October 14
Today is Columbus Day for 2013.
1066. Duke William of Normandy defeats King Harold Godwinson as the Battle of Hastings. The result of this battle would bring feudalism into England and result in the birth of English Common Law.
1066. Duke William of Normandy defeats King Harold Godwinson as the Battle of Hastings. The result of this battle would bring feudalism into England and result in the birth of English Common Law.
The Bayeux Tapestry depicting the vents of October, 1066.
And its Columbus Day for this year, 2019, as well.
At least in my part of the country Columbus Day doesn't mean much, other than Federal offices are closed. In some parts of the country there are protests regarding what ultimately occurred with the arrival of European Americans in the New World, again, and this time to stay. Indeed, in some localities it is Indigenous Peoples Day.
Columbus was working for the Spanish monarchs Ferdinand and Isabella, of course. They were having a big year, to say the least. On January 2, Granada, the last Moorish kingdom in Spain, had surrendered to them, having failed to receive aid from any other Muslim power. In an odd sort of way, Granada's experience was therefore similar to that of Constantinople, the seat of the shrunken Byzantine Empire, in 1453, some forty years earlier, which had failed to secure the support of other Christian powers against the Ottomans.
Columbus' expedition is typically claimed to have sighted land on October 12, 1492, but that date was on the "Old Calendar". Using the "New Calendar", that date is actually October 21, 1492.
It's also the anniversary of the Battle of Hastings, one of the single most important dates in English history and the history of the English speaking peoples. Perhaps the single most important date. Saxon England entered the feudal world and English met French.
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