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-   -   France to loan Britain the Bayeux Tapestry (https://www.cableforum.uk/board/showthread.php?t=33705941)

Kursk 17-01-2018 15:42

Re: France to loan Britain the Bayeux Tapestry
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by BenMcr (Post 35932858)
Celts are also immigrants

Celts are British. English are Germanic.

Uncle Peter 17-01-2018 15:58

Re: France to loan Britain the Bayeux Tapestry
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Damien (Post 35932869)
British Museum seems the logical place for most people to see it. Plus they probably are the best to handle it in terms of expertise and security. Hastings and Battle Abbey will be harder for those that live outside the area. That said another thing going to London might be politically difficult.

Battle Abbey would be a bit controversial due to the constant debate around the site actually being remotely associated with the physical location of the Battle of Hastings itself.

Modern analysis of the Chronicles of Battle Abbey suggest that it was built in a location other than that of the battlefield.

denphone 17-01-2018 15:58

Re: France to loan Britain the Bayeux Tapestry
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Kursk (Post 35932872)
Celts are British. English are Germanic.

Correct Sir.

Quote:

The first people to be called 'English' were the Anglo-Saxons, a group of closely related Germanic tribes that began migrating to eastern and southern Great Britain, from southern Denmark and northern Germany, in the 5th century AD, after the Romans had withdrawn from Britain.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_people

Damien 17-01-2018 16:00

Re: France to loan Britain the Bayeux Tapestry
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Uncle Peter (Post 35932875)
Battle Abbey would be a bit controversial due to the constant debate around the site actually being remotely associated with the physical location of the Battle of Hastings itself.

Modern analysis of the Chronicles of Battle Abbey suggest that it was built in a location other than that of the battlefield.

Yup it's also a pain for anyone on the otherside of London to get too. Most train lines go into and out of major hubs and not pan across the nation. I can see it going to Hastings because it's a super-marginal seat occupied by the Home Secretary....

BenMcr 17-01-2018 16:11

Re: France to loan Britain the Bayeux Tapestry
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Kursk (Post 35932872)
Celts are British. English are Germanic.

My point was that even the Celts came from somewhere else, even if they have been on the Islands longer than the Anglo-Saxons.

Considering most of the British Isles were under miles of ice at one point, everyone here will have ancestors who came from somewhere else. No-one will be 'native' to the UK.

The current thinking is that any populations that were around after the Ice Age were replaced by the 'Beaker people' who were migrants (or invaders) from Europe:

https://www.nature.com/news/ancient-...ritain-1.21996

Quote:

If true, this suggests that Britain’s Neolithic farmers (who left behind massive rock relics, including Stonehenge) were elbowed out by Beaker invaders. “To me, that’s definitely surprising,” says Pontus Skoglund, a population geneticist at Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts, who was not involved in the research. “The people who built Stonehenge probably didn’t contribute any ancestry to later people, or if they did, it was very little.”

Taf 17-01-2018 16:26

Re: France to loan Britain the Bayeux Tapestry
 
And William the Conqueror was of Nordic lineage.

Carth 17-01-2018 16:47

Re: France to loan Britain the Bayeux Tapestry
 
They could stick it on the side of a bus, that way everyone will be able to see it and comment on it.

. . . well it worked for ;)

Uncle Peter 17-01-2018 16:51

Re: France to loan Britain the Bayeux Tapestry
 
Norman families got a significant foothold in Ireland, Scotland and South Wales so that "Celtic" lineage might not be quite as clear cut as it seems ;)

The old adage is that the Fitz's (Fitzsimons, Fitzwilliam etc etc) and co. in Ireland ended up being more Irish than the Irish themselves.

Kursk 17-01-2018 22:19

Re: France to loan Britain the Bayeux Tapestry
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by BenMcr (Post 35932878)
My point was that even the Celts came from somewhere else, even if they have been on the Islands longer than the Anglo-Saxons.

Considering most of the British Isles were under miles of ice at one point, everyone here will have ancestors who came from somewhere else. No-one will be 'native' to the UK.

The current thinking is that any populations that were around after the Ice Age were replaced by the 'Beaker people' who were migrants (or invaders) from Europe:

https://www.nature.com/news/ancient-...ritain-1.21996

Anglo-Saxon is not an undesirable heritage, interlopers have always been tolerated by we British ;)

Hugh 18-01-2018 08:19

Re: France to loan Britain the Bayeux Tapestry
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Kursk (Post 35932932)
Anglo-Saxon is not an undesirable heritage, interlopers have always been tolerated by we British ;)

Except the Russians - we weren’t keen on them coming to visit us... ;)

pip08456 18-01-2018 10:13

Re: France to loan Britain the Bayeux Tapestry
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by denphone (Post 35932876)

What about the Picts?

Quote:

Picts are attested to in written records from before the Roman conquest of Britain to the 10th century, when they are thought to have merged with the Gaels. They lived to the north of the rivers Forth and Clyde, and spoke the now-extinct Pictish language, which is thought to have been closely related to the Celtic Brittonic language spoken by the Britons who lived to the south of them.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picts

Kursk 18-01-2018 13:42

Re: France to loan Britain the Bayeux Tapestry
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Hugh (Post 35932949)
Except the Russians - we weren’t keen on them coming to visit us... ;)

Except the billionnaires ;).

Back on topic (before I get told off) we should commission a new e-tapestry depicting British achievement, not its 'defeat'. A day in 1066 doesn't define the most inventive, philanthropic and sophisticated people on Earth.

BenMcr 18-01-2018 13:48

Re: France to loan Britain the Bayeux Tapestry
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Kursk (Post 35933001)
Back on topic (before I get told off) we should commission a new e-tapestry depicting British achievement, not its 'defeat'. A day in 1066 doesn't define the most inventive, philanthropic and sophisticated people on Earth.

We've got a new one - pretty much sums up the current world situation too!

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017...demned-racist/

OLD BOY 18-01-2018 19:19

Re: France to loan Britain the Bayeux Tapestry
 
I don't think we should accept it. Can you imagine the furore from the French if we ripped it?

Taf 18-01-2018 19:49

Re: France to loan Britain the Bayeux Tapestry
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by OLD BOY (Post 35933041)
I don't think we should accept it. Can you imagine the furore from the French if we ripped it?

A good 100c boil wash and a flat iron before it goes on display, a display that will probably cost us millions.


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