Create Blog

News Blogs (3,096)

Here is a list of News Blogs. A Blog is a journal you may enter about your life, thoughts, interesting experiences, or lessons you've learned. Post an opinion, impart words of wisdom, or talk about something interesting in your day. Update your blog on a regular basis, or just whenever you have something to say. Creating a blog is a good way to share something of yourself with others. Reading blogs is a good way to learn more about others. Click here to post a blog.

Cherielxl

About pig person!

The latest news, found the pig people.A lot of people can't stand the pig people, feel not fit to be seen.Just a anecdote, don't want to scare anyone.Is there even more terrible than people do?Murder, envy, greed, jealousy, evil, prostitution, gambling, drug abuse, human traffickers, reselling of human organs, to kill their parents, kill children, terrorists, riots, Father in law rape his daughter-in-law, murder,To destroy other people's families, women do third or fourth wives,even Fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth wives!Bad things are the people themselves, the first abnormal.Man and animal mating, will be born out of pig people!But man himself, he is afraid of a pig who does not hurt anyone.In Hugo's "Notre Dame de Paris", Casey Modoo has a geometric shape of the face, the nose of the square, out of the mouth, God gave him all the ugly.An abandoned freak, called the ugly and deaf bell tower.But he has a good heart, is the representative of the true,good and beautiful,from the hands of the feudal rulers, rescued the beautiful Esmeralda Esther.The devil are often beautiful face to seduce the most easily, sugar coated bullet guard, confused people.In this chaos of generation, is not to become blurred, true and false confusion, there is no spark!
Post Comment
donovan65

The Withdrawal of Roman Legions from Britain.



The Withdrawal of Roman Legions from Britannia resulted in the End of Literacy in the region (410 – 449 AD). Then starts the Dark Ages in Britain...
In 410AD.the Roman legions withdrew from the province of Britannia. With the departure of the last legions from Britain, and the end of Roman rule, literacy gradually left England. Within 40 to 50 years from the time of the departure of the Romans to the arrival in 597 of Augustine of Canterbury on a mission to convert the Anglo-Saxons, and for a period thereafter, it is believed that the people of Britain were, with few exceptions, essentially illiterate.

Roughly 40 years after the Romans departed, in 449, Saxons, Angles, and Jutes conducted large scale invasions of Britain, causing numerous members of the Christian aristocracy to flee to Bretagne, France. The environment in Britain became increasingly hostile to Christians, and increasingly illiterate.


The period from the departure of the Roman legions to the arrival of Augustine of Canterbury in 597 is often called Sub-Roman Britain or Post-Roman Britain. The date taken for the end of this period is arbitrary in that sub-Roman culture continued in the West of England, and in Wales, for a period of time thereafter. Reflecting the decline of literacy and of educational institutions, very little written material survived from the period.
“Two primary contemporary British sources exist: the Confessio of Saint Patrick and Gildas’ De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae (On the Ruin and Conquest of Britain). Patrick’s Confessio and his Letter to Coroticus reveal aspects of life in Britain, from where he was abducted to Ireland. It is particularly useful in highlighting the state of Christianity at the time. Gildas is the nearest to a source of Sub-Roman history but there are many problems in using it. The document represents British history as he and his audience understood it. Though a few other documents of the period do exist, such as Gildas’ letters on monasticism, they are not directly relevant to British history. Gildas’ De Excidio is a jeremiad: it is written as a polemic to warn contemporary rulers against sin, demonstrating through historical and biblical examples that bad rulers are always punished by God — in the case of Britain, through the destructive wrath of the Saxon invaders. The historical section of De Excidio is short, and the material in it is clearly selected with Gildas’ purpose in mind. There are no absolute dates given, and some of the details, such as those regarding the Hadrian’s and Antonine Walls are clearly wrong. Nevertheless, Gildas does provide us with an insight into some of the kingdoms that existed when he was writing, and how an educated monk perceived the situation that had developed between the Anglo-Saxons and the Britons.
Embedded image from another site
Post Comment
Track16online now!

lol

Embedded image from another site
Post Comment
Track16online now!

lol

Embedded image from another site
Post Comment
Track16online now!

lol

Embedded image from another site
Post Comment
Track16online now!

lol

Embedded image from another site
Post Comment
Track16online now!

lol

Embedded image from another site
Post Comment
Track16online now!

lol

Embedded image from another site
Post Comment
Track16online now!

Around Home

These pictures were took around my community.

Embedded image from another site


Embedded image from another site


Embedded image from another site


Embedded image from another site


Embedded image from another site


Embedded image from another site
Post Comment
We use cookies to ensure that you have the best experience possible on our website. Read Our Privacy Policy Here