Here are some of the documents are in different museums and documentation centers of London:
At the end of the Eighteenth Dynasty. Location: British Museum. Contains 9 columns and 10 his verse, in the same writing, forming about 65 paragraphs, of which only a few are properly médicos.Su content is pure magic.
Fer ferrer "London".
Fer ferrer "London".
"LONDON" (Original text in Spanish
The magic surrounding the city again
where the sun rises not by his thick fog
always a temperate oceanic climate and
and with that Thames dragging my dreams
when it rises the Tower Bridge
to give way in a minute to boats.
On the north bank of the river raised the Royal Palace
since the time of William the Conqueror
instead converted quintessential multicultural
you can find in any of the streets
with people of different races and cultures
walking at a pace that is marking the Big Ben.
With Shakespeare's language to communicate
its people nothing to do with the unstable weather
are friendly and offer hand predisposed to
although the city lives in a very high rate
being the only place where kindness reward
caught me and gave me shelter Greater London.
IN SPANISH
La magia envuelve una vez más la ciudad
donde no sale el Sol por su espesa niebla
siempre con tu clima oceánico y templado
y con ese Támesis que arrastra mis sueños
cuando se va elevando ese Tower Bridge
para dar paso en un minuto a los barcos.
A la ribera norte del río alzado el Palacio Real
desde tiempos de Guillermo el Conquistador
convertida en lugar multicultural por excelencia
puedes encontrarte en cualquiera de sus calles
con gentes de diferentes razas y culturas
caminando al ritmo que va marcando el Big Ben.
Con el idioma de Shakespeare para comunicarse
sus gentes nada que ver con su inestable tiempo
son amables y predispuestas a ofrecerte la mano
aunque la ciudad vive en un ritmo muy acelerado
siendo el único lugar donde premian la amabilidad
me atrapaste y me diste cobijo gran Londres.
Title: "London".
Author: Fer Ferrer.
Date Posted: Wednesday, May 15, 2013
Source: http://ferpoetaynovelista.blogspot.com/2013/05/londres-texto-original-en-espanol.html
London Gazette.
London Gazette.
London Gazette is one of the official newspaper of the Government of the United Kingdom and the oldest newspaper still in publication in the UK, since it was first published on November 7, 1665 under the name of Oxford Gazette. You are obliged to publish texts of a legal, and not a newspaper in the conventional sense, and does not cover aspects of general and has a very limitada.Fue founded during the English Restoration by Henry Muddiman, who had begun his career as a journalist during the interregnum. and was appointed editor of the Intelligencer Parlamentary, the official organ of the Long Parliament. In 1666, Muddiman launched the Oxford Gazette, offering a selection of news about the Royal Court, then a refugee in Oxford to escape the Great Plague of London. Once the cut was reinstalled in the Palacio of Whitehall was created the London Gazette. Although Henry Muddiman publications are the first general reports of the country, they still have little to do with modern newspapers: the manuscripts written by the journalist, in fact, were mailed to subscribers, without there being any print for sale the general public. For that it was necessary to wait at The Athenian Mercury.
Currently, the London Gazette is published every day except Saturdays, Sundays and holidays.
British Invasion.
British Invasion.
BRITISH INVASION TO SILVER RIVER(1806/1807).
The year of 1805 means one of the strongest defeats to France and to its ally Spain. Great Britain defeat both countries in the naval battle of Trafalgar. France will no longer be able to compete for sea control, while for Spain means a strong military defeat adds to the internal crisis of the monarchy, which began already noted from the beginning of the reign of Charles IV in 1788.
After Trafalgar, Britain decides to hit their allies in possessions which are remote from the centers of both Spain and France, and in this case a British vessel bound for South Africa to take possession of that place, aware of Trafalgar success, and understanding their commander that: given what was discussed in the British cabinet that the Rio de la Plata would be a place that could be taken into account in case of a conflict with Spain, without consulting the Cabinet to consider it unnecessary, directs these vessels to the region, opting for the port of Montevideo.
This port is the one that is better positioned for the arrival of ships Buenos Aires. And 1806 is the year that will mean for the Rio de la Plata, decision making, resulting from the arrival of Commander William Carr Beresford to Montevideo. When subsequently landed in Buenos Aires, it is clear that Spain, the metropolis has not allocated resources for defense. In part, the fear of the metropolis to create significant military forces in different places Overseas, had led to this kind of situation. There was no regular army, an army of line. At the same time warns (while it does Beresford), that both the Cabildo, as senior judges, and various ecclesiastical dignitaries, rush to swear allegiance to the king of Great Britain.
Title: BRITISH INVASION OF THE SILVER RIVER (1806/1807). Role of the Cabildo. Chronology of events.
Author: Alejandro Justiparan.
Date Posted: February 14, 2010
Era: 1806.
Source: http://www.siemprehistoria.com.ar/?p=541
Poem London.
Poem London.
The magic is dead in the city
in which the sun never rises.
Old Ben brand 3pm
a very bitter Thursday.
Again the fog is here,
covering all London.
Is so ..........
It's so thick,
that has been lost,
hoping not to find.
At the old terminal,
a man sits,
waiting in the shadows.
Trains come,
Trains go.
And that little girl smiling,
could be you.
The Tower Bridge,
is falling apart.
The fear crossing
and meet the other side.
The London Eye tour
without much luck.
And man has grown old.
Now, the waiting continues,
in that old terminal.
Trains come,
Trains go.
And that little girl smiling,
could be you.
The Thames drag all
an autumn dream.
Now, he wants to be like mist
and hide all you ever felt
for you.
Title: Tristeza.Londres.
Author: Arturo Madrid.
Date: 16/11/2012.
Source: http://www.latino-poemas.net/modules/publisher/article.php?storyid=10890
Vikings and England.
Vikings and England.
The Vikings in England.
For two hundred and fifty years ago, the Vikings were protagonists of the history of England, first as plunderers of towns, later as warlords who litigated the Saxon royal family for control of the island, and finally as the English kings
At the end of the eighth century, while Charlemagne created a vast empire in Europe, England was divided into seven kingdoms emerged from Saxons, Angles and Jutes, who invaded peoples Britain when the Roman Empire was declining. Of these stood the florecientre Saxon kingdom of Wessex, to the point that their monarchs believed the British sovereign. Their kings moved north, occupying even the Anglo kingdom of Northumbria, whose inhabitants' wept for his lost freedom "for them convinced that the story was over. But it was not.
In 787, according to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, three ships docked off the coast of Wessex and from them came a group of fighting men from across the North Sea. The wicingas called, "thieves of the sea ', ie Vikings, a name that perfectly identified as engaged in pillaging and looting amid cruel rituals. They returned five years later, in 793, but now the coast of Northumbria, where they plundered the prestigious monastery of Lindisfarne, and a year later did the same with that of Jarrow. In the decade of 870, most of England north of the Thames and was subject to the Vikings. But had not happened the most memorable events of this story.
These began in the winter of 878, when the Vikings finally interned in the kingdom of Wessex, a decision that forced the Saxon King Alfred to flee into a swamp. It was a critical moment in which Wessex was on the verge of collapse. The kingdom lasted through military and political intelligence of the king, a thousand years later earned him the admiration of Voltaire: "I do not think there has ever been in the world a man worthy of respect of posterity that Alfred the Great." The monarch drove the Vikings from their lands and founded cities.
Title: The war between Saxons and Danish Vikings in England.
Author: Jose Enrique Ruiz-Domènech.
Year of publication: 2008.
Source: http://www.nationalgeographic.com.es/articulo/historia/grandes_reportajes/7765/los_vikingos_inglaterra.html
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