Religion and Ethics Forum
General Category => General Discussion => Topic started by: Roses on July 19, 2024, 02:35:40 PM
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My childhood home in Guernsey was supposed to have been built on the foundations of the one belonging the Minstrel Blondel. He was given lands in Normandy and the Channel Islands for having rescued King Richard from the prison in Austria. Sadly any documentation referring to this would have been destroyed in a house fire in 1820. I have a very ancient key I found in our attic as a child, which I used to speculate could have been the one Blondel used to unlock the prison door. It is now hanging on the kitchen wall in our present home. Obviously there is no way of telling if it was the key, but I suppose it would be worth a bob or two if that was the case.
I would be interested to hear if any you have any historical figures in your past.
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Charlemagne
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Charlemagne
What a coincidence!
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What a coincidence!
You too?
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Charlemagne lived 1300 years ago.
Allowing for three or so generations each century and the fact that each of us has two parents that gives each of us 2 to the power of 40 direct ancestors ... 1,099,511,627,776. (The current population of the planet is about 8,100,000,000.) Distant individual ancestors will almost certainly appear multiple times in our family tree.
In addition, Charlemagne had at least 20 children.
And random events such as the black death decimated the populations of nations on more than one occasion.
It is statistically inconceivable that any of us does not have Charlemagne in our family tree ...
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Charlemagne lived 1300 years ago.
Allowing for three or so generations each century and the fact that each of us has two parents that gives each of us 2 to the power of 40 direct ancestors ... 1,099,511,627,776. (The current population of the planet is about 8,100,000,000.) Distant individual ancestors will almost certainly appear multiple times in our family tree.
In addition, Charlemagne had at least 20 children.
And random events such as the black death decimated the populations of nations on more than one occasion.
It is statistically inconceivable that any of us does not have Charlemagne in our family tree ...
That was the joke wasn't it?
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I did assume that NS's first reply to the question was a joke.
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Me, no.
Irish farmworker immigrants and Orkney farmers/fishermen.
Good solid stock!
My wife however is the great, great granddaughter of John MacPherson, one of the Skye martyrs.