Menu



error This forum is not active, and new posts may not be made in it.
PromoteFacebookTwitter!
Thomas Richmond

1637
15469 Posts
15469
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
SUNDAY SHOWCASE Featuring...SARAH PRITCHARD 8/12
8/11/2007 7:00:09 PM

Hello ALP family this week i have the honor of featuring a School teacher and tutor, a writer and a host of religious studys Sarah Pritchard!  Some added Features as always... Sittingbourne's Steam Railway is the preserved southern half of the former Bowater's Industrial Railway which, until 1969, was used to convey staff, raw materials and finished paper products between the mills at Sittingbourne and Kelmsley and the docks at Ridham. The railway features the longest narrow-gauge viaduct in the country with the original locomotives and rolling stock. 2006 marks the start of a 2nd century of steam operation with museum exhibits and model railways of historical interest. Also refreshments, play, picnic, education and wildlife areas.

Founded 850-years-ago, Forde Abbey was converted into a private house in c1649. Thirty acres of world famous gardens, interesting plants and stunning vistas.

Now privately owned, Forde Abbey was founded by the Cistercians in 1140 and became one of the richest and most learned monasteries in the country. The church was demolished in the dissolution, but in 1649 Sir Edmund Prideaux transformed the Abbey into a magnificent commonwealth house. Of particular note are the splendid Mortlake tapestries and ceilings from the 1650's and the crucifixion painting dated c1320. The 30 acres of world famous gardens include a walled working kitchen garden, ponds, cascades, ionic temple, rockery, bog garden, and the Centenary Fountain, the highest-powered fountain in England at full flow. Winner of South West Tourism's Small Visitor Attraction Of The Year 2006.

France is about 80% the size of Texas. In the Alps near the Italian and Swiss borders is western Europe's highest point—Mont Blanc (15,781 ft; 4,810 m). The forest-covered Vosges Mountains are in the northeast, and the Pyrénées are along the Spanish border. Except for extreme northern France, the country may be described as four river basins and a plateau. Three of the streams flow west—the Seine into the English Channel, the Loire into the Atlantic, and the Garonne into the Bay of Biscay. The Rhône flows south into the Mediterranean. For about 100 mi (161 km), the Rhine is France's eastern border. In the Mediterranean, about 115 mi (185 km) east-southeast of Nice, is the island of Corsica (3,367 sq mi; 8,721 sq km).

Archeological excavations indicate that France has been continuously settled since Paleolithic times. The Celts, who were later called Gauls by the Romans, migrated from the Rhine valley into what is now France. In about 600 B.C. Greeks and Phoenicians established settlements along the Mediterranean, most notably at Marseille. Julius Caesar conquered part of Gaul in 57–52 B.C., and it remained Roman until Franks invaded in the 5th century A.D.

The Treaty of Verdun (843) divided the territories corresponding roughly to France, Germany, and Italy among the three grandsons of Charlemagne. Charles the Bald inherited Francia Occidentalis, which became an increasingly feudalized kingdom. By 987, the crown passed to Hugh Capet, a princeling who controlled only the Ile-de-France, the region surrounding Paris. For 350 years, an unbroken Capetian line added to its domain and consolidated royal authority until the accession in 1328 of Philip VI, first of the Valois line. France was then the most powerful nation in Europe, with a population of 15 million.

The missing pieces in Philip Valois's domain were the French provinces still held by the Plantagenet kings of England, who also claimed the French crown. Beginning in 1338, the Hundred Years' War eventually settled the contest. After France's victory in the final battle, Castillon (1453), the Valois were the ruling family, and the English had no French possessions left except Calais. Once Burgundy and Brittany were added, the Valois dynasty's holdings resembled modern France. Protestantism spread throughout France in the 16th century and led to civil wars. Henry IV, of the Bourbon dynasty, issued the Edict of Nantes (1598), granting religious tolerance to the Huguenots (French Protestants). Absolute monarchy reached its apogee in the reign of Louis XIV (1643–1715), the Sun King, whose brilliant court was the center of the Western world.

After a series of costly foreign wars that weakened the government, the French Revolution plunged France into a bloodbath beginning in 1789 with the establishment of the First Republic and ending with a new authoritarianism under Napoléon Bonaparte, who had successfully defended the infant republic from foreign attack and then made himself first consul in 1799 and emperor in 1804. The Congress of Vienna (1815) sought to restore the pre-Napoléonic order in the person of Louis XVIII, but industrialization and the middle class, both fostered under Napoléon, built pressure for change, and a revolution in 1848 drove Louis Philippe, last of the Bourbons, into exile. Prince Louis Napoléon, a nephew of Napoléon I, declared the Second Empire in 1852 and took the throne as Napoléon III. His opposition to the rising power of Prussia ignited the Franco-Prussian War (1870–1871), which ended in his defeat, his abdication, and the creation of the Third Republic.

