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  1. Blackleaf

    The medieval manuscript that could be more significant than Magna Carta

    The Textus Roffensis, which was compiled by a single scribe at Rochester Cathedral in Kent in the 1120s, is seen by some as containing foundation documents of the English state. Safeguarded by the cathedral since its inception, the charter has been digitised by the University of...
  2. Blackleaf

    WW1: How firms cashed in on the war

    Amid the bloodshed and brutality, companies were quick to cash in on the marketing opportunities provided by World War One. In an age before TV bombarded consumers with commercials, newspapers and magazines such as Punch and the Illustrated London News were the battleground for firms...
  3. Blackleaf

    BBC theme park featuring Doctor Who and Top Gear set to open in 2020

    The BBC's commercial arm, BBC Worldwide, has signed a landmark deal with Paramount to open a huge BBC theme park. The development will transform an 872-acre brownfield site on the Swanscombe peninsula in western Kent, near London, and be twice the size of the Olympic Park in East London. It...
  4. Blackleaf

    School pupils, footballers and soldiers re-enact WW1 Christmas truce

    British and German school pupils are re-enacting a football game said to have taken place during the 1914 Christmas ceasefire of World War One between Britain and Germany. Seaham School of Technology in County Durham is hosting a match against pupils from Realschule Alpen in Germany to mark...
  5. Blackleaf

    Ex-SNP leader Alex Salmond announces he is to stand for UK Parliament

    Former SNP leader and Scottish First Minister, Alex Salmond, has announced he is to stand as an MP in the UK Parliament at the General Election on 7th May. Salmond recently stepped down as SNP leader and Scottish First Minister after he lost the Scottish independence referendum in September...
  6. Blackleaf

    What would you call a group of medieval horses?

    From a ‘pride of lions’ to a ‘misbelief of painters’, many of the terms we use every day have roots in the distant past – specifically, the medieval period. Here, Chloe Rhodes - author of the new book An Unkindness of Ravens: A Book of Collective Nouns - investigates the origins of 10...
  7. Blackleaf

    1799 Jane Austen letter goes on public display for first time

    A previously unseen letter by Jane Austen in which she first writes about Pride And Prejudice has gone on public display for the first time. The double folded sheet, sent by Austen to her sister Cassandra in January 1799, makes reference to the novel - 14 years before it was first...
  8. Blackleaf

    Britain to set up permanent Middle East military base

    Britain is to establish its first permanent military base in the Middle East since it formally withdrew from the region in 1971. The base, at the Mina Salman Port in Bahrain, will host ships including destroyers and aircraft carriers. The UK said it was an "expansion of the Royal Navy's...
  9. Blackleaf

    Who was Oliver Cromwell's mysterious 'queen'?

    Oliver Cromwell remains an intensely controversial figure - the subject of ongoing debate. But what was it like to be a woman at that time, and especially to be the Lady Protectress - wife of the Lord Protector himself, asks Samira Ahmed. Elizabeth: Oliver Cromwell's 'queen' 5 December...
  10. Blackleaf

    New Bond film to be called Spectre

    The new James Bond film is to be called Spectre. British director Sam Mendes revealed the title at a launch event at Pinewood Studios in Buckinghamshire, where principal photography is due to begin on Monday. Daniel Craig will play 007 for the fourth time in the film, to be released in the...
  11. Blackleaf

    Esa chooses Britain to lead mission to Mars, announces Chancellor of the Exchequer

    In his annual Autumn Statement yesterday, Chancellor of the Exchequer (Minister of Finance) George Osborne announced to the Commons that Britain has been chosen by Esa to lead Europe's mission to search for life on Mars. Some £95 million will be invested in European Space Agency programmes...
  12. Blackleaf

    Breathtaking photos capture the stark beauty of Orkney's standing stones

    These stunning photographs reveal the standing stones of Stenness in all their glory. The stones were erected 5,000 years ago way up on Orkney and they form what is probably the oldest henge monument in the UK, around 2,500 years older than even Stonehenge seven hundred miles to the south. The...
  13. Blackleaf

    Prince Harry makes £20,000 for charity in the City

    He may have proved a natural at sealing big-money deals to raise money for charity, but Prince Harry discovered there is one thing he will never share with City brokers - an Essex accent. The Prince personally raised tens of thousands of pounds by persuading brokers to increase...
  14. Blackleaf

    London's River Thames garden bridge backed by Westminster Council

    Plans to build a spectacular garden bridge over the River Thames in London are a step closer after Westminster City Council approved planning permission. The £175m footbridge would link Temple with the Southbank, but has been criticised over its location and cost. Westminster councillors...
  15. Blackleaf

    State-of-the-art scanners reveal hidden royal palace near Salisbury

    A map created using geophysical ground-penetrating scanners of the mighty Old Sarum Iron Age hill fort near the city of Salisbury in Wiltshire has revealed a series of houses and a courtyard believed to be the remains of a royal palace. The map was created using geophysical ground-penetrating...
  16. Blackleaf

    Have Anglo-Saxon royal skeletons been found in Suffolk?

    Twenty Anglo-Saxon skeletons that have been found on a proposed building site in Suffolk may have connections with the royal family, archaeologists believe. The remains were found at Exning alongside a host of jewellery, brooches, a glass bowl, weapons and beads, which experts believe points...
  17. Blackleaf

    Wild Weather with Richard Hammond

    When he's not co-presenting the world's most-watched factual TV series, Top Gear's Richard Hammond is presenting science documentaries. His latest - Wild Weather with Richard Hammond - started last night on BBC One. The new, three-part series will see Hamster travelling the world to look at...
  18. Blackleaf

    Umpire dies in Israeli cricket match after being struck on the head by a ball

    An Israeli cricket umpire has died after being hit by a ball during a league match in the city of Ashdod, the Israel Cricket Association has announced. Former national team captain Hillel Oscar was officiating in the game between Young Ashdod and Super Lions Lod when he was struck below...
  19. Blackleaf

    Pele allays fears over his health

    Brazil football legend Pele has played down health fears by telling his fans: "I'm fine." Pele, 74, who is a national hero in his native Brazil, winning the World Cup with his country THREE times in 1958, 1962 and 1970, eased fears that his health deteriorated while being treated for a urinary...
  20. Blackleaf

    The Plantagenets: On the trail of Britain’s bloodiest dynasty

    Thanks to Game of Thrones, The White Queen and the BBC revival of Shakespeare’s history plays, the Plantagenets are rapidly overtaking the Tudors as the hippest dynasty in British history. They certainly left their mark on the landscape of the country. From the lowlands of Scotland to the...