What language did people speak in England before English?
Conventional teachings say celtic languages, but this has recently been challenged. Some people content that Pre Old English was present in England before the Angles, Saxons, Jutes, etc. arrived.
What are the present British colonies?
In 1981, the United Kingdom decided to change the name of the remaining Crown Colonies to British Dependent Territories. In 2002, the UK again changed the name to British Overseas Territories.
Here is a list of British Overseas Territories:
Akrotiri and Dhekelia (On Cyprus, a former and now independent colony)
Anguilla
Bermuda
British Antarctic Territory
British Indian Ocean Territory
British Virgin Islands
Cayman Islands
Falkland Islands
Gibraltar
Montserrat
Pitcairn Islands
Saint Helena & Ascension Islands
South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands
Turks and Caicos
Here is a list of Overseas territories that were once their own colony:
Anguilla
Bermuda
Falkland Islands
Gibraltar
Note: A reason some Overseas territories (Turks & Caicos, St. Helena) were never colonies is because they were too small to be their own government.
To see all the areas of the Serengeti National Park, it takes several days. The park is roughly the same size as the state of Connecticut.
What is the zip code for London .. England?
Zip Codes aren't used in the UK. Post Codes are used which usually narrow an address down to around 10 addresses. Large buildings have their own post code. So the answer to your question is that there are thousands of post codes in London. A London post code would look something like this: SE27 5AQ or SW16 3TF or N22 8ZB
Who was born in Gloucester England and was the signer who was killed with Lochlan McIntosh?
Button Gwinnett
What is the most important river that flow into the North Sea?
First Answer;
bnvnbuo
Second Answer;
No! You're wrong. It's not even a river! Let alone a word. The answer is the Rhine River.
-CookieLuver123D
How does England use natural resources?
Britain's natural resources have all but gone. There used to be huge iron and coal deposits but these resources are mostly used up now. Since the 1970's, there has been North Sea oil and natural gas, but that is all off-shore.
What is the distance in England from Dover to Brighton?
The distance in England from Dover to Brighton is 66 miles. That equals 106 kilometers or 57 nautical miles.
Where could one purchase womens oxford shoes?
One can purchase women's Oxford shoes from most department stores such as Macy's, Nordstrom's, Bloomingdales and even stores like Target and Walmart as well.
What was the legislative body in England?
Parliament, comprised of the House of Commons and the House of Lords.
komalakamug
What bell rings on England's house of Parliament building?
the main bell, the one that chimes the hours, is Big Ben.
What is current time in England?
In the United Kingdom the time is five hours ahead of the Eastern Time Zone in the US. Presently at 8:25 pm the time in the UK is 1.25 am.
How far from kings cross rai station to victoria bus station?
It is about 3.3 miles on foot from Kings Cross station to the Victoria coach station.
Where is Shadwell located in England?
Shadwell is located in Albemarle County, a few miles east of the city of Charlottesville. Shadwell is the plantation where Thomas Jefferson, third president of the United States, was born.
Which London bridge opens to let ships through?
Tower Bridge - the nearest to the sea and the entrance to the Pool of London
Is the river thames the largest river in Britain?
No the Severn is the longest, the Thames is the second longest.
What is that absolute location of England?
it is just ka-EWAN(2X) HAHA....JOKE IT IS IN BOLA-BOLA.....
I might Be wrong But I assume Full Rivers would be 17 x
What movie and television projects has Jo England been in?
Jo England has: Played Day Nurse in "The Fourth Wish" in 1976. Played Babysitter in "The Last Wave" in 1977. Played 1st Nun in "Hawk the Slayer" in 1980. Played Meg in "Under Capricorn" in 1983. Played Doll in "Playing Beatie Bow" in 1986. Played Storyteller in "Mulligrubs" in 1988. Played Therapist in "More Winners: Second Childhood" in 1990.
