Happy Saint George's Day (8)

Apr 23, 2015 7:32 AM CST Happy Saint George's Day
stanley8m
stanley8mstanley8mkildare, Kildare Ireland156 Threads 7 Polls 5,341 Posts
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For all our friends from Ingurland. wave
Apr 23, 2015 8:10 AM CST Happy Saint George's Day
stanley8m: For all our friends from Ingurland.



Never met St. George but I've met a few dragons in my time.
uh oh
Apr 23, 2015 9:33 AM CST Happy Saint George's Day
Phoenix
PhoenixPhoenixBelfast....., Antrim Ireland274 Threads 65 Polls 6,948 Posts
Apr 23, 2015 11:44 AM CST Happy Saint George's Day
GalwayGuy35
GalwayGuy35GalwayGuy35galway, Galway Ireland25 Threads 1,537 Posts
That's a very small dragon he is killing, it would be a bit more impressive if he took on a dragon like the one on Game of Thrones.
Apr 23, 2015 12:16 PM CST Happy Saint George's Day
DonPepperoni
DonPepperoniDonPepperoniMálaga, Andalusia Spain42 Threads 1 Polls 552 Posts
stanley8m: For all our friends from Ingurland.

The horse looks really happy stamping on that dragon, bad horsescold
Apr 23, 2015 12:20 PM CST Happy Saint George's Day
is st. patrick, st. george's brother?
Apr 23, 2015 12:23 PM CST Happy Saint George's Day
Phoenix
PhoenixPhoenixBelfast....., Antrim Ireland274 Threads 65 Polls 6,948 Posts
pedro27: is st. patrick, st. george's brother?


They are both 2nd cousins, twice removed on their mothers side.
Apr 23, 2015 3:22 PM CST Happy Saint George's Day
Phoenix
PhoenixPhoenixBelfast....., Antrim Ireland274 Threads 65 Polls 6,948 Posts
St George's Day 2015: 5 English things not actually English....

Fish & chips

The quintessential English fast food, what could be more English than picking up a portion from the chippie on a Friday? But fried fish was actually introduced into Britain by Jewish refugees from Portugal and Spain

A spot of polo

Is anything more English than rubbing shoulders with the high-rollers at a polo match at the height of summer? Yet English plantation owners actually learned polo from locals in the Indian state of Assam in the 19th century…

A nice cuppa tea

We all know the English love a good cuppa! A lot of people know that tea was first grown in China, which was then taken to India by the British. But did you know that the tea bag was accidently invented by a New York tea merchant? In the very early 1900s, Thomas Sullivan sent his customers samples of tea in silken bags. Rather than emptying the tea from the bag, some assumed they should be used in the same way as metal infusers and consequently, the tea bag was born

The good old pub

Long have the British population relished a pint in the local pub but it was after the arrival of the Romans, and the Roman road network, that inns began to appear where a passer-by could enjoy a refreshing beverage

...and Saint George

Believe it or not, even Saint George himself was born abroad! Although historians have argued the Roman’s soldiers place of birth for over a century, it is believed that that Saint George was born to a Greek Christian noble family in Syria…


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