Illegitimate Transfer of Inalienable European Rights via Convention(s) & Supranational Bodies Establishment of Sovereignty-Usurping Supranational Body Dictatorships Enduring Program of DEMOGRAPHICS WAR on Europeans Enduring Program of PSYCHOLOGICAL WAR on Europeans Enduring Program of European Displacement, Dismemberment, Dispossession, & Dissolution
No wars or conditions abroad (& no domestic or global economic pretexts) justify government policy facilitating the invasion of ancestral European homelands, the rape of European women, the destruction of European societies, & the genocide of Europeans.
U.S. RULING OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR TO SALVAGE HEGEMONY [LINK | Article]
Who's preaching world democracy, democracy, democracy? —Who wants to make free people free?
destruction of the Phoenician seafaring trading empire
Colony of Carthage by Roman Republic in 146 BC
The Punic Wars
Roman Republic v. Carthage Colony / Empire (Phoenician)
series wars: 264 BC to 146 BC
Punic from Latin 'Punicus' = Phoenician (Carthaginian)
Carthage defeated / Roman Republic ascendency Carthage Third Punic War
3 year siege by Romans walls breached, Carthage sacked Carthage deliberately burned to ground 146 BC over the space of 17 days Carthage city walls and buildings were completely destroyed Carthaginian territories were annexed by Rome as Roman province of Africa 150,000 to 250,000 est. Carthaginians dead many died 3 year siege / others in 6 days of fighting 50,000 Carthaginians
(small surviving portion of original population) sold into slavery by Roman victors Carthage is where Tunisia is now
Battle of Trafalgar (Oct 1805)
at: Cape Trafalgar, Spain
British Royal Navy vs. combined French & Spanish fleets
decisive naval engagement of Napoleonic Wars
1. control of the seas
2. averted possibility of French invasion & conquest of Britain
Vice-Admiral Horatio Nelson FLAG SIGNAL SENT FROMHMS Victory:
"England expects that every man will do his duty"
Ships in fleet misrecorded signal as: "England expects every man to do his duty"
It is the misrecorded, prevalent version that is on tomb of Horatio Nelson,
St Paul's Cathedral
Battle of Trafalgar (Oct 1805)
at: Cape Trafalgar, Spain during: War of Third Coalition (Aug-Dec 1805)
European conflict: 1803 to 1806
France, Napoleon I + French client states
v. THIRD COALITION
THIRD COALITION
Holy Roman Empire (Germany)
Russian Empire
Britain
Kingdom of Naples
Kingdom of the Two Sicilies Kingdom of Sicily
Sweden
Kingdom of France French royalists
versus
France - French Empire, Napoleon I
Spain
Kingdom of Italy (Napoleonic) Etruria
Batavian Republic (Dutch Netherlands)
Napoleonic Italy
Electorate of Bavaria Bavaria
Württemberg
Poland Polish Legions
War of Third Coalition Battles
Central Europe
Italy
Atlantic
Result: French victory
TREATY OF PRESSBURG (1805) - consolidation of French Empire
- dissolution of Holy Roman Empire
- Confederation of the Rhine, created
*Fourth Coalition formed few months later: hostilities resume
-------/\/\/\ Interesting European History Detour
Holy Roman Empire alliance between Rome's pope and German tribes confederation starts 799 AD 800 AD crowning of Charlemagne Charles the Great, King of Franks - founder Carolingian Empire born in what is now Belgium (otherwise in Germany) Charlemagne crowned by pope, in exchange for protection irrespective of: existing Roman Empire of the East (Constantinople) Charlemagne's mission, uniting all of Western Europe for first time since fall of Rome ... by the sword, ie. by forced conversion to the non-European system of social and political control known as 'Christianity' http://www.roman-emperors.org/leoiii.htm
Summary
Source, book: Simon Dubnov, Moche Spiegel 'History of the Jews' below:
Dec. 25, 800 AD
Charlemagne Crowned by Pope Leo III
as Emperor of Romans & "the most pious Augustus"
at St Peter's Basilica, Rome
ALONGSIDE EXISTING BYZANTINE EMPIRE - REMNANT OF FORMER EAST-ROMAN EMPIRE - THERE RE-EMERGED THE WEST-ROMAN EMPIRE OF ITALY & MIDDLE EUROPE
Holy Roman Empire (Western Roman Empire) of Italy & Middle Europe
capitals = France & Germany Rome as spiritual & religious capital
Only much later, when pope/church power surpassed power of king, were Jews subjected to religious sector of state
In meantime, Charlemagne & successors, had Jews of new empire under patronage
& pope was reliant on Charlemagne protection
friendly relations between Holy Roman Empire new power & Jews in Narbonne, France (south)
district previously annexed to Visigoth Spain & previously under control of conquering Arabs
759 AD army of Franks, led by King Pepin (hunchback, father of Charlemagne (eldest son)) conquered Narbonne
with help of Christians - who slaughtered Arabs & surrendered city to Franks / alternatively help of Jews [not clear to me].
'Acts of Charlemagne' texts:
Jewish community of Narbonne had existing full autonomy
even had king of own of Davidic dynasty who had come from Baghdad
Isaac, chief of Jewish delegation reportedly informed Charles
if Jews surrender would not be traitors to Arabs [that makes no sense if Jews killed the Arabs, so Christians must have?] Jewish delegation gifts Charles with 70,000 'marks' in name of Jewish king
& declares submission on condition that former autonomous community may remain intact Charlemagne consented & granted Jews one-third of Narbonne
one-third awarded to bishop
one-third awarded to Count Emmerich
Jewish zone administered by Rabbi Makhir, descendant of Davidic dynasty summoned by Charlemagne from Babylon & appointed as 'Nasi' (prince) / patriarch of Jews
[Therefore Narbonne division is: Jews, Church, Nobility.]
Founders of Carolingian dynasty cooperative with Jews of Narbonne Jews of Narbone political favour of significance to Franks
due to struggle with Arab invaders of Spain FOR control of south of France
Jews of Narbonne also enjoyed special privileges after city recaptured from Arabs
Pope Stephanus III wrote letter re Jews being permitted to own land & live with Christians
Pope Stephanus II:
"Christians till the fields and vineyards; male and female Christians living under one roof ... justice demands that all promises that were made to those unbelievers ... be abolished, because of the death of the crucified Redeemer."
