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Post by bathstoke on Feb 15, 2016 15:25:50 GMT
In Feb 2015 Leicester had 18pts & not a prayer. On 26th of March the reinterment of the Plantagenet King took place at Leicester Cathedral, after his ignominious burial under a council car park since 1485. By April Leicester had 31pts & they Havnt looked back. Discuss...
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Post by crouchie on Feb 15, 2016 15:43:31 GMT
absolute total coincidence,......or is it?
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Post by blurtonboy on Feb 15, 2016 15:54:33 GMT
After having 18 points perhaps the CHIPS were down. It might be there CRISP passing, or do they have a countryside route for WALKERS?
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Post by dirtygary69 on Feb 15, 2016 15:58:22 GMT
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Post by Lakeland Potter on Feb 15, 2016 16:11:53 GMT
Richard of York should have been buried in York, his spiritual home and the place where his present day descendants wished him to be buried. Not that I am saying that York City would have been on their way to the Premier League title if he had been buried in York!
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Post by Northy on Feb 15, 2016 16:12:28 GMT
Is there a meaning to these pictures as they don't look anything like each other ?
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Post by Deleted on Feb 15, 2016 16:16:08 GMT
In Feb 2015 Leicester had 18pts & not a prayer. On 26th of March the reinterment of the Plantagenet King took place at Leicester Cathedral, after his ignominious burial under a council car park since 1485. By April Leicester had 31pts & they Havnt looked back. Discuss... I think you're onto something there I suggest we kick hemheath pit back into gear and tunnel our way under Leicester cathedral, steal the quasi git, and bury him infront of sir stans statue on the north car park asap.
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Post by starkiller on Feb 15, 2016 17:04:59 GMT
One of the most truly ridiculous days ever witnessed.
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Post by lordherefordsknob on Feb 15, 2016 17:10:34 GMT
I'm just going for a Richard the third.
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Post by spitthedog on Feb 15, 2016 17:14:13 GMT
In Feb 2015 Leicester had 18pts & not a prayer. On 26th of March the reinterment of the Plantagenet King took place at Leicester Cathedral, after his ignominious burial under a council car park since 1485. By April Leicester had 31pts & they Havnt looked back. Discuss... Nigel Pearson also got a group of Buddhists from Thailand to bless the ground and the players....discuss!
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Post by nott1 on Feb 15, 2016 17:14:38 GMT
Richard of York should have been buried in York, his spiritual home and the place where his present day descendants wished him to be buried. Not that I am saying that York City would have been on their way to the Premier League title if he had been buried in York! Correct...he wanted to be buried there and his remaining descendants wanted him in York. It is an absolutely a shocking decision that he is in Leics.
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Post by Dutchpeter on Feb 15, 2016 17:25:22 GMT
Didn't Jamie Vardy refer to the King as Richard the Hundred and eleventh in Steptoe and Son?
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Post by Deleted on Feb 15, 2016 17:27:13 GMT
Richard of York should have been buried in York, his spiritual home and the place where his present day descendants wished him to be buried. Not that I am saying that York City would have been on their way to the Premier League title if he had been buried in York! Correct...he wanted to be buried there and his remaining descendants wanted him in York. It is an absolutely a shocking decision that he is in Leics. With York being hit with floods this winter , his body would have probably risen to the surface, therefore Richard the Floater.
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Post by Gods on Feb 15, 2016 17:36:43 GMT
Here are Ranieri, Vardy and Bob Huth blowing out of their arses with the peloton about to swallow them up as it always does!
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Post by leicspotter on Feb 15, 2016 19:48:53 GMT
Finding the royal bones certainly had a positive effect on the city and tourism has had a major boost, indeed several German, Italian, Turkish and French tourists enjoyed it so much that they decided to stay... Btw the plans for the new statue celebrating their prem success are well in hand...my vote goes to the one featuring Robert Huth's "square" head
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Post by bathstoke on Feb 15, 2016 19:49:47 GMT
Here is Ranieri, Vardy and Bob Huth blowing out of their arses with the peloton about to swallow them up as it always does! You can almost smell their fear
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Post by Old School Stokie on Feb 15, 2016 20:17:52 GMT
Could always dig up John o'gaunt and re- bury him outside the borough of Newcastle next to the Britannia stadium and see what happens next!
