's three volume work - I have.
I'm entirely uninterested in your guesses and misrepresentations. In my history they start off with anti-Jewish pogroms in Europe (after the initial preaching of course). Strange how so much of Catholic history is filled with ethnic cleansing and anti-semitism, from the Crusades to Spain, King John's England, et cetera.I guess in your history they got of the boat and that German dude drowned and the English dude kicked butt with the French dude? 3rd Crusade.
I didn't say that. And what I said can't be interpreted that way, by anyone with a degree of knowledge or common sense. Which I'm coming to see excludes you. Jerusalem had indeed been fought over by the Fatimids and the Seljuk Turks, and the Fatimids had only recently taken it from the Sejuk's vassals, the Ortoqids, when the Crusaders appeared. I suppose when you can't misrepresent, you attempt to obfuscate.Nicaea was ruled for 300 years by the Fatimids? What kind of history do they teach over there?
Not relevant. Many Crusaders were fighting for what their brethren had already captured from the Byzantines in Southern Italy, Sicily and the Balkans. Territory of their own. Some of those who had pledged to be vassals of the Byzantine emperor broke their oaths. Others happily murdered Christians who weren't Catholic, in the Balkans, Greece, in Byzantine territory and in Egypt.Right, that's because Marx said so. IIRC, doesn't Marx believe there is no such thing as spirituality
Oh dear. Someone's missing his medication. The point being that you hysterically portraying the Crusades as an attempt to win back 'Christian' lands is just nonsense- the lands were no more 'Christian', and had not been in some cases for over 300 years.Really? Let's ask the Persians what they think of Islam.
If you're referring to today's Istanbul, then the majority population would appear to be Muslim, but it is capital of a secular state.One would argue then that Constantinople isn't a Christian city either
Again, irrelevant. The Crusaders were not retaking lands that had belonged to the Christian West. The Byzantines had not been well-liked by their Syriac and Coptic citizens either- which if you'd read any Byzantine history, youd know.True. But we have Islam to thank for that.
Nope. It's relevant, because, as Runciman points out, the Sack of Jerusalem coloured all future relations beween the Franks and the Muslims and Jews. I've read what happened when the Caliph took Jerusalem. You clearly have not.Apparently it's only relevant when Christians retake it.
My love is irrelevant. The question which you keep shying away from or obscuring with irrelevant asides, is 'Is Catholicism a religion of peace ? ' and on past and present evidence the answer is no. The Crusaders defended Orthodox and Coptic Christians to death. Hardly a friendly act, setting them free by killing them....Neither is slaughtering Christians. I don't see why Christians shouldn't stand up for their brothers and sisters who are being attacked, and yes, that includes Jews in Israel. But apparently your love for them only goes so far
Again, irrelevant. The Fatimids in Egypt sponsored feast on Christian holy days, they subsidised the head of the Jewish community and paid fees for new synagogues. They also wanted an anti-Turkish alliance. Please, stop jumbling up Mediaeval and Modern history when your lack of scholarship becomes apparent.And today they Muslims are torching the churches that have existed in Egypt since the Fatimids.
How woud I know the difference ? Besides, my ancestry is all Irish. In any case, it's irrelevant as to ownership. The lands in question were once ruled by the Achaemenids, and the Seleucids, and the Ptolemies, and the Sassanids... possession for over 300 years counts for quite a lot, I'm afraid.So if Napoleon succeeded you'd call yourself a proud Frenchman?
No, I have rather a good memory, and a better idea of Islamic and Iranian history than you. I'm not holding up Islam as a model for religious tolerance, simply stating facts. Which as ever, you seem incapable of doing, relying rather on stale rhetoric, misrepresentation and accusation.Which is why you are holding up Islam as the model for religious tolerance, given what they did to the Persians? You have a selective memory.
Just once in a while, state a date, name a figure, give some facts.