Charlemagne consented to granting Jews previous privileges of Jews under Arabs: owning land and hiring labour. However, Charlemagne recognised Jews as main players in world trade in peak of Baghdad Caliphate, enabled by constant relations between Jewish communities of Asia and Europe. Jewish merchants (Randanites) spoke multiple languages and travelled with goods to Asia and Africa. Narbonne & Marseilles = centres of international trade with mixed population.
'History of Jews' indicates that Jews, as in ancient times, were among shipowners who shipped cargo & passengers across world. Carolingian official documents often refer to 'Jewish and other merchants", so Jews appear pre-eminent among the traders.
Jews played key role as intermediaries in international trade (between the Baghdad Caliphate and Charlemagne). Jews also played role in the political relations. Jews interpreters and emissaries in negotiations with the Arabs.
Jews were under protection of the emperor
Jews could not be unlawfully harassed, slandered or have property unlawfully transferred or confiscated
Special taxes could not levied of Jews
Jews could live according to own laws (proviso: release Christians from Sunday & holy day labour)
Jews could buy and sell foreign Moslem and pagan slaves, but slaves could not be baptised without approval of their Jewish masters (which would be denied, as law freed slave converts to Christianity).
Jews and Christians were equal under the law courts. But Jews were apparently more equal:
Jews were not to be subject to fire, boiling water or whipping if it is contrary to Jewish law.
In crimes of killing or incitement to kill, answerable to emperor.
Relations with Christians were friendly in France & Jews had high status.
Clergy was unhappy with this and problems began when archbishop of Lyon began to incite hostility of Christians during sermons. Above source, book: Simon Dubnov, Moche Spiegel 'History of the Jews'
Interesting European History Detour Charlemagne, Holy Roman Emperor three-decades of battles against the Germanic Saxons 782 AD - Massacre of Verden
Charlemagne ordered slaughter of 4,500 Saxons
force-converted Saxons to Christianity
/ all who refused were killed
[wikpedia]
*** Apart from the non-believable / superstitious factor of all religion, thisforce (and foreign political and social control factor) is why I cannot understand continued acceptance of what is domination by mortals, claiming to represent the wishes/communications etc of 'god' and the failure of the masses to simply accept that there is nothing but the law of man and that law is: might is right. Might derives from wealth and position. That is all there is. This intellectual oppression and backwardness exists hundred of years later because the same institutions refuse to relinquish power and privilege. Even more horrifying: we are heading backwards. European societies are being invaded as a policy of the economic-political elite. The West is about to collapse, and the world will be plunged into hundreds of years of darkness again.
Pope Leo III the Isaurian ie the Syrian born in Germanicia, North Syria (Anatolia, later Maraş, Turkey) original name: Konon his family was removed by Emperor Justinian to Mesembria (Bulgarian Black Sea coast) / Thrace refused to acknowledge Theodosius III's claim to imperial throne joined forces with Artabasdos, general of Armeniakon to force abdication Meanwhile, Arabs invading
Arabs besiege Constantinople 717 AD Byzantine Empire territories lost to Germanic, Slav and Arab incursions loss of territories + underwater earthquake (Thera & Therasia 726 AD) seen as signal of divine displeasure Leo III - "the first Iconoclast emperor" ( icon of Mary / superstitious protection ritual ) Leo III driven by desire for unity of empire under threat from Arabs Leo III allied with Khazars & Georgians versus Arabs 740 AD decisive in halting Umayyad Arab advance Leo III unity drive also resulted in forced conversions of Jews + Montanists Montanists = 2nd Century AD, f. by Montanus, early Christian sect
Montanus was a priest of Apollo or Cybele
believed he was a prophet of god
believed Paraclete (holy spirit) spoke through him
741 AD - Leo III succeeded by his son: Constantine V
http://www.roman-emperors.org/leoiii.htm
-------/\/\/\
Back to Horatio Nelson Battle of Trafalgar (1805) at: Cape Trafalgar, Spain / British Commanders:
Admiral Lord Nelson
Cuthbert Collingwood
33British Ships
vs. 41combined French & Spanish
British French Spanish
458 dead 2,218 1,025
1,208 wounded 1,155 1,383
POW 4,000 4,000 (*3,000 drowned in storm)
British imposed a naval blockade on France French trade affected French unable to fully mobilise own navy French managed evasions of blockade, but did not inflict major defeat on British British attacked French interests domestically and abroad with ease
Peace of Amiens = 1802, ended hostilities French & UK but Napoleon reportedly determined to invade Britain to do so, control of English Channel needed Third Coalitiondeclared war on France French main fleets at
BREST, BRITTANY
TOULON, MEDITERRANEAN COAST
smaller squadrons at other ports of French Atlantic Spanish fleet
CADIZ
FERROL
British fleets well-trained & experienced
However, best officers of French navy
EXECUTED OR LEFT SERVICE - IN EARLY FRENCH REVOLUTION
French Command Vice-Admiral Pierre-Charles Villeneuve
command of French Mediterranean fleet
(on death of Latouche Treville)
more competent officers employed elsewhere
or fell out of favour with Napoleon Bonaparte
1798 - Battle of the Nile (1798)
British defeated French
Villeneuve not keen on British engagement
1805 Napoleon navy plan
was for French & Spanish fleets in Med. & Cadiz to:
- break through blockade
- join forces in Caribbean
- then return to assist Brest fleet to emerge from blockade
- jointly clear English Channel of British ships
- ensuring safe passage for invasion barges
1805, Vice Admiral Lord Nelson commanded British fleet blockading Toulon
maintained loose blockade, hoping to lure French
LOL ... I found the: poop deck / I can't help laughing at that. I know, it's so juvenile of me. Poop Deck technically: stern deck naval architecture deck forms roof of cabin built in rear ('aft') of superstructure of ship https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poop_deck originates from: la poupe (French 'stern', from Latin 'puppis') stern - rear part fm. sterne, poss. Scandinavian origin; akin to Old Norse stjōrn, rudder
Battle Looks like battle was fought on basis of columns of British attack ships A. French / Spanish in arc of ships with back-up ships sparse B. English in x2 parallel line formations head for central French/Spanish arc.
