Wednesday, June 6, 2018

WARRIORS FAMILIES | 80K VIEWS

June 6, 2018 – Today was D-Day in 1944. 

This blog today just passed 80,000 page views.

Thank you for reading.

Here are the most-viewed posts on this blog site since it was begun. The first one has 54 comments.



FAMILIES | CHAMPS Closes Down
Dec 10, 2014, 54 comments
WW2 | 8. Hiding Jews in Holland–Bob Boissevain (Up...
Dec 2, 2014, 6 comments
VET STORY 2 | Franklin D'Olier, Founded American L...
Sep 17, 2013
R.I.P. | Edward B. McMenamin (1912-1994), Economis...
Jan 2, 2016
WW2 | Willem van Stockum Bench at Trinity College,...
Jul 14, 2015
WW2 | Mark II Halifax Bomber
Nov 25, 2015
US NAVY | Oct. 10, Naval Academy Founded, 1845–170...
Oct 10, 2015, 1 comment
UN OPENS | My Dad Joins ICAO (Comment)
Oct 24, 2015
WW2 | Spies–Choices
May 29, 2015
CIVIL WAR | June 12–Jeb Stuart's Cavalry Circles t...
Jun 12, 2015

Sunday, June 3, 2018

HERALDRY | June 10 – Heraldry Day, for Geoffrey of Anjou

Arms of Geoffrey Plantagenet
On June 10, 1128, Geoffrey Plantagenet was presented by his father-in-law, King Henry I of England in Rouen, France with a blue shield bearing six gold lions.
The occasion was of international significance. Geoffrey was French. He was knighted by King Henry I, the English father of his bride Matilda, who was daughter of Edith of Scotland and the widow of the Holy Roman Emperor Henry V.

Thus three royal lines were united with England – Scotland, France and the Holy Roman Empire.
This is the oldest record of an initiation of international royal arms, although coats of arms are recorded in the Bayeux tapestry after the invasion of William I of England, and royal arms are attributed posthumously to Edward the Confessor and even King Alfred.

Geoffrey of Anjou is therefore considered the first armigerous royal family. For this reason, June 10 is registered on the International Day Calendar (https://nationaldaycalendar.com/register-a-national-day/) by Kathy McClurg as International Heraldry Day. She is a member of the IAAH, the International Association of Amateur Heralds.  More here: http://amateurheralds.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=1420.

BOOKEXPO | Pen & Sword

Charles Hewitt, Pen & Sword
June 3, 2018 – On Friday I visited the Pen & Sword booth at BookExpo2018 and met Charles Hewitt, the Managing Director. The symbol of the publishing house is a pen crossed with a sword. The pen may be mightier than the sword, but the sword is a good thing to read and write about...

The company is based in Barnsley, South Yorkshire, midway between Leeds and Sheffield. I spent three years about 20 miles northeast of Barnsley, at Ampleforth College. I've also visited Selby and the RAF Melbourne base that was used by 10 Squadron in World War II. My uncle piloted a Halifax bomber the week of D-Day and was shot down over Laval, where he and his crew are buried.

Pen & Sword is a distinguished military history publishing company with a big and actively used backlist. It is part of Westholme Publishing.

What caught my eye was a book by Jos Scharrer that has just been released called The Dutch Resistance Revealed. She is the daughter-in-law of a member of the Resistance. The note on the book correctly reports that the Dutch Underground movement has been largely overlooked by historians in the English language. The official Dutch historian, Loe de Jong, wrote 24 volumes about World War II in Holland and much of his writing is about Resistance efforts. While de Jong says he like his history like his sherry, dry, he has nothing but admiration for the work of Walraven van Hall, about whom a movie in Dutch has just been released.