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'''[[Edward I]]''', 1272-1307, often regarded as one of [[England]]s finest medieval Kings. | '''[[Edward I]]''', 1272-1307, often regarded as one of [[England]]'s finest medieval Kings. | ||
<!--, also known as Edward 'the Longshanks' for his distinguishable tallness and Edward 'hammer of the Scots' as a result of his dealings with [[Scotland]], was named after the legendary Anlo-Saxon King, [[Edward the Confessor]], one of the last of the Anglo-Saxon Kings by his father [[Henry III]]. Edward is often regarded as one of [[England]]s finest medieval Kings, but has in recent years received heavy criticism from certain historians and from Hollywood in the epic film [[Braveheart]]. He was succeeded by his son [[Edward II]] in 1307. --> | <!--, also known as Edward 'the Longshanks' for his distinguishable tallness and Edward 'hammer of the Scots' as a result of his dealings with [[Scotland]], was named after the legendary Anlo-Saxon King, [[Edward the Confessor]], one of the last of the Anglo-Saxon Kings by his father [[Henry III]]. Edward is often regarded as one of [[England]]s finest medieval Kings, but has in recent years received heavy criticism from certain historians and from Hollywood in the epic film [[Braveheart]]. He was succeeded by his son [[Edward II]] in 1307. --> | ||
<font size=1>[[Edward I|['''more...''']]]</font> | <font size=1>[[Edward I|['''more...''']]]</font> |
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Article of the Week [ about ]The Northwest Passage is a long-sought water route connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans north of the North American mainland. Between the 16th and 19th centuries, European explorers, particularly the British, made numerous attempts to discover such a route north and west, through (by river) or around (by sea) North America. The earliest of the explorations were based on a mixture of legend, conjecture, and wishful thinking, but later expeditions built on what was learned and gradually extended their maps, at first of North America itself and then of Arctic America in particular. [more...] New Article of the Week [ about ]Edward I, 1272-1307, often regarded as one of England's finest medieval Kings. [more...]
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