Ships at tip (van) of British lines more concentrated than the rear of the line
probably for impact and for cover (rear ones must be for back-up)
Vice-Admiral Pierre-Charles Villeneuve
ordered by Napoleon to sail Combined Fleet from Cadiz to Naples
war council held on Velleneuve flagship, Bucentaure
overall length, almost 60 metres
80-gun ship of the line
was the flagship of Vice-Admiral Latouche Tréville, who died onboard
shot in the arm by a musket ball 1780
during the American War of Independence
battle b/w frigates Hermoine & HMS Iris (British)
location: Long Island
Purpose of Nelson's parallel line formation
was to cut into the arc of French Spanish ships, cutting line into 3
surrounding one-third and forcing them to fight to end
by cutting line in front of flagship, rear isolated ships would not see flagship's signals
taking those ships out of combat while they reformed (it was hoped)
tactics of going straight at target used by:
Admiral Duncan, Battle of Camperdown 1797 (v. Dutch / Holland)
Admiral Jervis, Battle of Cape St Vincent 1797 (v. Spain / near Portugal)
Advantages of plan:
1. reduced chance that Franco-Spanish would flee (forced fight)
2. breaking line = series of ship-to-ship actions
faster gunnery & better morale of British advantage
3. concentration on rear of Franco-Spanish fleet / ships on van would take long time to turn to support
van = vanguard / advance guard - leading part of advancing military formation
Medieval Army Tradition 'van' = derived from medieval army traditional division
medieval dived into three (3) - BATTLES or WARDS
1. Van - vanguard - advance guard / front
2. Middle
3. Rear - protects from attack from rear
aka 'rereward' or 'rearward'
rearmost (if deployed in column)
left-hand ward (if deployed in line)
Rearguard in military tactics established by battles of 1800s.
Before mechanisation of troop formations,
rearguard tactics usually used cavalry forces.
*later highly mobile infantry + mechanised (armoured) forces
narrow definition of rearguard = covering attachment protecting main ground force WWI & WWI rearguard definition became more expansive
rearguard became minor unit of regular or irregular troops protecting withdrawal
of large numbers of military or civilian personnel
methods: blocking, defending, delaying or interfering
purpose: to gain time (for regrouping)
defensive action (holding territory); or
pre-emptive assault on enemy offensive ops ('spoiling attack')
Rearguard actions in nation-state battles combat is desperate & vicious Rearguard can expect high casualties, if not suicide mission
[Find the tactics really exciting and interesting. Must be such a rush being a commanding officer ... It must also feel really good to be in combat, if you know what you're doing (and if you don't get hurt). This is weird, but I sort of get a rush just from reading about tactics. Probably because I'm perfectly safe here at the keyboard. LOL]
Burgundian Army 1400s
van / vanguard typically consisted of:
1. FORE-RIDERS contingent (forward scouts drawn from this section)
2. MAIN BODY of vanguard (accompanying civil officials, trumpeters, messengers, summon surrender of towns)
3. WORKMEN under direction of Master of Artillery (aim: clear obstacles that obstruct logistics & artillery)
Artillery - large-calibre weapons, eg cannon, howitzers, missile launchers / operated by crews. [TFD]
[from Old French, from artillier, to equip [TFD]]
Trafalgar Battle Plan Nelson instructed his captains of battle plan
over x2 dinners abroad HMS Victory order of sailing (ie where ships were when enemy sighted) would be order of action that followed
therefore no time wasted on creating set formation
second in command: Vice-Admiral Cuthbert Collingwood easy recognition: Nelson Chequer - Nelson ordered the ships of his fleet
painted in a distinctive yellow & black pattern
Nelson knew not to over-plan tactics & to give captains free hand
as nothing is sure in sea battle / chance factor (Machiavelli considered chance factor, too, I think) circumstances would dictate actions
subject to only guiding rule:
1. enemy's rear to be cut off
2. concentrated force on the cut off enemy rear
[Imagine how cool it would be studying different military compositions, battle tactics and traditions of eg. Persians, Mongols, Ottomans, Native Americans, Romans, Greeks and so on.]
