• Look at the family tree of The House of Windsor.

    Can you tell what family relations there are?

    • mother, father (parents)
    • grandmother, grandfather (grandparents)
    • wife, husband
    • great-grandmother, great-grandfather (great-grandparents)
    • daughter, son (children)
    • granddaughter, grandson (grandchildren)
    • sister, brother (siblings)
    • aunt, uncle
    • cousin
    • in-laws (mother-, father-, son-, daughter-, brother-, sister-)

    E.g.: The Queen is Prince Charles’s mother.

    William is Diana and Charles’s son.

    royallineofsuccession-2019aug

  • Look at the pictures and revise the words.

  • COUNTRY England Scotland Wales Northern Ireland
    POPULATION*
    (estimated)

    *the next Census takes place in 2011

    ca. 56,000,000 ca. 5,420,000 ca. 3,125,000 ca. 1,871,000
    CAPITAL CITY and its POPULATION London
    (ca. 8,8 million in Greater London)
    Edinburgh
    (ca. 500,000 in the council area)
    Cardiff
    (ca. 1,000,000 in the urban zone)
    Belfast
    (ca. 585,000 in the Metropolitan Area)
    LANGUAGE English English, Scots, Scottish Gaelic Cymraeg (Welsh), English English, Irish Gaelic
    OFFICIAL FLAG england scotland wales uk 1200px-Ulster_Banner.svg
    PATRON SAINT St George
    (celebrated on 23 April)
    St Andrew
    (30 November)
    St David
    (1 March)
    St Patrick
    (17 March)
    FLOWER SYMBOL(S)
    OF THE COUNTRY
    rose 2000px-Tudor_Rose_(Heraldry).svg thistle Scottish_Thistle_(Heraldry).svg daffodil Narcissus.calcicola.7114.jpg shamrock  Irish_clover
    NATIONAL TREE oak Scots pine, heather oak oak
    ANIMAL SYMBOL(S) lion lion, unicorn dragon Irish elk
    HIGHEST POINT Scafell Pike (978 m) Ben Nevis (1344 m) Snowdon (1085 m) Slieve Donard (850 m)
    LONGEST RIVER the River Thames (346 km)* River Tay (188 km) River Teifi (122 km)* River Bann (159 km)
    LARGEST LAKE Windermere Loch Ness (by volume); Loch Lomond (by surface area) Llyn Tegid (Bala Lake) Lough Neagh
  • ABOUT ROCHESTER

    The city has Roman origins, commander Aulus Paulitus and his corpse had built a fort and a bridge at the River Medway. On the fundations o the Roman fort a castle was built by William the Conqueror, a castle that is aming the so called Circle of Nine (Baynard’s and Montfichet used to be in London; WindsorColchester Castle in Essex with the talllest keep of 46 m; Rochester; Canterbury, Oxford, Wallingford, Hertford, Berkhamstead). By the way, William built over 80 castles till his death.

    Charles Dickens was born in nearby Chatham and lived there until the age of five. He returned not long before his death. The lands around this area are shown in many works of Dickens. Rochester celebrates the great author with several festivals, like Dickens Festival (in June) and a Dickensian Christmas (fun fair) . Moreover, the Dickens Centre is also found here as well as cafés and pubs namedafter his characters.

    Rochester is also famous for Sweeps Festival when chimney sweepers dance and march. It is organized early May every year and a festival combines a fair, music and morris-dancing productions and fun fair elements for all ages.

    A DICKENSIAN CHRISTMAS

    ROCHESTER CASTLE

    At the entrance, a large gun taken from the Russians in the Crimean War stand guard. In 1215, noblemen had a fierce and bloody battle against King John I (known as John Lackland). The battle ended with the collision of the main tower. The castle was ruined by fires and theft later on and was abandoned from the 1400s till 1870 when the site was made into a public park. Rochester Castle is part of the English Heritage as a Listed Building and Scheduled Monument. The site has its own ghost, the White Lady.

