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  1. Blackleaf

    Princess Charlotte to be christened at Sandringham today

    Pincess Charlotte's christening is to take place on the Queen's Sandringham estate in Norfolk today. The baptism, conducted by Archbishop of Canterbury the Most Reverend Justin Welby, will be held in private in the same church where Princess Diana - who would have been Princess Charlotte's...
  2. Blackleaf

    Wimbledon: Britain's Heather Watson almost causes huge upset against Serena Williams

    British tennis star Heather Watson almost knocked out five-times champion Serena Williams in a match that has stunned Wimbledon. In a battle of David versus Goliath, relative unknown Miss Watson, 23, pushed her American opponent, 33, to her limit. But, proving why she's the world number one...
  3. Blackleaf

    Medieval graffiti: the lost voices of England’s churches

    From beasts and demons to Latin prayers for the dead, the walls of England’s medieval churches and cathedrals are covered with inscriptions and doodles. But what do they tell us about the Middle Ages? Medieval graffiti: the lost voices of England’s churches in the Middle Ages...
  4. Blackleaf

    Tunisia attack: Minute's silence to be held for victims

    A minute's silence will be held across the UK at midday to remember the 38 people - including 30 Britons - killed in the Tunisia beach attack a week ago. Flags will be flown at half-mast over Whitehall and Buckingham Palace, while play at Wimbledon will be delayed. The Queen and Prime...
  5. Blackleaf

    Matilda, daughter of Henry I: A queen in a king’s world

    Historian Helen Castor explores how Matilda, daughter of Henry I, came tantalisingly close to becoming England’s first female ‘king’. Matilda, daughter of Henry I: A queen in a king’s world This article was first published in March 2012 Helen Castor Tuesday 1st...
  6. Blackleaf

    2,000-year-old human footprint found at Hadrian's Wall

    The Romans may have marched across Britain and left many impressive monuments, but few of their footprints remain. Now, a Roman tile bearing a clear imprint of a naked foot has been discovered close to Hadrian’s Wall. It’s the first human footprint to have been found at the fortified...
  7. Blackleaf

    HMS Victory to be painted a lemon colour

    Admiral Nelson's flagship, the HMS Victory, is to be repainted a delicate lemon colour as part of restoration works on the 250-year-old vessel. Workers from the National Museum of the Royal Navy said the new shade would be more authentic than the current orange hue after scraping off 72...
  8. Blackleaf

    The BBC is in a fog of groupthink and can’t see how biased it is

    Here are recent examples of how mindlessly the left-wing BBC falls into its party line, on three familiar topics. The BBC is in a fog of groupthink and can’t see how biased it is...
  9. Blackleaf

    It's time for another game of ASYLUM!

    As thousands of migrants, including many dubious-looking Mohammedans, continue to flood Calais in order to get to Britain, Richard Littlejohn thinks it's time for another game of ASYLUM! LITTLEJOHN: Iraqi terrorists, Afghan dissidents, bogus Bosnians and Rwandan mass murderers. Border...
  10. Blackleaf

    From Mary Queen of Scots to the FIFA Women’s World Cup: a history of women’s football

    With the FIFA Women’s World Cup in full swing in Canada, Dr Ariel Hessayon from Goldsmiths, University of London, reflects on women’s surprisingly long involvement with football... From Mary, Queen of Scots to the FIFA Women’s World Cup: a brief history of women’s football...
  11. Blackleaf

    Tunisia attack: Queen offers condolences to victims' families

    The Queen has sent her "sincere condolences" to the families of those killed in the Tunisian beach massacre. The monarch said she and the Duke of Edinburgh were "shocked" by Friday's gun attack and she also offered their "deepest sympathy" to the injured. Officials fear the UK death toll...
  12. Blackleaf

    The Queen lays a wreath at Bergen-Belsen

    It is the final resting place of more than 80,000 people murdered by the Nazis and, today, the Queen visited the site of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp to pay tribute to those who lost their lives there. Belsen, which occupies a stretch of Lower Saxony countryside, began life as a...
  13. Blackleaf

    It's hippie crack for breakfast! 175,000 revellers descend on Glastonbury

    Thousands of groggy revellers awoke from their first night of partying to a magnificent sunrise over Glastonbury Festival this morning, with the music finally set to begin today. With 175,000 people expected to walk through the Worthy Farm gates over the weekend, tens of thousands of...
  14. Blackleaf

    Stonehenge's sun-disc revealed

    One of the earliest known pieces of metalwork in Britain, found just a few miles from Stonehenge, has gone on display to the public for the first time. The gold sun-disc, which was forged around 4,500 years ago at around the same time the main circle of Stonehenge was erected, was...
  15. Blackleaf

    Falklands troops test their mettle

    Defence chiefs will deploy specialist air defence units to the Falklands to test Britain’s capability to protect the islands from an attack by Argentina. The move is part of ongoing ‘contingency’ exercises to ‘prove’ that if required, high readiness units are ready to react. During the...
  16. Blackleaf

    Wild beaver gives birth in England

    A female from the first wild beaver colony in England for centuries has given birth to at least two young. New footage shows the kits being helped through the water by their mother. The images taken in Devon by local filmmaker Tom Buckley provide the first evidence of the new arrivals. The...
  17. Blackleaf

    Europe's two most powerful women meet in Berlin

    The Queen paid her respects to the victims of war and dictatorship at Berlin's Neue Wache Memorial today, as her fifth state visit to Germany got underway in earnest. Watched by the Duke of Edinburgh, Her Majesty stood silently in contemplation for several moments before laying a wreath...
  18. Blackleaf

    The irony of Mrs Obama's Tower Hamlets speech on female emancipation

    Last week, Michelle Obama visted a British school to make a speech on female emancipation to its female pupils. Of course, the school that she visted wasn't full of white girls. Oh no. In these days of "celebrating diversity and multiculturalism" the school that was chosen for the speech...
  19. Blackleaf

    Seattle's football fever could see the mighty NFL heading for a fall

    Is "soccer" on its way to becoming the biggest sport in the US? MARTIN SAMUEL: Seattle's football fever could see the mighty NFL heading for a fall Most see the MLS as where good footballers go to earn a final paycheck Yet if soccer capitalises on the fears around NFL, it could grow rapidly...
  20. Blackleaf

    Is the Queen the world's hardest-working monarch, despite being 89?

    She may be 89 but the Queen has a social calender that would exhaust someone half her age. The past week, which saw the monarch carry out eight public appearances in just seven days, was proof enough. When considering the Queen’s jam-packed diary, which sees her carry out an average of five...