A new France emerged from World War I as the continent's dominant power. But four years of hostile occupation had reduced northeast France to ruins. Beginning in 1919, French foreign policy aimed at keeping Germany weak through a system of alliances, but it failed to halt the rise of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi war machine. On May 10, 1940, Nazi troops attacked, and, as they approached Paris, Italy joined with Germany. The Germans marched into an undefended Paris and Marshal Henri Philippe Pétain signed an armistice on June 22. France was split into an occupied north and an unoccupied south, Vichy France, which became a totalitarian German puppet state with Pétain as its chief. Allied armies liberated France in Aug. 1944, and a provisional government in Paris headed by Gen. Charles de Gaulle was established. The Fourth Republic was born on Dec. 24, 1946. The empire became the French Union; the national assembly was strengthened and the presidency weakened; and France joined NATO. A war against Communist insurgents in French Indochina, now Vietnam, was abandoned after the defeat of French forces at Dien Bien Phu in 1954. A new rebellion in Algeria threatened a military coup, and on June 1, 1958, the assembly invited de Gaulle to return as premier with extraordinary powers. He drafted a new constitution for a Fifth Republic, adopted on September 28, which strengthened the presidency and reduced legislative power. He was elected president on Dec. 21, 1958.

France next turned its attention to decolonialization in Africa; the French protectorates of Morocco and Tunisia had received independence in 1956. French West Africa was partitioned and the new nations were granted independence in 1960. Algeria, after a long civil war, finally became independent in 1962. Relations with most of the former colonies remained amicable. De Gaulle took France out of the NATO military command in 1967 and expelled all foreign-controlled troops from the country. De Gaulle's government was weakened by massive protests in May 1968 when student rallies became violent and millions of factory workers engaged in wildcat strikes across France. After normalcy was reestablished in 1969, de Gaulle's successor, Georges Pompidou, modified Gaullist policies to include a classical laissez-faire attitude toward domestic economic affairs. The conservative, pro-business climate contributed to the election of Valéry Giscard d'Estaing as president in 1974.

Socialist François Mitterrand attained a stunning victory in the May 10, 1981, presidential election

. The victors immediately moved to carry out campaign pledges to nationalize major industries, halt nuclear testing, suspend nuclear power-plant construction, and impose new taxes on the rich. The Socialists' policies during Mitterrand's first two years created a 12% inflation rate, a huge trade deficit, and devaluations of the franc. In March 1986, a center-right coalition led by Jacques Chirac won a slim majority in legislative elections. Chirac became prime minister, initiating a period of “cohabitation” between him and the Socialist president, Mitterrand. Mitterrand's decisive reelection in 1988 led to Chirac being replaced as prime minister by Michel Rocard, a Socialist. Relations, however, cooled with Rocard, and in May 1991 Edith Cresson—also a Socialist—became France's first female prime minister. But Cresson's unpopularity forced Mitterrand to replace Cresson with a more well-liked Socialist, Pierre Bérégovoy, who eventually was embroiled in a scandal and committed suicide. Mitterrand did succeed in helping to draft the Maastricht Treaty and, after winning a slim victory in a referendum, confirming close economic and security ties between France and the European Union (EU).

On his third try Chirac won the presidency in May 1995, campaigning vigorously on a platform to reduce unemployment. Elections for the national assembly in 1997 gave the Socialist coalition a majority. Shortly after becoming president, Chirac resumed France's nuclear testing in the South Pacific, despite widespread international protests as well as rioting in the countries affected by it. Socialist leader Lionel Jospin became prime minister in 1997. In the spring of 1999, the country took part in the NATO air strikes in Kosovo, despite some internal opposition.

Jean-Marie Le Pen, leader of the right-wing anti-immigrant National Front Party, shocked France in April 2002 with his second-place finish in the first round of France's presidential election. He took 17% of the vote, eliminating Lionel Jospin, the Socialist prime minister, who tallied 16%. Jospin, stunned by the result, announced that he was retiring from politics and threw his support behind incumbent president Jacques Chirac, who won with an overwhelming 82.2% of the vote in the runoff election. Chirac's center-right coalition won an absolute majority in parliament. In July 2002, Chirac survived an assassination attempt by a right-wing extremist.

During the fall 2002 and winter 2003 diplomatic wrangling at the United Nations over Iraq, France repeatedly defied the U.S. and Britain by calling for more weapons inspections and diplomacy before resorting to war. Relations between the U.S. and France have remained severely strained over Iraq.

France sent peacekeeping forces to assist two African countries in 2002 and 2003, Côte d'Ivoire and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Prime Minister Raffarin's plan to overhaul the national pension system sparked numerous strikes across France in May and June 2003, involving tens of thousands of sanitation workers, teachers, transportation workers, and air traffic controllers. In August, a deadly heat wave killed an estimated 10,000 people, mostly elderly. The catastrophe occurred during two weeks of 104°F (40°C) temperatures.