Villeneuve anticipated attack on rear
drawn pre-battle chase exhausted Villeneuve
who lost his courage
Villeneuve did not act on anticipation / inexperienced officers
/ maintain formation in more than one group unlikely
French internal power struggle or similar
Villeneuve was to be replaced by another
but found pretext to sail prior disgrace before fleet WEATHER TURNED FROM CALM TO A WEEK OF GALES
slowing progress of Combined Fleet = British plenty of warning
of Combined Fleet departure from harbour
reluctance of some captains to leave Cadiz = did not follow Villeneuve orders closely & straggled from harbour
without set formation
fleet set in order after several days / spotted force of 18 British ships in pursuit
began to prepare for battle in night
/ ordered into single line
Nelson's fleet in pursuit with wind behind
Villeneuve ordered 3 columns but changed to single line
result: sprawling formation
some change ordered (turn about), causing problems for inexperienced seamen
some problem with wind conditions (light)
caused delay & ragged formation
Nelson outnumbered & out-gunned:
Combined Fleet Britain / Nelson
30,000 men 17,000 men
2,568 guns 2,148 guns
As British drew close, officers and sailors - anxiety
perception: England's fate rested on this battle
Nelson went to poop / rear deck & ordered signal:
ENGLAND CONFIDES (EXPECTS) THAT EVERY MAN WILL DO HIS DUTY
using 'England' to refer to United Kingdom
British fleet included significant contingents from:
Ireland
Scotland
Wales
Tricky Move
Nelson led column to van (front / left) of Franco-Spanish arc
& abruptly turned to point of attack
ships moving very slowly because winds light
British ships in front under heavy gunfire from several Franco-Spanish ships for hour
before they could employ own guns
Villeneuve signal: 'Engage the enemy"
British Royal Sovereign outran rest of British fleet & was in firing line
managed to break line & fire devastating shot at Santa Ana
HMS Belleisle under fire 45 minutes until British ships came to rescue
de-masted completely, unable to move / fight
HMS Victory was under fire 40 minutes
projectiles wounded crew & shot wheel away
had to be steered from tiller belowdecks
HMS Victory cut Franco-Spanish line at 12:45
coming close to Bucentaure, killing & wounding many gundecks
HMS Victory locked masts with French Redoutable
crew of Redoutable, which included strong infantry corps
gathered for attempt to board & seize HMS Victory
Nelson Wounded Nelson struck in left shoulder by musket bullet fired from mizzentop of Redoubtable
bullet passed through his spine at 6th & 7th thoracic vertebrae
middle segment (abt. base neck to end rib-cage) lodged 2 inches below his right scapula (big flat shoulder bone) in muscles of his back
mizzentop is platform at upper end of each lower mast
fightingtop
could be manned by snipers or swivel guns to fire on enemy decks
swivel gun = mini cannons
HMS Victory gunners called on deck to fight boarding enemy
HMS Victory had ceased firing
gunners forced below decks by French grenades
Nelson carried below deck
As second French ship prepared to board HMS Victory, British ship approached & fired on French
high casualties caused by carronade
carronade is a cannon on big wheels, made by Carron Company, ironworks, Scotland
powerful short-range anti-ship and anti-crew weapon
eventually fell out of use as rifled naval artillery changed shape of shell & engaged in fewer close engagements
Rifling
is swirly or twisted grooves inside barrel of firearm
which gives projectile a spin, which stabilises the projectile
& makes projectile more aerodynamic & accurate
Bucentaure (enemy flagship)
was isolated & under attack
surrendered in 3 hours
Franco-Spanish centre and rear overwhelmed as more British ships entered battle
Franco-Spanish van (front / lead) sailed away
British took 22 vessels of Franco-Spanish fleet & lost none
Nelson, dying, ordered fleet to anchor as storm approaching
even so, severely damaged ships sank or ran aground on shoals
some recaptured by French & Spanish prisoners overcoming small seizure crews
others recaptured by ships from Cadiz
Nelson seemed to have a big thing about doing one's duty
Reportedly, on deathbed, pleased that he had done his duty
Nelson last recorded words: "God and my country"
Nelson may have been reciting prayer
Horatio Nelson died 4:30 - 3 hrs after being hit
Nelson's corpse was preserved in barrel of brandy
Nelson buried in St Paul's Cathedral
Nelson memorial column erected Trafalgar Square
[Battle continues ... but it's not the same without Nelson]
Looks like the Franco-Spanish kept attacking to get back the seized ships
influenced Collingwood's decision to sink or set fire to the most damaged of remaining prizes
Only x4 seized ships survived to be taken to Britain
HMS Victory headed to Gibraltar for repairs, carrying Nelson's corpse Rosia Bay, Gibraltar repairs before return to Britain
injured crew brought ashore & treated at Gibraltar naval hospital
Trafalgar Cemetery in Gibraltar dead from injuries buried
Defeat was kept secret for over a month by France French media was tightly controlled
when news broke, it was proclaimed a victory [I'd say French media remains tightly controlled.]
Vice-Admiral Villeneuve aboard his flagship, taken to Britain as prisoner.
1806 released. Returned to France. Stabbed x6 to chest with dining knife. French officially recorded this as 'suicide' [So corrupt. Who does that? No wonder I get bad vibes from the French.]
Although Battle of Trafalgar was British victory
this had negligible impact on War of Third Coalition Napoleon decisively defeated Third Coalition in BATTLE OF AUSTERLITZ
knocking Austria out of war & forcing dissolution of Holy Roman Empire
but Battle of Trafalgar meant Napoleon could no longer challenge British at sea
Napoleon's next move: Continental System establishment
to deny Britain trade with continent Napoleonic Wars continued another decade after Trafalgar
French were never able to seriously challenge British in large-scale engagement
French were never able to seriously challenge British in large-scale engagement
French were forced to abandon immediate plans for invasion of Britain
but French threat continued: Napoleon began large-scale shipbuilding program
that had produced 80 ships by time of his fall 1814
(+ more under construction)
Britain had 99 active ships
given time, French could have overwhelmed British in time, with sheer numbers
almost a decade after Trafalgar, British navy maintained close blockade of French bases
but Napoleon's empire fell in time *main difference = morale of the leaders / morale of leadership won the battle
British Royal Navy dominated the sea until WWII
victory at Trafalgar given as reason
but historians now argue that economic strength was an important cause of British naval mastery
1905 Centenary
1905 centenary not attended by royal family to avoid upsetting french (recent 'Entente cordiale' agreements series)
Gala was held at Royal Albert Hall but event ended with
God save the King
La Marseillaise
[That's just b*llshit. Nelson scarified his life. What an insult to Nelson. Assh*les.]
