England$25002$ - перевод на итальянский
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England$25002$ - перевод на итальянский

ESSAY BY GEORGE ORWELL
England, your england; England, Your England

England      
n. (Geog) Inghilterra
Edward VI         
  • Privy Council]] proclaimed his half-sister as [[Queen Mary I]], despite Edward's attempt to prevent her accession.
  • John Leland]]'s ''Genethliacon illustrissimi Eaduerdi principis Cambriae'' (1543)
  • Coat of arms of King Edward VI
  • pp=75–76}}</ref> [[National Portrait Gallery, London]]
  • Edward VI's uncle, [[Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset]], ruled England in the name of his nephew as [[Lord Protector]] from 1547 to 1549.
  • In his "devise for the succession", Edward passed over his sisters' claims to the throne in favour of [[Lady Jane Grey]]. In the fourth line, he altered "L Janes heires masles" to "L Jane and her heires masles" (Lady Jane and her male heirs). [[Inner Temple Library]], London
  • pp=235–236}}.</ref> [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]], New York
  • Portrait of King Edward VI, aged about thirteen, by [[William Scrots]]
  • access-date=10 January 2018}}</ref>
  • ''Edward VI signing his first death warrant'', by [[John Pettie]] R.A
  • p=100}}</ref>
  • pp=21–25, 107}}</ref>
  • Privy Council]] after the downfall of Somerset.
  • Shilling]] with portrait of Edward VI, struck 1551–1553
  • [[Lady Jane Grey]] was proclaimed queen four days after Edward's death.
  • [[Thomas Cranmer]], Archbishop of Canterbury, exerted a powerful influence on Edward's Protestantism.
KING OF ENGLAND (1547–1553)
Edward VI of England; Edward VI, King of England; Edward Vi; King Edward VI; Edward VI (England); Edward VI Tudor; Edward the Sixth; 1549 Rebellions; King Edward VI.; King Edward VI of England; Edward vi of england; Edward VI of the United Kingdom; Edward 6; Edw. 6; Tudor, Edward; Edward Tudor; Devise for the succession; Devise for the Succession
n. Edoardo VI, (1537-1553) re d"Inghilterra e Irlanda (1547-1553), figlio del re Enrico VIII e Jane Seymour
John Lackland         
  • Capetian]] holdings in France. Blue: French royal domains,
Green: Fiefs held on behalf of the French crown,
Yellow: Church lordships,
Red: Fiefs held on behalf of the English crown
  • Historia Anglorum}}
  • A [[silver]] King John [[penny]]
  • stag hunt]]
KING OF ENGLAND FROM 1199–1216
John Lackland; John I of England; John (of England); John the Bad; John lackland; John Lackland of England; King John of England; King John I of England; John Softsword; John Soft-sword; Bad King John; John, Earl of Cornwall and Gloucester; Sans Terre; Softsword; King John I Of England; John Soft-Sword; Soft-Sword; John the Incompetent; Earl of Moreton; John I Lackland; John I Lackland of England; Prince John's rebellion; Jean sans Terre; John of England; Johan Sanz Terre; Johan sanz Terre; Joh. 1; John I, King of England; King John Lackland
Giovanni senza terra

Определение

Clambake
·noun The backing or steaming of clams on heated stones, between layers of seaweed; hence, a picnic party, gathered on such an Occasion.

Википедия

England Your England

"England Your England" is an essay written by the English author George Orwell during The Blitz of 1941 as bombers of Nazi Germany flew overhead. It is his attempt to define English culture and the English people for the rest of the world as he fears that it might soon be wiped from earth by the Nazi armies. He also states that England would not change into a fascist state and cannot unless she is thoroughly broken.

The essay is in fact the first part of The Lion and the Unicorn: Socialism and the English Genius, published 19 January 1941, as the first volume of a series edited by T. R. Fyvel and Orwell, in the Searchlight Books published by Secker & Warburg.

Orwell also describes England as one of the most democratic nations on the earth at the time, but that it lacked a true and correct worldview and replaced it with a level of fervent patriotism. He exemplifies this with reference to the fact that English gentry and businessmen thought Fascism was a system that was compatible with the English economy. The gentry believed that simply because Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler were staunchly opposed to communism that their views were "England-friendly" and thus they cheered whenever Mussolini's bombers would sink a ship ferrying supplies to support Spanish republicans. It was not until the election came around and they realised that Franco's accession would be a severe blow to England. Thus they realised that Fascism is bad for England due to its revolutionary origins or heavily military-dependent system of policing and control. Orwell himself, however, admits that Fascism is a better system for the wealthy, unless you were a Jew, than Communism or democratic socialism.

Orwell argues that Britain, although divided between many nationalities such as Scots, Welshmen, English, etc..., everyone considers themselves British as soon as a need to defend their land arises. He also theorises that it might be more appropriate to divide Britons by financial classes which would result in two, or maybe even three or four, Britains.