In 2004, the French government passed a law banning the wearing of Muslim headscarves and other religious symbols in schools. The government maintained that the wearing of conspicuous religious symbols threatened the country's secular identity; others contended that the law curtailed religious freedom.

In March 2004 regional elections, the Socialist Party made enormous gains over Chirac's Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) Party. Unpopular economic reforms are credited for the UMP's defeat.

On May 29, 2005, French voters rejected the European Union constitution by a 55%–45% margin. Reasons given for rejecting the constitution included concerns about forfeiting too much French sovereignty to a centralized European government and alarm at the EU's rapid addition of 10 new members in 2004, most from Eastern Europe. In response, President Chirac, who strongly supported the constitution, replaced Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin with Dominique de Villepin, a former foreign minister.

Rioting erupted on Oct. 27, 2005, in the impoverished outskirts of Paris and continued for two weeks, spreading to 300 towns and cities throughout France. It was the worst violence the country has faced in four decades. The rioting was sparked by the accidental deaths of two teenagers, one of French-Arab and the other of French-African descent, and grew into a violent protest against the bleak lives of poor French-Arabs and French-Africans, many of whom live in depressed, crime-ridden areas with high unemployment and who feel alienated from the rest of French society.

In March and April 2006, a series of huge and ongoing protests took place over a proposed labor law that would allow employers to fire workers under age 26 within two years without giving a reason. The law was intended to control high unemployment among France's young workers. The protests continued after President Chirac signed a somewhat amended bill into law. But on April 10, Chirac relented and rescinded the law, an embarrassing about-face for the government.

Presidential elections held in April 2007 pitted Socialist Ségolène Royal against conservative Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, the nominee for the Union for a Popular Movement. Late in the race, centrist candidate Francois Bayrou emerged as a contender. Sarkozy, with 30.7%, and Royal, taking 25.2%, prevailed in the first round of voting. Sarkozy went on to win the runoff election, taking 53.1% of the vote to Royal's 46.9%.

Sarkozy immediately extended an olive branch to the United States, saying "I want to tell them [Americans] that France will always be by their side when they need her, but that friendship is also accepting the fact that friends can think differently." The dialogue signalled a marked shift from the tense French-American relationship under Chirac.

On his first day in office, Sarkozy named former social affairs minister François Fillon as prime minister, succeeding Dominique de Villepin. He also apopinted Socialist Bernard Kouchner, a co-founder of the Nobel-prize-winning Médecins Sans Frontières, as foreign minister.     WE LOVE YOU SARAH Thank you Thomas for your kindness in choosing me for this Sunday Showcase.

 

As you know, I am English.  I was born in Sittingbourne, Kent, the third child of four.

I won’t bore you with all the details, but I went to grammar school, worked in London for a while (to see the real world), before studying Religious Studies and Education for my Honours Degree.  I then went on to do a PGCE in Religious Studies & English with option teaching children with Special Needs and became a secondary school teacher.  I changed from teaching in school to being a prison tutor in an open prison and a ‘B’ category prison on the Isle of Sheppey. As my young family started to increase, I decided to do private tuition at home and I ran my own little craft business from home too, in Canterbury.

 

After 10 years in Canterbury we moved to France where I’ve been living for nearly 12 years  with my family of one husband, 7 children, 3 cats, a pony and a donkey.  We actually came over with 5 children and added 2 more to the list.

We run gites here at our beautiful home (holiday accommodation for those who don't know the term).

You can take a look here:

 

http://www.sdpgitesinfrance.bravehost.com

I'm a teacher, writer, proofreader and translator.

I sing in a choir and participate in drama activities, writing, acting, producing, directing.  I'm doing a genealogy diploma.  I think it important to know where we came from and why we are like we are.  It can give us an insight into the future and what way to go.

I'm a Reiki and am very interested in the angels and connecting with them.

In my spare time (which I have to create!), I'm building up an internet business.
 At present I'm concentrating on SWSEO.
I'm going to build two websites using this system. 
You can see how far I’ve got on my writing site here:

http://www.sitewizardseo.com/onlinewriting

 

I’ve still got a long way to go, but I’ve started.  Writing is my passion.

As a writer, I tend to go on and on so I must stop myself and say thanks to Thomas and thanks to you all for reading my message.

Oh and I'll just tell you about the new marketing system that I’ve joined with Georgios. 

It’s not mlm.  It’s a contribution marketing system with an environmental twist.