Horatio Nelson
1758-1805
born at the Rectory of Burnham Thorpe, Norfolk
son of the village rector Edmund Nelson Royal Navy at Chatham (1770) Captain Maurice Suckling , uncle, patronage
1779 - age of 20, captain of frigate in West Indies
American War
served under Admiral Robert Digby & Lord Samul Hood during American War
1784 - return to West Indies: enforcement of:
NAVIGATION ACTS preventing direct trade between remaining colonies & new American states rigid enforcement of law brought him into conflict with: - traders - commander-in-chief - governor of Leewward Island this rotten lot tried to have Nelson removed or court-martialled Nelson successfully petitioned to Admiralty & King George III on Nevis, married widow with son
out of favour with Admiralty on return to Britain for doing his duty in the West Indies
& reportedly with King George for associating with disreputable son Nelson was refused another ship
but recalled 5 years later at outbreak of wars with France
Revolutionary Wars: 1792-1802 1794 tasked with securing Corsica for British
during attack on Calvi, Nelson blinded in right eye by stone splinters
returned to duty following day, despite injury
British fleet encountered Spanish fleet off Cape St Vincent
British heavily out-gunned
but British decisive win 1797 credit: Nelson - bold, unorthodox tactics (again)
Nelson received knighthood
detached to Santa Cruz in the Canary Islands
to capture rumoured Spanish treasure lost right arm by grapeshot injury (amputation) grapeshot: mass of small metal balls (not single projectile)
Battle of the Nile
1798 - Abu Qir (Aboukir) Bay - Alexandria, Egypt
dusk attacks by Nelson
British win / massive French losses
leaving French army stranded in Egypt
Nelson was wounded
Nelson returned to Naples for recovery
affair with wife of Sir William Hamilton (Emma)
granted peerage: Baron Nelson of the Nile appointed principal military adviser to Court of Ferdinand IV, King of Two Sicilies
Controversy
1. advice to send army to recapture Rome from French (big defeat)
2. affair with Emma Hamilton
Relinquished command b/c ill health
overland escort of Hamiltons to England
Separation from wife on return
Emma Hamilton pregnant with daughter Horatia
financial issues led to return to active service
1801 - promotion: vice-admiral
second in command: expedition to break armed neutrality of Baltic States
engaged in battle with Danish fleet, coast of Copenhagen
heavy losses, both sides lol ... ignored commanding officer's signal to disengage from firing
reportedly put telescope to blind eye & claimed he did not see signal
hour later battle was won
Nelson elevated to viscount
& appointed commander in chief of fleet & commanding officer (Parker) was recalled
next assignment: flagship HMS Victory / Battle of Trafalgar (above)
Emma Hamilton died in abject poverty in Calais nine years later.
Nelson's daughter Horatia returned to Norfolk & married clergyman.
Rule, Britannia! Lyrics Rule, Britannia! Britannia, rule the waves! Britons never, never, never shall be slaves. When Britain first, at heaven's command, Arose from out the azure main, This was the charter of the land, And Guardian Angels sang this strain: (Chorus) The nations not so blest as thee Must, in their turn, to tyrants fall, While thou shalt flourish great and free: The dread and envy of them all. (Chorus) Still more majestic shalt thou rise, More dreadful from each foreign stroke, As the loud blast that tears the skies Serves but to root thy native oak. (Chorus) Thee haughty tyrants ne'er shall tame; All their attempts to bend thee down Will but arouse thy generous flame, But work their woe and thy renown. (Chorus) To thee belongs the rural reign; Thy cities shall with commerce shine; All thine shall be the subject main, And every shore it circles, thine. (Chorus) The Muses, still with freedom found, Shall to thy happy coasts repair. Blest isle! with matchless beauty crowned, And manly hearts to guard the fair. (Chorus) Rule, Britannia! Britannia, rule the waves! Britons never, never, never shall be slaves. Source | Lyrics
COMMENT
Sodaring. Wow, I like Nelson a lot. My new hero. The Villeneuve stabbing is ugly. It's not nice to say this, but I don't think I like the French much. Seem untrustworthy, vicious and treacherous. Even so, Napoleon seems kind of impressive: didn't give up. Began large-scale ship-building. Got to admire that. LOL Think the Battle of Trafalgar should be celebrated in a big way by the British and not doing so on the centenary was an insult to Nelson, as was playing the French national anthem on Nelson's day. Immediate interests of appeasing the French should not have come before properly honouring a national hero. That's a disgrace. Nelson seems really exceptional. Not sure if it was worthwhile giving up his life for the nobility/merchant class of Britain, especially when they unfairly punished him for doing his duty blocking trade (per British law) and when, in the end, they dishonoured him on the centenary of his sacrifice for his country. Or is that sacrifice for the wealthy, ruling nobles and merchant class? If Nelson could see his country today, he would probably conclude it wasn't worth dying for an England that was stolen by the nobility and merchant class from under natural Englishmen, and handed to third world invaders that displace Horatio Nelson's people today.
Apart from reading about Samson Gideon ('the great oracle and leader of Jonathan's Coffee House in Exchange Alley'), I've been reading some current hysterical social media stuff that kept me most amused. It is so f*cking funny.
Feel kinda vindicated and superior, too. LOL
Been bad smoking cigarettes indoors, which I haven't done in years. In fact, I've almost stopped smoking (most days only one or two cigarettes). So I don't know why I'm smoking now or smoking indoors.
Now I have to hide the evidence and light incense, in the hope of covering the smell.
Can't find anything I like to listen to, so it's back to A3 (even though they're probably leftist SJW whackos).
Can't seem to get my music fix today. Sort of frustrated. Not sure I really care about normal news anymore. All I can think is that Europe is destroyed and Europeans everywhere are finished. It's like a stuck record in my mind, and it freaks me out when I pay attention. Everything else seems a joke. Nothing much matters.
Bendigo's finished. I feel sick in the stomach reading that. Australian objectors had to pay $200k to fight that. And the government and the government's judiciary is against them. As usual, only lawyers profit.