You're about as good a comedian as you are an 'historian'. I suggest you read any book on the development of the different churches in the Middle East and the various doctrinal controversies in Byzantine held territory. It should prove informative, since you appear clueless.Except that they are actually in accordance with what the Church teaches. Might want to catch up with ol' Papa Benedict. He's a step ahead of you. Man, even 84 year old dudes are passing you by...
A source you should trust:
The whole of Egypt was then Monophysite, and it was constantly threatened by the Saracens. Heraclius was doubtless very anxious to unite all to the Catholic Church, for the country was greatly weakened by the dissensions of the heretics among themselves,
A modification of Monophysitism proposing that Christ had no human free will. Rejected by the Third Council of Constantinople (680)
Boring. It was in part, a religious war- an attempt by the Habsburgs to impose Catholicism throughout their lands and the Empire. As I've said, you seem not to know too much about the Thirty Years' War. Perhaps you should read something before commenting. That goes for much of your other posts too, especially with reagrd to English history.So, it WASN"T a religious war. Thanks Molly! Glad to see that your narrative is wrong, as usual.
No figures I see. You said there were mass expulsions of English Catholics. When, where, and where did they end up ? I can supply dates, names and locations for expelled French Huguenots. You can't do the same, because Catholics in England were not expelled en masse.You're looking at the colonies of Nova Scotia, (New Foundland), significant numbers of folks in Manitoba, some in Ontario.
Emigration is not forced expulsion. Mass expulsion in Elizabethan times of English Catholics, facts, figures, dates. Put up or shut up.I'm interested in the question myself, putting a total number on those who left England to settle elsewhere
If you mean the French, so what ?And Catholics served at Yorktown
England was a country ruled by a Catholic monarch. There were still in fact Lollards in Henry VII's time, and besides, I note you simply assume that if the ruler's Catholic the country is- I'm talking about devout practising Catholics. If we go by this reasoning, then the Crusaders were no longer retaking Christian lands were they ? They'd be invading Muslim lands.Under Henry VII? Same as in France at the time. England was a Catholic country
No it didn't. If you want an example of a Holy War, pick one of France's. England saw a couple of unsuccessful rebellions. Nothing like the same.England did have a holy war over Faith.
No, it's because I'm not a religious fanatic. The Glorious Revolution- doesn't sound much like a war, does it ? The Gordon Riots ? Not a war by anyone's definition. Sorry, it just won't run.The reason you don't get this is because you don't see things from the Catholic perspective.
When was England's St Bartholomew's Day Massacre ? Who carried it out, and under whose orders ? Who was expelled to the colonies, when and which colonies ?Yes, they did have St. Bartholomew's Day massacre. And their 'mass expulsion', was primarily to the Colonies
If you can't provide names, dates, locations, then please, stop lying.
Did the majority have the vote before 1832, yes or no ? If no, the do be quiet.Balderdash.
Proof. Names, dates, locations. Oh that sounds familiar. I know, it's because you seem not to understand what evidence is.And yes, they were expelled, en masse
So did I. It preceded the Recusancy Act, and came just after a rebellion by English Catholic lords.I cited the damn Bull
Again, I suggest you look at the reasons why. Treason is the main one. Please refer to the statute.Elizabeth I executed priests for no other reason than the fact that they celebrated mass.
You're sadly mistaken.No, I happen to be a historianVive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.
...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915
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Except if it weren't for Ben we might not know how much Molly Bloom knows.Originally posted by MikeH View PostIf you are arguing with Ben, you should assume all of the following:
1. that he wont read what you say
2. that he wont understand what you said (see point 1)
3. that he wont argue against what you actually said, just an army of strawmen (see point 2)
4. that he wont have facts to back up his points
5. that he wont understand any facts you provide (see points 1, 2 and 3)
6. that he wont understand or follow any basic logical argument
7. that he wont provide any logical argument
8. that he will lie
He's demonstrated again and again. So it really is pointless to discuss anything with him.I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
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