I paid a one off contribution of 11 €uros (about $16, I think) and within hours I’d already earned nearly half of that back.  It’s based on teamwork.  I’ll let you take a look:

http://ubiee.com/enviro/?vortex=566

 http://community.adlandpro.com/go/sarahp/default.aspx

Angel Cuddles to everyone,

AT YOUR SERVICE. Drop A Line With The Pros!! http://www.goneclicking.com/?rid=7178 http://www.protrafficshop.com/?rid=5719 Chief Administrator & Support
+0
Nan
Nan Herring

1596
3059 Posts
3059
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 100 Poster
Person Of The Week
Re: SUNDAY SHOWCASE Featuring...SARAH PRITCHARD 8/12
8/11/2007 7:33:46 PM
Congratulations
Sarah
+0
Thomas Richmond

1637
15469 Posts
15469
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
Re: SUNDAY SHOWCASE Featuring...SARAH PRITCHARD 8/12
8/11/2007 8:18:13 PM
Thank You Nan for your thank you greeting! Enjoy your evening my friend.!
COVERED BRIDGE PETITE FRANCE STRASBOURG ALSACE FRANCE
AT YOUR SERVICE. Drop A Line With The Pros!! http://www.goneclicking.com/?rid=7178 http://www.protrafficshop.com/?rid=5719 Chief Administrator & Support
+0
Georgios Paraskevopoulos

2644
5965 Posts
5965
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 50 Poster
Person Of The Week
Re: SUNDAY SHOWCASE Featuring...SARAH PRITCHARD 8/12
8/11/2007 8:54:19 PM
Hello Thomas!

Thank you for the invitation to Sunday ShowCase Featuring. Your articles are incredible. A very nice choise you did for this week. Sarah is a very good friend. A woman of style, image and spirit. English with an accent of the real French inspiration. She reminds me Baroque versus Rococco, An Englishman can never be French. She has a more French than English way of thinking. Living to close the legendaric regon of Caracassonne province with many historical mysteries she is a part of it.

CONGRATULATIONS SARAH
ENJOY YOUR WEEK


France - Cest La Vie

The modern history begins in France 1789. A total confrontation between the "aristocracy" and the bourgeoisie. For first time the Royalties loose the power and the king his head. A whole system changes and the bourgeoisie takes over. A period of terror folows the revolution.A new epoch begins in Europe. Everything is up and down.


Principaux Symboles, en France,
de la Monarchie à la République.
(More about Royal and Republican symbols)

click on Angels

LES HYMNES

Sous l'Ancien régime : Pas d'hymne national
Ce sont des hymnes religieux qui sont joués pour tous les événements

- en
1686 Madame de Maintenon fait jouer, à Saint-Cyr, "Dieu protège le Roi",
de
J-B Lully, qui, en 1745 serait devenu l'hymne britannique
"God save the king (ou queen)"... -

Sous la 1ère République : C'est "Le chant pour l'armée du Rhin",
devenu "la Marseillaise", de
Rouget de Lisle, qui devient l'hymne français
(
voir page suivante)
avec "Le chant de la Liberté", de
Voltaire et Gossec pour la musique


Sous l'Empire : Pas d'hymne national mais des musiques et chants à la gloire
de
Napoléon, tel "Veillons au salut de l'Empire"

Sous la Restauration : hors de la présence du Roi, on joue le "Vive Henri IV",
chant populaire de la
fin du XVIème siècle ;
en sa présence "Où peut-on être mieux qu'au sein de sa famille ?",
de
Marmontel et Grétry pour la musique

Sous
Louis-Philippe ce sera "La Parisienne", de Delavigne et Auber pour la musique

Sous la 2ème République : C'est "le chant des Girondins", de Dumas
(avec un emprunt pour le texte à
Rouget de Lisle...) et Varney pour la musique

Sous le second Empire : On joue "Partant pour la Syrie"
(dont le vrai titre est "Le beau Dunois"), de
Laborde et Dalvimore pour la musique

Sous les 3ème, 4ème et 5ème Républiques :
C'est de nouveau "La Marseillaise"
(avec diverses orchestrations, dont la plus célèbre est d'
Hector Berlioz)

- Sous le Régime de Vichy, on y ajoutera "Maréchal nous voilà",
de
Montagard et Courtioux ;
pour la France libre on a aussi "Le chant des partisans", de
Kessel et Druon,
musique d'
Anna Marly (d'après un chant serbe) -

Kindly Regards
Georgios
ETERNAL WISDOM-Know ThySelf, PHILOXENIA MetaCafe, Adlanders In Facebook
+0
Monica S

703
5971 Posts
5971
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 50 Poster
Person Of The Week
Re: SUNDAY SHOWCASE Featuring...SARAH PRITCHARD 8/12
8/11/2007 9:01:44 PM

Thank you Thomas for featuring Sarah! She is one of my newest friends..

 

Sarah!

on being in the Sunday Showcase!

Enjoyed reading about you, you are a very active lady!

 

Hope you are having a Terrific Weekend! :)

~Monica

+0