    Rochester Slideshow

    ROCHESTER CATHEDRAL

    Founded by Archbishop Justus in 604, Rochester Cathedral is the secon oldest in England (following Canterbury). The Norman Cathedral dates back to the 1080s and was ordered to built as part of a mnastery by Bishop Gundolf. Elements of Norman architecture can still be discovered in the nave and the crypt. Unique sights are a 13th-century fresco and an unfinished version of the Wheel of Fortune. The crypt hosts the Textus Roffensis which is a manuscript from 1120 and a great memorabilia to that era. Similar to the castle the cathedral was on fire several times. Queen Mary I (Bloody Mary) put Bishop Nicholas Ridley on the bonfire because he supported Lady Jane Grey, a Protestant to get on the throne after King Henry VIII’s successor, son Edward died. The cathedral was ruined by Oliver Cromwell’s men in the 1640s, and no renovations were made for 200 years when the refurbishent following Georg Gilbert Scott’s plans began.

    The Cathedral itself hosts a nice medieval Wheel of Fortune painting, a great organ as well as a memorial to a “William”, a legendary pilgrim.

    LIVING WALK ROCHESTER

  • Edinburgh Castle Official

    Honours of Scotland (Scottish Crown Jewels)

    Edinburgh Castle slideshow

    A Visit to Edinburgh by Rick Steve

    Cleaning of the Scottish Crown Jewels

  • The Isle of Wight is a remote paradise and a great place for showing the beauty of Britain in a relatively compact place (as you can visit the Isle in one day). Home of cathedrals, gorges (Shanklin), coastline beauty (The Needles), botanical gardens (Ventnor) and a steam railway, the Isle’s popular attraction is the castle of the donkeys, Carisbrooke.

    It is located in the village of Carisbrooke on a hill, near Newport on the Isle of Wight. There are a number of buildings, some of them in ruins. The outer gate dates back to 1598. The rooms used as home of Princess Beatrice when she was the Governor of the Isle of Wight are in good repair. A must to see: the Keep, The Great Hall, The Great Chamber. Most rooms are partly furnished and feature original fireplaces.

    The site was an Anglo-Saxon fort as early as the 8th century. A wall was built around the structure around 1000 to defend it against Viking raids. After the Norman invasion, William Fitz Osbern built a motte-and-bailey castle. In 1100 Carisbrooke was granted to Richard de Redvers. The Keep was added to the castle in the 13th century.
    King Charles I was imprisoned at Carisbrooke Castle for fourteen months before his execution in 1649. Princess Beatrice, daughter of Queen Victoria, lived in the castle between 1896-1944 as the governor of the Isle of Wight.

  • The building of the favourite weekend-home of Her Majesty the Queen – the oldest and largest occupied castle in the world – began soon after the Norman conquest. William the Conqueror was really thoughtful and ordered to build the motte on a 30-metre-high cliff on which the keep was erected. The early layout of William’s and Henry II’s castle (from the 1170s) can still be seen today in Windsor. The complexity of the castle contains the famous St George’s Chapel (hosting tombs of ten monarchs) or the great entry gate named after its builder King Henry VIII who is the most notable Tudor monarch and was buried at Windsor’s St George Chapel. Not only mournful, but cheerful royal events take place at St George’s – it hosted numerous royal weddings, the latest to occur was the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle on 19th May, 2018.  
    More than a hundred rooms were damaged in the great fire of Windsor in 1992. To pay back the cost of £36,000,000 to the State, the Royal Family decided to open the gates of Buckingham Palace to the public.