But it's a cracking theory over Dick 3
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Post by malteser68 on Feb 15, 2016 20:22:33 GMT
The day after well beck got the winner in the dying seconds of the game against Leicester it has come to pass that the late Pope John Paul II (already elevated to sainthood) had a relationship with a beautiful Polish American woman which appears to go beyond the platonic. Discuss
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Post by starkiller on Feb 15, 2016 20:29:03 GMT
The day after well beck got the winner in the dying seconds of the game against Leicester it has come to pass that the late Pope John Paul II (already elevated to sainthood) had a relationship with a beautiful Polish American woman which appears to go beyond the platonic. Discuss At least it wasn't kids.
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Post by samba :) on Feb 20, 2016 1:45:06 GMT
In Feb 2015 Leicester had 18pts & not a prayer. On 26th of March the reinterment of the Plantagenet King took place at Leicester Cathedral, after his ignominious burial under a council car park since 1485. By April Leicester had 31pts & they Havnt looked back. Discuss... Nigel Pearson also got a group of Buddhists from Thailand to bless the ground and the players....discuss! as in telling his son to shag a different coloured prostitute in a sex tape I like how he was sacked for racist language Career over
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Post by samba :) on Feb 20, 2016 1:46:42 GMT
dick three could mean Leicester are gonna dick somebody three nil
Coincidence, me thinks no
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Post by Linx on Feb 20, 2016 6:40:37 GMT
Dick the Shit would probably hate Leicester if he had any say on the matter. His body probably ended up there in the most ignominious of circumstances.
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Post by Olgrligm on Feb 20, 2016 8:13:06 GMT
Richard of York should have been buried in York, his spiritual home and the place where his present day descendants wished him to be buried. Not that I am saying that York City would have been on their way to the Premier League title if he had been buried in York! Sorry, but that's totally wrong. I'll put a warning in here: boring medieval history coming up. There's no precedent for Plantagenets, or indeed York is monarchs, being buried at York. Generally, unless there were unusual circumstances, you were buried wherever you died or at a religious house that you had endowed. The only really viable candidates for a burial place were the chapel of Edward the Confessor at Westminster Abbey, where monarchs typically liked to be buried, or Leicester Cathedral. Obviously Westminster Abbey was out of the question, so he belonged in Leicester. You could probably argue that so long as he had a decent Catholic burial, in accordance with his faith, it doesn't really matter where he was buried. The so-called Plantagenets Alliance were just a bunch of troublemakers who formed in the middle of all of the hype. The day after well beck got the winner in the dying seconds of the game against Leicester it has come to pass that the late Pope John Paul II (already elevated to sainthood) had a relationship with a beautiful Polish American woman which appears to go beyond the platonic. Discuss I saw that. It read more like a sexed up smear story than anything else.
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Post by Lakeland Potter on Feb 20, 2016 8:24:06 GMT
Richard of York should have been buried in York, his spiritual home and the place where his present day descendants wished him to be buried. Not that I am saying that York City would have been on their way to the Premier League title if he had been buried in York! Sorry, but that's totally wrong. I'll put a warning in here: boring medieval history coming up. There's no precedent for Plantagenets, or indeed York is monarchs, being buried at York. Generally, unless there were unusual circumstances, you were buried wherever you died or at a religious house that you had endowed. The only really viable candidates for a burial place were the chapel of Edward the Confessor at Westminster Abbey, where monarchs typically liked to be buried, or Leicester Cathedral. Obviously Westminster Abbey was out of the question, so he belonged in Leicester. You could probably argue that so long as he had a decent Catholic burial, in accordance with his faith, it doesn't really matter where he was buried. The so-called Plantagenets Alliance were just a bunch of troublemakers who formed in the middle of all of the hype. The day after well beck got the winner in the dying seconds of the game against Leicester it has come to pass that the late Pope John Paul II (already elevated to sainthood) had a relationship with a beautiful Polish American woman which appears to go beyond the platonic. Discuss I saw that. It read more like a sexed up smear story than anything else. Bugger your history lesson - we live in the here and now. Unless you leave specific instructions in your will as to where you should be buried, your descendents or executors get to choose - which is as it should be. If there were no traceable descendents then I could understand the idea of re-burying him in the city where he died. But there ARE traceable descendants so their wishes should be respected. If I die on a visit to Westminster Abbey I will be interested to look down from above to watch Mystical's campaign to get me buried there against the wishes of my executors!
