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  1. Blackleaf

    British politician accuses EU President as having the charisma of a wet rag

    The former leader of the anti-EU United Kingdom Independence Party has launched an incredible attack against the EU's unelected president, Herman Van Rompuy. Farage - who isn't afraid of sticking up for Britain and for democracy - accused Rumpy Pumpy of being a "damp rag" from a non-country...
  2. Blackleaf

    Is this the field where Richard III lost his kingdom for a horse?

    In the 15th Century, the Wars of the Roses was raging in England. It was fought between two rival factions of the House of Plantagenet - the Yorkists (symbolised by a white rose) and the Lancastrians (symbolised by a red rose), each fighting for the Throne. It was one of several civil wars to...
  3. Blackleaf

    'We will not be bullied by you, Old Plastic Face', says a sixth generation Falklander

    No matter what happened to it in the past, UN law says that a Dependency's people must decide what country they wish to belong to. And the fact that the people of the Falkland Islands overwhemingly wish their islands to be British demonstrates that the British, not the Argentines, are right to...
  4. Blackleaf

    "A Future Fair For All": Labour's "new" election slogan is 7 years old

    "A Future Fair For All": Labour's "new" election slogan is 7 years old The Prime Minister this week launched the Labour Party's new General Election slogan that he hopes will propel his party to an unprecented fourth successive term in power. The slogan is "A Future Fair For All" but there's...
  5. Blackleaf

    The evidence that might show Elizabeth I's 'lover' had wife killed

    A theory has long existed that Queen Elizabeth I's lover, Robert Dudley, killed his wife, Amy, so he could wed the Queen. Amy died aged just 28 in 1560 by breaking her neck after falling down the stairs. At the time, it was rumoured that Dudley had actually killed her to clear the way for him...
  6. Blackleaf

    Where History Happened: The Anarchy

    The event known as The Anarchy is one of the least known periods of English history but also one of the most interesting. This English civil war has its origins on the fateful night of 25th November 1120, when the White Ship sank in the English Channel off the Normandy coast after its port...
  7. Blackleaf

    Americans are 'most attractive' people in the world, poll of Brits finds

    A poll of more than 5000 Brits has found that the Americans are the most attractive people on the planet. However, the British don't find the Germans very attractive - Germany came just 20th on the list. The British also took a look at themselves, with the English coming a respectable 7th...
  8. Blackleaf

    Was this the waistcoat that Charles I was wearing when he was beheaded?

    On Tuesday 30th January 1649, a bitterly cold day, King Charles I was beheaded outside the Banqueting House at Whitehall Palace. His last words were, "I shall go from a corruptible to an incorruptible Crown, where no disturbance can be." This occurred during the English Civil War...
  9. Blackleaf

    Probe ordered into UFO seen over Home Secretary's house, reveal MoD files

    It has often been said that Michael Howard looks like a vampire but, in March 1997, witnesses near his home had a fright in the night for a very different reason. In the run-up to the 1997 General Election, Michael Howard, then the Tory government's Home Secretary, saw a UFO over his home...
  10. Blackleaf

    Falklands War II? Britain says it is prepared to protect the islands

    The Falklands War II looks more likely as Britain and Argentina once again find themselves in a broil over the Falkland Islands. As Argentina makes efforts to control shipping in the region, Britain has said it has made 'all the preparations necessary' to protect the Falkland Islands. The...
  11. Blackleaf

    Oldest remains of English royalty unearthed

    England has been a monarchy for a very long time - over 1000 years, in fact. At one time, what is now England was instead a collection of Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, each with their own royal family. These kingdoms often went to war with each other and invaded each other, and a kingdom's ruler...
  12. Blackleaf

    3,000 year old shipwreck found off Devon coast

    One of the world's oldest shipwrecks has been found of England's south western coast. The trading vessel was carrying an extremely valuable cargo of tin and hundreds of copper ingots from the Continent when it sank off the coast of Devon around the year 900BC. The find provides new evidence...
  13. Blackleaf

    To mark his 50th birthday, Prince Andrew speaks to Sky about his marriage breakdown

    Interviews with members of the Royal Family are extremely rare. But, to mark his 50th birthday, Prince Andrew has given an exclusive interview to Sky News in which he talks about topics such as his 1996 divorce to Sarah Ferguson and bankers' bonuses. Prince Andrew, also known as the Duke of...
  14. Blackleaf

    Will the opening of a Warwickshire tomb prove that Shakespeare never wrote his plays?

    Fulke Greville (1554-1628 ) was an Elizabethan poet, dramatist and statesman. He was a capable administrator who served the English Crown under Elizabeth I and her successor James I as treasurer of the navy, Chancellor of the Exchequer and commissioner of the Treasury. In 1621, Greville -...
  15. Blackleaf

    Operation Moshtarak in Afghanistan has 'gone to plan', say British military chiefs

    British military chiefs have said that Operation Moshtarak has "gone to plan." Major General Gordon Messenger told a press briefing in central London that commanders on the ground were not complacent but were 'very much of the view this has gone according to plan.' He said some British...
  16. Blackleaf

    Climategate scientist: There's been no Global Warming since 1995

    The scientist at the centre of a British university's climate change scandal has admitted that he has trouble keeping track on the raw data which is crucial to the theory of climate change. Professor Jones, of the University of East Anglia, told the BBC yesterday that his colleagues believe he...
  17. Blackleaf

    The Nazi board game that taught the Hitler Youth how defeat the British

    Maybe the Germans do have a sense of humour - albeit a very black one - after all. In 1941, whilst British children were being killed in their beds by Luftwaffe bombers or having to suffer food rationing, German kids were playing a board game which taught them the tactics of warfare. Their foe...
  18. Blackleaf

    Australia asks Queen to pardon its disgraced Second Boer War soldiers

    Australia has asked the Queen to pardon two of its soldiers who were court-martialled and executed by the British during the Second Boer War. The petition asks Britain to review the trials of lieutenants Harry "Breaker" Morant and Peter Handcock who were found guilty of the murder of 12...
  19. Blackleaf

    Want to find love? Go bird watching on Valentine's Day

    It's Valentine's Day on Sunday. And if a woman wishes to have an insight into the type of man she will marry, then tradition has it that the first bird seen by an unmarried woman on Valentine's Day will give her such an insight. This may seem a flight of fancy only believed by bird-brains, but...
  20. Blackleaf

    Publication over Operation Moshtarak could cost troops' lives

    British, American and Afghan troops are about to start Operation Moshtarak within the next few days. "Moshtarak" means "Together" in the local Dari language, and 15,000 troops - a third of them British - will join the offensive, which is designed to clear out a hardcore of around 1,000 Taliban...