The Mysterious Darnley/Lennox Jewel — Uncontrolled Historian (Reblog)

I’m beginning to really like this girl. Not agreeing with her means nothing, I just enjoy her videos…and Accent. She’s an Ulster girl. The shenanigans that went on within the family featured below was part of my final History Exams. I stopped at the murder of Rizzio. Darnley doesn’t come out of this smelling very […]

The Mysterious Darnley/Lennox Jewel — Uncontrolled Historian

The Grave of Arthur? — Pendragonry (Reblog)

Rex Artorius inscription. Image: Alan Wilson and Baram Blackett Article first published in Pendragon, the Journal of the Pendragon Society XVI No 3 (1983), and here slightly revised and expanded Several Pendragon Society members over the past year [1982-3] brought to our attention news of two South Wales historians who have claimed to have discovered […]

The Grave of Arthur? — Pendragonry

*The stories of Arthur (and many other such histories) were considered fact until relatively recent times.

Excellent Archive of Tartary Maps and Cultures — Aplanetruth.info (Reblog)

According to the old world maps, at times it reached the borders of China and Mongolia. Little is known about the people inhabiting the land at that time and due to the lack of information people are still speculating if it was an area or an actual country. Europeans during the 19th century and earlier […]

Excellent Archive of Tartary Maps and Cultures — Aplanetruth.info

Human history as we know it to crumble after handwriting discovery — Inspo Daily (Reblog)

Three tablets date back to pre ancient Egypt

Human history as we know it to crumble after handwriting discovery — Inspo Daily

Cry ‘God for Harry, England, and Saint Edmund!’ — Reflections (Reblog for November 20)

Last Friday was St Georges day. The now Patron Saint of England. My Reflection this week is that he wasn’t always such. That honour once held by Edmund. King of East Anglia in the 9th century AD. A devout Christian (believed born on Christmas Day 841), he fought alongside Alfred the Great against the ‘Great […]

Cry ‘God for Harry, England, and Saint Edmund!’ — Reflections