The English have rediscovered a national dress which harks back to the thegn dress of the 7th century which was pretty much universally worn at this time yet is modern enough to be widely acceptable. The outfit is smart but casual enough to wear at public functions such as weddings,particularly when adorned with the rich embroidery which replicates the traditional craft of the English seamstress.The national dress can be made from cutting patterns or bought as a tailor made finished article complete with embroidery.
Until recently, the English do not have a particularly typical national dress. In Britain, the Scotsmen in the north, in Scotland, of course have the kilt (a tartan skirt), the sporran (a type of purse that hangs in front) the dirk (a dagger held in a calf-length sock, and a tartan hat, the 'Tam-o'shanter'. Women have a similar dress, but without the sporran or dirk. Traditionally Scotsmen wear no underwear under the kilt - a source of much humour and innuendo about 'what a Scot keeps under his kilt...'.
The Welsh female also has a traditional dress - a full woolen calflength skirt, a cotton frilly top, a tassled shawl and a Welsh traditional hat that is a little like a witch's traditional hat but without the pointed top - the hat being truncated into a flat top
Sadly, however, the English do not have such well known traditional costumes. Apart from that being resurrected (see above) the nearest would be the Morris Man - a traditional (almost exclusively male) dance costume that consists of white shirt, white trousers (pants), black shoes, a boater-type hat and usually coloured sashes like those worn in beauty contests. The hat is usually bedecked with flowers, and the ankles with bells that jingle as the dancer moves. Although appearing to a tourist as a little effeminate, it is considered quite a macho thing to belong to a group of Morris Men - who are renowned for dancing but also for drinking the many pubs in England dry after they finish their stint at local fairs and May day celebrations.
The traditional wear of the English businessman has always been a pinstripe suit, and a bowler hat ( as worn by Laurel and Hardy) - and the accompaniment of a rolled up umberella (because of the changeable weather!) but sadly so few businessmen dress this way nowadays.
The question was What is ENGLAND'S traditional dress,-not what is Scotland,Wales and Ireland's?
However,interestingly all of these are invented traditions like England's new national dress.
The thegn style of dress was worn for the better part of 1000 years in England before the common folk finally abandoned it,having been impoverished by their Norman overlords.
The brightness of this costume is not completely seen in the website photo,nor can the embroidery be fully appreciated.
The reason for using this particular style of dress was because several emblems are traditional.
The English dress of the man and woman is made from pure English wool,and the colour is made using traditional dyers weeds or herbs.The brooch and metal clasps are made with wyrms( dragons) incised into the metal to symbolise the white dragon of the Angles and Saxons which they revered from the earliest times and carried into battle.
Silver in itself was revered by the early English as it conferred status and was a mystical metal.
The seaxe worn in its leather scabbard by both males and females is an integral part of our dress as it was worn by every freeman and woman and child,and demonstrated the right of all English folk to bear arms for protection.
The colours which echo the traditional red and white of England are added to by the addition of embroidery.
Every county of England has its own sacred emblem and these show others where each
wearer originates.The white horse for Kent three seaxes for Essex etc.
The originators of this dress took great care to make it practical and attractive, and one which could be personalised, and added to over the years.
The embroidery echoes the artistry of our ancestors whose needlework was famed throughout northern Europe. (After all the Bayeaux Tapestry was made by English seamstresses in Canterbury)
P.S.The kilt was invented by Thomas Rawlinson (an Englishman) in the 18th century because at the time the Scottish highlanders were dressed in blankets pinned with a brooch at the shoulder and frankly looked rather 'rustic'.
The Welsh were dressed up in their national costume by Augusta Hall -(an English woman) in the nineteenth century.
Why was Jamestown more democratic than England?
No, only a select portion of the colony of Jamestown were permitted to vote. Eligibility was restricted to white males 21 or older, who owned property. As a result, the more numerous but landless people of the colony were not given suffrage, and all laws were made by a few land holding citizens.
Is there a train that runs from Rochdale to Manchester airport?
There is an hourly train which goes to Newcastle (operated by First Transpennine Express) from the Airport station. Once at Newcastle change onto the Tyne And Wear Metro service to Sunderland.