Mansfield Smith-Cumming
adopted 'Cumming' on marriage to: Leslie Marian Valiant-Cumming
heiress of Logie first director of Secret Intelligence Service (SIS)
aka M16
SIS headquarters at 2 Whitehall Court
great-grandson of John Smith director of:
1. South Sea Company
South Sea Bubble - speculation induced
South Sea Company to assume national debt of UK in exchange for lucrative bonds
would reap profit in international trade in: cloth, agricultural goods, slaves
but by 1720 company began to collapse & shares plunged
Robert Walpole nicknamed 'The Screen' or 'Screenmaster-General' 1721 investigation into corruption scandal of UK govt cabinet
implicated:
John Aislabie, Chancellor of the Exchequer - impeached, imprisoned
James Craggs, the Elder (Postmaster General) - disgraced
James Craggs the Younger (Southern Secretary) - disgraced
Lord Stanhope, head Ministry - impeached - got off b/c Wapol influence
Lord Southerland, head Ministry - impeached - got off b/c Wapol influence
1721 left Walpole as the most important figure in the admin
was appointed
- First Lord of the Treasury
- Chancellor of the Exchequer
- Leader of the House of Commons
2. East India Company
son of Abel Smith, Notthingham banker
served Royal Navy:
ops against Malay pirates (1875–6)
in Egypt 1883
unfit for service, seasickness
liked to lie about how he lost his leg
enjoyed shocking by stabbing his artificial limb
Smith-Cumming came to rely heavily on Sidney Reilly (ie. Shlomo Rosenblum), the 'Ace of Spies'
British agent based in St Petersburg
WWI - outbreak
involved in Special Branch arrest of 22 German spies in England
11 German accused executed
Sir Roger Casement found guilty of treason 1916
During WWI
Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) offices renamed:
-- MI5 (Security Service) = domestic division
-- M16 - Foreign Division = Secret Intelligence Service
WWI agents for M16
Augustus Agar
Paul Dukes
John Buchanan
Compton Mackenzie
W. Somerset Maugham
M16 motto: 'Every man his own stylo" refers to use of semen as invisible ink
1919 - Home Office Civil Intelligence Directorate
assumes control of MI5
successful WWI MI5/Special Branch partnership disturbed
meanwhile, Sinn Fein and Irish Republican Army launching independence campaigns
1920 - IRA Intel ('the Squad')
IRA Intelligence Chief
General Michael Collins
conducts successful ops to assassinate x14 Smith-Cumming SIS case officers
hasty British withdrawal of most of remaining SIS agents from Ireland
single greatest catastrophe in history of British Secret Service
-------/\/\/
South Sea Company
(officially:
The Governor and Company of the merchants of Great Britain
trading to the South Seas
and other parts of America
for the encouragement of fishing
British joint-stock company
f. 1711
public-private partnership
*to consolidate & reduce cost of national debt
granted a monopoly to trade with South America
Spain controlled South America
Britain involved in War of Spanish Succession
company never realised significant profit
expanded its operations dealing in government debt
peaked expansion 1720
company stock rose enormously in value upon expansion
but company collapsed, just over its original flotation price
known as: South Sea Bubble
aka 'speculative bubble', 'speculative mania', 'balloon'
(trade where prices based on implausible view of future trading / returns)
term 'bubble' originated from this 1711-1720 British South Sea Bubble
Bubble Act 1720
forbade creation of joint-stock companies
without royal charter
(promoted by South Sea Company prior its collapse)
Due to share collapse:
national economy greatly reduced
people were ruined
founders engaged in insider trading
using advance knowledge of when national debt was to be consolidated
to make large profits from PURCHASING DEBT IN ADVANCE huge bribes given to politicians to support legislation in parliament
favourable to the government debt dealing scheme of South Sea Company
*company money was used to deal in its own shares
select individuals buying shares were given loans backed by those shares
to spend on buying more shares
public share purchasing encouraged
by expectation of vast wealth from South American trade only significant trade done was in slaves
& even this wasn't managed profitably
politicians disgraced
individuals found to have profited unlawfully from company
had assets confiscated
but most were already wealthy & remained wealthy
South Sea Company
restructured continued to operate for over a century after the Bubble
HQ Threadneedle Street, London 1711-1850s
Threadneedle Street
location of Bank of England
'the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street'
(reserve of UK treasury & others) 5,000 tonnes of gold bars held
Threadneedle Street
to 2004 was location of London Stock Exchange
now: 10 Paternoster Square, London
formerly the 'Royal Exchange'
founded by English financier Thomas Gresham (father silk merchant)
modelled on Antwerp Bourse (stock exchange)
1571 - opened by Elizabeth I
stockbrokers not permitted in Royal Exchange (rude manners)
operated from nearby establishments (eg Jonathan's Coffee House)
Royal Exchange building later destroyed in Great Fire of London
1669 - rebuilt & re-established, as modern model of stock exchange
housed brokers, merchants & merchandise
BIRTH OF THE REGULATED STOCK MARKET
govt levied heavy penalties on those brokering without licence (1697)
fixed number of brokers at 100 (later increased)
led to street trading by disaffected or ejected brokers
'Exchange Alley', or 'Change Alley'
Seven Years' War (1756–1763) trade at Jonathan's coffee house boomed
1773, Jonathan, together with 150 other brokers, formed a club
opened more formal 'Stock Exchange' in Sweeting's Alley
had a set entrance fee, through which traders could enter stock room and trade securities
trading also occurred in the Rotunda of the Bank of England
fraud was also rife
solution: annual fees and turning the Exchange into a Subscription room
1801 - first regulated exchange in London
government used the Exchange's organised market
& may not have managed without it to RAISE ENORMOUS AMOUNT OF MONEY FOR WARS AGAINST NAPOLEON
Following war, booming world economy
growing market in foreign trade to: Brazil, Peru, Chile
London benefited from international trade Liverpool and Manchester sites of business development
1836 both Liverpool and Manchester Stock Exchanges opened
stocks known to rise up to 30% in a week
stockbroking began to be considered a real profession
but busts followed the booms
eg. 1835 'Spanish panic'
Technology - late 1880s - revolution in work of Exchange:
telephone
ticker tape - digital electronic communication medium
transmitted stock price info over telegraph lines 1870 to 1970
telegraph - long-distance transmission of textual or symbolic messages
like a semaphore / signalling WWI - London financial centre of the world
city & Stock Exchange closed the stock exchange July to New Year
to prevent bank runs
causing re-introduction of street business (challenge system)
