The relationship here, and that somewhat distant, is the common Germanic ancestry: the Normans were descendants of vikings (the horde of Rollo, if I remember), Norse cousins of the Angles, Saxons and Jutes (name still reflected in the Jutland penninsula). As to that being the last successful invasion (remember, also, that Harold's army had just made a full march to Hastings after defeating another army of Norse cousins), it's the reason the Nazi's wanted the Bayeaux Tapestry -- a woven depiction of the battle -- in their attempt at another Germanic invasion. Maybe there's a connection here to 'bloody' having been a favorite British byline adjective.King Harold lost the Battle of Hastings in 1066, the last time that Britain was successfully invaded.
The relationship here, and that somewhat distant, is the common Germanic ancestry: the Normans were descendants of vikings (the horde of Rollo, if I remember), Norse cousins of the Angles, Saxons and Jutes (name still reflected in the Jutland penninsula). As to that being the last successful invasion (remember, also, that Harold's army had just made a full march to Hastings after defeating another army of Norse cousins), it's the reason the Nazi's wanted the Bayeaux Tapestry -- a woven depiction of the battle -- in their attempt at another Germanic invasion.King Harold lost the Battle of Hastings in 1066, the last time that Britain was successfully invaded.
Maybe there's a connection here to 'bloody' having been a favorite British byline adjective.
You want it more graphic to prove my point? How bloody British of you...Maybe there's a connection here to 'bloody' having been a favorite British byline adjective.
Your line of thought is a tad too obscure for me.
You want it more graphic to prove my point? How bloody British of you...Maybe there's a connection here to 'bloody' having been a favorite British byline adjective.
Your line of thought is a tad too obscure for me.
and my history's not so exhaustive that I could ever list the many battles in which the British engaged.
Zulus? Well, Victoria, the African soil was surely bloodied.:P
I wasn't speaking so much of the bloody usage origin as the bloody spillage...There are various theories on the origin of the word bloody as a mild expletive. I don't think it goes anywhere near as far back as the Saxons. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloody
You want it more graphic to prove my point? How bloody British of you...
and my history's not so exhaustive that I could ever list the many battles in which the British engaged.
Zulus? Well, Victoria, the African soil was surely bloodied.
The rest were just physical arguments...As I recall from a book I read in a British History graduate course, the British engaged in over 200 battles.
As I recall from a book I read in a British History graduate course, the British engaged in over 200 battles.
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