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Post by Olgrligm on Feb 20, 2016 9:07:42 GMT
Sorry, but that's totally wrong. I'll put a warning in here: boring medieval history coming up. There's no precedent for Plantagenets, or indeed York is monarchs, being buried at York. Generally, unless there were unusual circumstances, you were buried wherever you died or at a religious house that you had endowed. The only really viable candidates for a burial place were the chapel of Edward the Confessor at Westminster Abbey, where monarchs typically liked to be buried, or Leicester Cathedral. Obviously Westminster Abbey was out of the question, so he belonged in Leicester. You could probably argue that so long as he had a decent Catholic burial, in accordance with his faith, it doesn't really matter where he was buried. The so-called Plantagenets Alliance were just a bunch of troublemakers who formed in the middle of all of the hype. I saw that. It read more like a sexed up smear story than anything else. Bugger your history lesson - we live in the here and now. Unless you leave specific instructions in your will as to where you should be buried, your descendents or executors get to choose - which is as it should be. If there were no traceable descendents then I could understand the idea of re-burying him in the city where he died. But there ARE traceable descendants so their wishes should be respected. If I die on a visit to Westminster Abbey I will be interested to look down from above to watch Mystical's campaign to get me buried there against the wishes of my executors! So we should dig up John and chuck him over to France with Richard I, or Edward II and stick him with his mum and Dad in Westminster? The 'descendents' of Richard III are far more closely related to those two than they are Richard, so perhaps we should ask their opinion? Maybe it would have been more appropriate and less selfish for them to try to bury him with his close family. He was exceptionally loyal to his older brother, Edward IV, who is at Windsor. His wife is in Westminster. His older brother George is in Tewkesbury. It would be more like having you buried there against the wishes of your weird great great great uncle's children's children's children's children's children's children's children's children's children's children's children's children's children's children's children's children's children's children. Anyway, the historians won and he's not being moved again, so nerr.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 20, 2016 9:30:52 GMT
Richard of York should have been buried in York, his spiritual home and the place where his present day descendants wished him to be buried. Not that I am saying that York City would have been on their way to the Premier League title if he had been buried in York! Correct...he wanted to be buried there and his remaining descendants wanted him in York. It is an absolutely a shocking decision that he is in Leics. Haha, what misinformed bollocks from the pair of you there Leicester's points haul since Dicky's reinterment is quite an amazing coincidence really!
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Post by stiggerstackle on Feb 20, 2016 10:01:09 GMT
Is there a meaning to these pictures as they don't look anything like each other ? 2 big chinned, pointy nosed bastards?!?...
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Post by CBUFAWKIPWH on Feb 20, 2016 11:14:35 GMT
Sorry, but that's totally wrong. I'll put a warning in here: boring medieval history coming up. There's no precedent for Plantagenets, or indeed York is monarchs, being buried at York. Generally, unless there were unusual circumstances, you were buried wherever you died or at a religious house that you had endowed. The only really viable candidates for a burial place were the chapel of Edward the Confessor at Westminster Abbey, where monarchs typically liked to be buried, or Leicester Cathedral. Obviously Westminster Abbey was out of the question, so he belonged in Leicester. You could probably argue that so long as he had a decent Catholic burial, in accordance with his faith, it doesn't really matter where he was buried. The so-called Plantagenets Alliance were just a bunch of troublemakers who formed in the middle of all of the hype. I saw that. It read more like a sexed up smear story than anything else. Bugger your history lesson - we live in the here and now. Unless you leave specific instructions in your will as to where you should be buried, your descendents or executors get to choose - which is as it should be. If there were no traceable descendents then I could understand the idea of re-burying him in the city where he died. But there ARE traceable descendants so their wishes should be respected. If I die on a visit to Westminster Abbey I will be interested to look down from above to watch Mystical's campaign to get me buried there against the wishes of my executors! Mystical is right - and before Richard iII was dug up the legal position had been decided. It was a condition of removing the body that he be buried in Leicester cathedral. The decision was nothing to do with medieval history - it the law in the hear and now. There were some attempts to overturn the decision and have him buried in York but they were half hearted and doomed to failure. The best story I heard while the squabble was going on was that the mayor of Chesterfield (seeing a nice bit of tourist income) put in a cheeky bid to have him buried there as it was halfway.
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Post by bathstoke on Feb 20, 2016 11:20:08 GMT
Is there a meaning to these pictures as they don't look anything like each other ? 2 big chinned, pointy nosed bastards?!?... Dishonouring the King!?! There'll be a fatwa on your ass before sundown...
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Post by stiggerstackle on Feb 20, 2016 11:25:04 GMT
2 big chinned, pointy nosed bastards?!?... Dishonouring the King!?! There'll be a fatwa on your ass before sundown... King or not, there's little doubt Richard was a but of a bugger! If you mean Robert of Huth, I love that man, the big dirty German bastard that he is! :-)
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