Sunday, 1 November 2015

1st November - On This Day In History

Image result for empress matilda
ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY - 1st of November.
 
On This Day, 1st of November, 1141, the reign of Empress Matilda came to an end. She was kinda Queen of England, although technically uncrowned, so she was called Lady of the English, or "You-Traitorous-Cow" by her cousin, Stephen of Bois, who was King of England. He spent most of his reign fighting a civil war known as The Anarchy with the Empress Matilda.
 
Image result for philip ii of franceOn This Day, 1st of November, 1179, Philip II is crowned King of France.
 
He managed to bring all of France together and made the country prosper again. However, he had a heck of time with his wives. He's basically the Henry VIII of the French.
 
 
Image result for an orange with a faceOn This Day, 1st of November, 1688, William-Of-Horrible-Disgusting-Fruit, set sail, for the second time, from Hellevoetsluis. Say that ten times when you're drunk.
 
William-Soon-To-Be-The-Third-William's goal was simple: capture the Crowns of England, Scotland and Ireland from his father-in-law, James-The-Second-His-Son-In-Law-Lands-In-England-Will-Flee-To-France. Yes, he did, the big chicken. Unless he just didn't like Orange's. Can't blame him for that, I suppose. They are the nasty-disgusting-fruit.
 
William-The-Third-Is-A-Turd (a nickname given to him by James II) won England without a fight. A bloodless coup. A Glorious Revolution. And ex-king James sulked in France for a bit, then tried to reclaim the throne, lost, and went and sulked a bit more.
 
Image result for executive mansion white houseOn This Day, 1st of November, 1800, John Adams becomes the first President of them there, over here, these here, United States of America, to live in what would one day be called "The White House".

Fun Facts About Philip II of France

Image result for Philip II of FranceFun Facts About the Marriages of Philip II of France
 
On This Day, 1st of November, 1179, Philip II is crowned King of France.
 
He managed to bring all of France together and made the country prosper again. However, he had a heck of time with his wives. He's basically the Henry VIII of the French.
 
His first wife, Isabella of Hainaut died in childbirth. Philip, not perturbed, married again.
 
Image result for borg queenOn the 15th of August, 1193, he married Ingeborg, designation 8 of 11, tertiary adjunct of unimatrix 05.
 
Despite her green complexion and an unfortunate habit of declaring "You will be assimilated," she was described as being very kind, young of age but old of wisdom.
 
However, King Philip found her off-putting. One can only imagine it was due to the placement of certain tubules and nanobots, which he found uncomfortable, during the mating process.
 
Philip refused to Crown her Queen and asked Pope Celestine III for an annulment on the grounds of "Me-Didn't-Bang-That-Ugly-Borg". Philip then shipped her off and imprisoned her in a convent.
 
Isa-Borg-Queen-Even-If-Me-Not-Crowned insisted the marriage had been consummated and that Philip had a really tiny fun-stick, chopping off three quarters of her little finger and waggling it around, as if to prove the point. Don't worry, she's a Borg Queen, it grew back. Unlike Philip's teeny-weeny.
 
As the insults and home truths carried on, Philip sought a new bride. But, as the new bride-to-be, Margaret of Geneva, daughter of William-I-Am-Count-Of-Geneva, made her way to Paris for the nuptials, she was kidnapped by Thomas-I-Am-A-Git-Of-Savoy, who married her instead and porked the living daylights out of her to make sure it was a recognised, consummated bonding.
 
Philip was annoyed. Everyone kept saying he was still married to I-Borged-A-King-And-I-Liked-It. Even the Pope. But Philip was not put off. Not put off by marrying again, but still put off by Borging his Un-Crowned Queen.
 
On the 7th of May 1196, he married Agnes of Merania from Dalmatia. That's apparently not a made up place. It's where they let the dogs out. All one hundred and one of them.
 
They had a couple of sprogs and lived happily ever after.
 
Well, not quite. Philip Innocent III declared their marriage null and void as he was still married to the Borg Queen. The Pope ordered Philip to part ways from Agnes and to slap her with a wet kipper to make the consummation invalid. Pretty sure that's how it was done back then, even if they'd all ready had kids.
 
Philip ignored the Pope and the Pope went angry-mad-vexed and vexed the heck out of Philip by placing all of France under an interdict in 1199. Luckily, no one had any idea what that actually meant.
 
The following year, under a lot of pressure trying to understand the word "interdict", which had nothing to do with his teeny-weeny, and from threats from Ingeborg's brother, King Valdemar II of Denmark, the Dark Lord who almost killed Harry Potter, Philip finally took I-Am-Going-To-Borg-My-Vengeance-On-Your-Arse back as his wife in 1213.
 
And they lived happily ever after. Although Philip never sat right on his throne after that.