1914 and 1918 limitations on business (eg. cash-only transactions)
many quit Stock Exchange
1923 - London Stock Exchange - own coat of arms:
Dictum Meum Pactum [my word] my covenant My Word is My Bond
pre WWII - 1937 London
finance men readied for war
London Stock Exchange officials drew up plans, based on WWI experience
1939 - opening of war, London Stock Exchange closed doors for a week
1940 incendiary bombing struck LSE floor (extinguished)
trading then done mainly on phone, to reduce bodily risks
LSE traded and remained open through WWII
(trading in basement)
1990 IRA bombing
considerate IRA bombers give Reuters warning 30 mins before blast
1986 - 'Big Bang'
SUDDEN DEREGULATION OF FINANCIAL MARKETS IN UK
'Big Bang' describes measures, incl:
-- abolition of fixed commission charges
-- abolition re distinction b/w stockjobbers & stockbrokers
-- change from 'open outcry' to electronic, screen-based trading
1995 - Alternative Investment Market (AIM)
launched to let growing companies expand into international markets
1997 - Electronic Trading Service (SETS) launched
CREST settlement service launched
2000 - London Stock Exchange's shareholders
vote to become public limited company: LONDON STOCK EXCHANGE PLC
Financial Services Authority (FSA)
was a quasi-judicial body
responsible for the regulation of the financial services industry
between 2001 - 2013
2007—2009 credit crisis
FSA was held by some observers to be weak and inactive
permitting irresponsible banking & 'credit crunch'
led to:
shrinking of housing market
increased unemployment esp. financial & building sectors)
public bail-outs
EDX London
derivatives exchange (managed by London Stock Exchange)
absorbed into Turquoise trading platform (2011)
Trading took place on the three Scandinavian linked exchanges:
Stockholm Stock Exchange (Sweden)
Copenhagen Stock Exchange (Denmark)
Oslo Børs (Norway)
*some Russian stocks
2009 - Nasdaq takes over OMX
cooperation between EDX London & OMX terminated
contracts moved to Nasdaq OMX
*only Norwegian derivatives with EDX London
Turquoise (trading platform)
equities trading platform
multi-lateral trading facility (MTF)
dealing services at 50% discount to traditional exchanges
hybrid system: trading both on and off traditional exchanges
advertised as: pan-European platform based on London
set up by consortium of banks:
BNP Paribas
Citi
Credit Suisse
Deutsche Bank
Goldman
Sachs
Merrill Lynch
Morgan Stanley
Société Générale
UBS
EuroCCP - provide clearing & settlement services
Sweden's Cinnober = its trading platform
real-time market surveillance system to capture breaches of trading rules etc
2009, London Stock Exchange Group
agrees to take a 60% stake in trading platform Turquoise
Turquoise had 7% share market
subsequent merger with Baikal Global 2014, Turquoise migrated to MillenniumIT platform
expansion: to option & future derivatives, futures contracts
DARK POOL
2016, Turquoise plans to extend dark pool to Czech, Poland, Hungary 'dark pools' are trading venues that allow investors to buy and sell shares anonymously
prices displayed only after a transaction finalised ***do not provide trading information, such as trade sizes and prices, to the public prior to trades taking place
attractive to fund managers who need to conceal trading intentions on large orders
trading across major European dark pools
totalled 79.2 billion euros ($90.33 billion) ONE MONTH
http://www.reuters.com/article/europe-markets-darkpools-idUSL3N18950E
Occupy London
London Stock Exchange, Paternoster Square
initial target of protests 2011
protester attempts to occupy square
defeated by police & the courts
entrance to square sealed off by police as 'private property'
High Court injunction granted ahead of time, prohibiting public access
protestersmoved to St Paul's Cathedral
'Paternoster'
L. 'Our Father'
3. A sequence of words spoken as a prayer or a magic formula.
1. often Paternoster The Lord's Prayer.
2. One of the large beads on a rosary on which the Lord's Prayer is said.
[from Late Latin : Latin pater, father; see pater + Latin noster, our]
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Paternoster
NASDAQ Stock Market
aka NASDAQ
USA stock exchange
second-largest exchange in world by market capitalisation
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NASDAQ
LSE Group CEO: Xavier Rolet
b. Aix-les-Bains, France
military parents
raised in Algeria & France
French Air Force Academy
MBA from Columbia Business School
MSc in Management Science and Finance (KEDGE Business School, bus. school France)
post-graduate degree from IHEDN (Institute of Advanced Studies in National Defence) in Paris
1984-1994, Rolet worked at Goldman Sachs in New York & London
1994-1996, Credit Suisse First Boston
1997-2000, Dresdner Kleinwort Benson
2000–2008, Lehman Brothers, various + Banque Lehman Brothers CEO
2009, London Stock Exchange board - later CEO
under his leadership, LSE acquired:
MillenniumIT 2009
Turquoise 2010
FTSE Group 2011
TRS 20111
Gatelab Srl 2012
EuroTLX Srl 2013
LCH.Clearnet 2013
Bonds.com 2014
Exactpro 2015
XTF 2015
Frank Russell Company 2014
Northwestern Mutual (sold asset management arm 2015)
Xavier Rolet
member PM David Cameron's 'Business Advisory Group'
various other, see link
member Governor of the Bank of England's Financial Services Forum
member Bank of England's Open Forum in Oct 2015, he was (KBE) by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II (2015) appointed Echansonnier of Echansonnerie de Châteauneuf-du-Pape (2015)
Knight of the National Order
of the Legion of Honour of the French Republic by Presidential decree (2016)
Legion of Honour
highest French order for military and civil merits established 1802 by Napoléon Bonaparte
hilarious: order's motto
"Honneur et Patrie"
("Honour and Fatherland")
French Revolution, all French orders of chivalry were abolished
French Revolution replaced orders of chivalry with Weapons of Honour
Chivalric order - equestrian order, society of knights
Catholic military order of Crusades (circa 1099-1291) founding or inspiration
paired with medieval concepts of chivalry
fall of Acre in 1291 = end of crusades
however, many crusades against Ottoman Empire planed & executed
well into 14th century & 15th century ongoing military effort against Islam
fall of Constantinople 1450s
rise of Ottoman Empire
15th century orders of chivalric dynastic orders of knighthood
became courtly fashion, some purely honorific institutions gave rise to modern 'orders of merit' of states
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chivalric_order
SWEDEN
Royal Order of the Seraphim
1748, founded by Frederick I of Sweden
Hebrew, pl. 'seraphim' = the burning ones, celestial or heavenly being
in Christianity & Judaism
highest rank in Christian angelic hierarchy
fifth rank in Jewish angelic hierarchy of ten
triple invocation of holiness (formula known as Trisagion)
influenced theology, literature & art
*trisagion = ancient hymn seen in works depicting angels, heaven & apotheosis (to deify, glorification of subject to divine level)