    A Visit at Windsor

    SOME CASTLE-FACTS FROM WINDSOR

    • Dedicated to England’s patron saint George, the highest order of chivalry founded by Edward III in 1348; the Order of the Garter – “Mal qui pense mal” since the legend says the knights saw a piece of lady’s garter in the bailey – the Queen, Prince Philip, the Duke of York and the Earl of Wessex are members
    • Henry VIII enjoyed Windsor as a royal playground for shooting, dancing, wrestling, tennis, and even songwriting. He is purported to have spent the equivalent of £295 million in 2008 terms ($420 million) on work that included hiring Italian architect Benedetto Grazzini to convert the Lady Chapel into an Italian Renaissance design.
    • Windsor Castle was one of Elizabeth I’s favourite residences and she spent more money on it than any of her other residences.
    • Charles II liked to imitate Louis XIV of France, creating “the most extravagantly Baroque interiors ever executed in England”.
    • In 1939 Windsor Castle was readied for war-time: security tightened, windows blacked-out, staff were relocated to Windsor from Buckingham Palace. The roof above the children’s room, where Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret were staying was strengthened, chandeliers were lowered to floor level to prevent damage in a bombing raid, and important works of art were removed for safe keeping. Driving daily to London and returning to Windsor each night was a closely-guarded secret for the king and queen. It was considered good for morale to report that the king was staying full-time at Buckingham Palace.
    • From the 1350s to the 1370s, Edward III transformed Windsor from a military fortification to a gothic palace.
    • Edward’s core design lasted through the Tudor period, during which Henry VIII and Elizabeth I made increasing use of the castle as a royal court and centre for diplomatic entertainment.
    • During English Civil War (1642–1651) castle was used as a prison for Charles I and a military headquarters for Parliamentary forces.
    • At the Restoration of the monarchy in 1660, Charles II rebuilt much of Windsor Castle with the help of the architect Hugh May, creating a set of extravagant Baroque interiors that are still admired.
    • During WW2, the castle was used as home to entire royal family during German bombing campaigns.
    • The Great Fire at Windsor started on 20 November 1992. The fire damaged or destroyed 20% of the Castle area. The castle was fully repaired within the next few years at a cost of over £36 000 000.
    • The Castle grounds cover 52,609 square meters (13 acres). After centuries of alterations it contains about 1,000 room and the staff is over 500.
    • The castle has 300 fireplaces which are tended by a full-time fendersmith, whose family have been doing the job for generations.
    • The Windsor Castle estate (including Windsor Great Park) has over 450 clocks. When British Summer Time (BST) begins, it takes The Queen’s clock maker 16 hours to move every clock forward by one hour. At the end of BST it takes him 18 hours to adjust them back one hour (as he actually has to move them forward 11 hours!)
    • Windsor Castle has over a million visitors each year.

    Official Windsor Castle Website

    Fire at Windsor Castle in 1992

    Inside Windsor Castle

     

  • About Leeds Castle

    • In 857 CE, a Saxon leader called “Esledes” (Leed) had a wooden fortress built on he River Len. This fort was later given as a token of friendship by Edward the Confessor to the Godwin Family, a great rival to William the Conqueror
    • The fort / castle was occupied by William who gave it to his son, William II (Rufus), and Rufus gave it further on to the Crevecoeur Family. The Crevecoeurs rebuilt it as a motte-and-bailey type stone castle.
    • When the castle returned to Royal hands, it was mostly owned by wives of monarchs – six of them, to be exact.
    • It was Henry VIII who transformed Leeds Castle into a real and elegant royal residence for himself and his first wife, Catherine of Aragon. However, his son Edward VI gave the castle to Sir Anthony Leger who stopped riots in Ireland. Leger paid 10 pounds a year to the king. Since this time (16th century) the castle has been privately owned.
    • Now it is run by Leeds Castle Foundation.
    • As a result of the alterations, the castle is a great example of 900 years of castle-building: Norman, Medieval, Spanish (the Gloriette), Tudor…

    THE WAY THE CASTLE ALTERED

  • About Maiden Castle

    Maiden Castle & Dorchester:

     

  • MOTTE-AND-BAILEY

    Motte-and-Bailey.jpg

    STONE KEEP CASTLE

    stonekeepcastle

    CONCENTRIC CASTLE

    concentriccastle.jpg

    THE MEDIEVAL CASTLE