word seraph/seraphim appears three times in the Torah
used to describe a type of celestial being or angel other five uses of the word refer to serpents
heavenly creatures standing nearest to throne of god
also called the Ikisat: serpents, dragons, alternate term for Hell
under the rule of Gabriel
flying elements of the sun
multiple wings and burst into song at sunrise
Kabbalah:
Maimonides placed the seraphs in the fifth of ten ranks of angels
Seraphim = part of angelarchy of modern Orthodox Judaism
Medieval Christian theology, seraphim = caretakers of god's throne
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seraph
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Order_of_the_Seraphim
Great Chain of Being
Medieval and Renaissance thinkers
humans unique position on 'chain of being'
straddling spiritual & physical
thought ot possess divine powers: reason, love, imagination
like angels, spiritual beings
unlike angels, human souls bound to physical body
subject to passions & physical sensations, just like animals lower on chain of being
angel is only capable of intellectual sin such as pride
(see Lucifer fall from heaven)
humans, however, capable of both intellectual sin & physical sin (eg. gluttony)
humans, sensory: sight, touch, taste, sound, smell - limited by organs
highest ranking human being: king
great chain was seen as a God-given ordering
ranking of world's organisms goes back to Aristotle
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_chain_of_being
Rome - apotheosis
process where deceased ruler was recognised as having been divine by his successor
by decree of Senate & popular consent (usually)
grovelling to popular former rulers by new rulers
done to legitimise their subsequent rule
upper class did not always take part in imperial cult (subject of satire)
at height of imperial cult, emperor's family, lovers etc deified as well
sometimes temples and columns erected as places of worship
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apotheosis
LSE launched CURVE GLOBAL
new Futures Exchange co-owned with:
- Barclays Bank
- Bank of America
- Citi
- Goldman Sachs
- Societe Generale
- Chicago Board Options Exchange
2016 - Deutsche Boerse AG to merger with LSE
companies to be bought under new holding co: UK TopCo
HQ in both London & Frankfurt
will create one of the largest exchange companies in the world
combined value: £21bn
terms:
45.6% - LSE shareholders
54.4% - Deutsche Boerse shareholders
Xavier Rolet said LSE & Deutsche Boerse merger:
"creating an industry-defining combination"
merger anticipates savings on combined operation costs: @ about 20%
30% of new group's revenue = from UK
30% of new groups revenue = from Europe
19% of new groups revenue = from USA
06% of new groups revenue = from other
LSE group
owns Milan-based Borsa Italiana
Result: combination of London, Frankfurt and Milan
group better positioned to compete against large US peers
boosting position in China and Asia generally
Donald Brydon (LSE chairman)
will be chair: UK TopCo Carsten Kengeter (Deutsch Boerse chief exec)
will be chief executive: UK TopCo
Intercontinental Exchange (ICE)
(owns New York Stock Exchange)
considering making offer for LSE
http://www.bbc.com/news/business-35818997
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xavier_Rolet
Open house at palace of ill-gotten gains
By Clive Aslet
PUBLISHED: 00:01, Mon, Jun 3, 2013
EXTRACTS (not in order)
... Amazingly it’s not only still in private hands (indeed, the Marquess of Cholmondeley actually owns two stately piles, the other being Cholmondeley Castle in Cheshire) but like Goodwood, Arundel Castle, Chatsworth and Alnwick Castle, it is firing on all cylinders.
To this day Walpole remains our longest serving prime minister. After the uncertainty and wars that followed James II’s expulsion in 1688, his 20 years in the job – serving from 1721 until 1742 without a break – brought stability and peace. Walpole also steered the country through the Jacobite rebellion and all the anti-Hanoverian plots.
His job of political management was made easier by George I, newly arrived from Hanover and bored by the House of Commons. He delegated to Walpole. Critics accused Walpole of corruption and the evidence of Houghton suggests they had a point. The charitably disposed might say it was not only showcase of great art but a tool of statecraft. It could supposedly accommodate 100 guests at an hour’s notice.
Marquess of Cholmondeley
"... descendent of both the Rothschild family and the Sassoon family through his paternal grandmother, Sybil Sassoon." [wikipedia]
"... it is claimed that the SIB [Secret Intelligence Bureau] wanted to kill Rasputin, who was hoping to broker peace between Russia and Germany, because of his influence over the Tsar. The fear ... was that if such a deal had been agreed in 1916, 350,000 German troops would have been freed to fight the Allies on the Western Front." | source
Noodles in the Minestrone are huge, because I underestimated how much the 'scrap' noodles I had in pantry would swell. That's on the dense side, because I like Minestrone like that rather than runny. But this is probably a tad denser that I normally like. Madras Beef Curry is from scratch, using Martha Stewart's 'Madras curry powder' recipe as basic guide/inspiration for the 'paste' (ie curry gravy/base). Adjusted it to my taste.
In the curry itself, I threw in loads of tinned tomato, some tomato paste, and once I had a curry powder and tomato 'paste' cooked down, I threw in loads of coconut cream and hot water, before letting the entire thing cook down.
Yes, coconut cream. Just water it down to taste. This is just improvised 'Madras' curry, rather than the real deal. It tastes good to me, whatever it is. LOL
I'll have to remember to go a bit easier on the spices next time. Was rather heavy handed in my very loose by-feel estimates.
Yes, the dinner serves above are enormous and the presentation is shocking. It's just how I've slopped things on plate. Very basic. LOL
Beef Madras with vegies is my dinner few nights later, in front of computer. Enormous again. Probably won't get through this. Think I need to be banned from serving up food, because I serve food like a hungry shopper shops. LOL The batch of curry I cooked was enough for something like 5 or 6 frozen meals on standby, which is cool. Makes for very easy (and economical) dinners. Steamed pudding was made in the slow cooker, in a greased metal bowl that then gets slotted into the ceramic bowl of the slow cooker (along with hot water, for the steaming). Works very well. Nice puddings, although mine tend to be dense and heavy. Need to work on getting lighter results ... LOL. Still taste good with vanilla ice-cream. :) This is just some of what I've been up to. But mostly I'm slack, shamefully useless, and reading history or playing with pictures, or whatever pointless activity absorbs me for hours on end, on any given day.