100+ British Sports and Icons Given To the World

Category : Region III

100+ British Sports and Icons Given To the World

I have also added a list of the many Sports and Games given to the world by us here in the UK and also the many British Icons recognised around the world.
It always amazes me that from a country the size of Great Britain we have given the World so many Sports and games.

Cricket

England Football Team

Portsmouth F. C. ( My Favorite Football Club – Pompey )

Sheffield F.C 1857 ( The Oldest Football Club In The World )

Wembley Stadium and Football Association ( Home of Football )

Wimbledon Tennis Championship ( Home of Tennis )

Saint Andrews ( Home Of Golf )

Lords Cricket Ground ( Home of Cricket )

The Jockey Club ( Home of Horse Racing )

Sebastian Coe

Steve Ovett

Steven Redgrave

The Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race

David Beckham

George Best

Lester Piggett

Lewis Hamilton

Ian Botham

W.G.Grace

Andrew Flintoff

The England 1966 World Cup Winning Football Team

Speedway

Football / Soccer

English Premier League

American Football – Adapted from English Rugby

Rugby League

Rugby Union

Billiards

Snooker

Croquet

Curling

The Boat Race

Squash

Bowls

Tennis

Badminton

Table Tennis

Rounders

Softball

Baseball – Adapted from Rounders and Softball

Modern Olympic Games Held from 1846 Village of Wenlock by Dr. William Penny Brookes

Horse Racing

Polo

Show Jumpingarts

Modern Archery

Bar Billiards

Shove A Ha’penny

Golf

Skittles

Yachting and Sailing

Bobsleigh

Skeleton

Real Tennis

Hovercraft Racing

Field Hockey

Ten Pin

Darts

Boxing

Bowls

Pigeon Racing

Greyhound Racing

Stag Hunting

Fox Hunting

Otter Hunting

Angling

Formula One ( The First Ever Formula One race was Held in England in 1948 )

Boccia

A to Z British Games and Icons

British Games

Card Sharp

Ludo

Bingo

Cribbage

Crossword Puzzles

Jigsaw Puzzles

Reversi

Anexation

Snakes and ladders

Quoits

Shove Ha’penny

Shoffe Groat

Aunt Sally

Ringing The Bull

Slide thrift

Rings

Caves

3 Mens Morris

Jenga

Shut the box

Bowls

Bagatelle

Stoolball

Bat and Ball

Pitch Penny

Toad in Hole

English Morris Dancing

The Valentine Card

William Wordsworth

Oxford University 1096

Cambridge University 1209

Haggis – A Dish first seen in a English Receipe Book from 1615 and loved by the Scots

London Hansom Black Cab

First British canal in AD50

Double Decker Buses ( Routemasters )

History of British Post Box

Histoy of British Telephone Box

Cludge Molliers

English Folk Songs

We British Invented the Fizz and Sparkle in Champagne

Scottish, Irish and English Kilts

History of London Stock Exchange

History of English Sterling Silver and Gold Hallmarks 1300 to present

English Language

English Peoples

British Peoples

Welsh Peoples

Irish Peoples

Scottish Peoples

Union Jack

A Compleat Angler by Charles Cotton and Izaac Walton

The Magna Carta

The Doomsday Book

Anglo Saxon Chronicles

English Jury Service

The English Sherriff

The King James Bible

Beowulf

BagPipes

Tower of London’s Beefeaters or Yeoman of the Guard

Saint Georges Day Englands Patron Saint

Saint Andrews Day Scotlands Patron Saint

Saint Patrick’s Day Ireland’s Patron Saint ( Saint Patrick was an Englishman )

Saint Davids Day Welsh Patron Saint

Listing of All Other British Saints

The City of London ( survey found that over 350 languages are spoken in London Schools )

British Telephone Box

Augustus Pugin

Sir Charles Barry

Sir Christopher Wren ( I am a direct descendent )

Carnaby Street

The Iconic English Pub

Houses of Parliament and Big ben

Number 10 Downing Street

Buckingham Palace

Windsor Castle

Oxford Street

Regent Street

Mayfair

London Theatreland

The London Eye

Madame Tussaud Waxworks Museum

Tower Of London

Windsor Castle

Whitechapel ( aka Where Jack The Ripper Killed. aka Mr Tumblety was the Ripper )

Please click here for A to Z Iconic British Buildings and Places

1) King Alfred The Great
2) Boudeca, Queen Chief of the Iceni Tribe
3) King Edward the Confessor ( I am Related to )
4) Queen Elizabeth the 1st
5) Queen Victoria
6) Queen Elizabeth the 2nd.
7) William Shakespeare
8) Charles Dickens
9) Agatha Christie ( Author of Miss Marple and Poiret )
10) J.K Rowling ( Author of the Harry Potter Books )
11) Sir Terry Pratchett ( Author of the Disc World Books )
12) James Herbert ( Horror Story writer of many novels including The Rats )
13) Sir Christopher Wren ( I am related to )
13b) Sir Isambard Kingdom Brunel
13c) James Watt ( Inventor of the Steam Engine )
13d) George Stevenson ( Inventor of the Steam Train )
13e) Sir Isaac Newton
13f) Charles Darwin
14) Rudyard Kipling ( Author of the Jungle Book )
14b) H.G. Wells ( Author of The Time Traveller )
14c) Arthur Conan Doyle ( Author of Sherlock Holmes )
14d) Bram Stoker ( Author of Count Dracula )
14e) Mary Shelley ( Author of Frakenstein )

14) Sir Walter Raleigh
15) Sir Francis Drake
16) Duke Of Marlborough
17) Admiral Lord Nelson
18) Duke of Wellington
19) Bernard Montgomery, 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein

20) Robert Walpole, 1st. Earl of Orford ( Regarded as the first Prime Minister in the modern sense );
21) William The Pit The Younger ( introduced the first Income tax )
22) Charles Grey, The Earl Grey ( restriction of employment of children; reform of the poor Laws, abolition of Slavery )
23) Sir Robert Peel ( Created the first National Police Force )
24) Edward Smith -Stanley, The Earl Derby. ( Father of the Conservative party ).
25) Benjamin Disraeli ( Queen Victoria’s favorite Prime Minister )
26) Sir Winston Churchill ( Saviour of the world by defeating Hitler, Mussolini and Japanese Emporer )
27) Lady Margarat Thatcher ( First female prime minister and creator of Privatisation ).

28) The 1966 England World Cup Winning Team
29) The Portsmouth F.Cup Winning Team from 2008
30) Sir Ian Botham
31) David Beckham
32) Lord Sebastian Coe
33) Steve Ovett
34) Virginia Wade
35) David Bedford
36) Johnny Wilkinson
37) Torvil and Dean
38) Jennifer Ennis
39) Dame Kelly Holmes

40) Freddie Mercury
41) Elton John
42) Queen
43) Electric Light Orchestra ( ELO )
44) The Beatles
45) Annie Lennox
45b) Pink Floyd
45c) Genesis
46d) The Spice girls

46) Tom Baker
47) Lord Olivier
48) Sir Roger Moore
49) Cary Grant
50) Peter Davidson
51) John Pertwee

Please visit my Funny Animal Art Prints Collection @ http://www.fabprints.com

My other website is called Directory of British Icons: http://fabprints.webs.com

The Chinese call Britain ‘The Island of Hero’s’ which I think sums up what we British are all about. We British are inquisitive and competitive and are always looking over the horizon to the next adventure and discovery.

Copyright © 2010 Paul Hussey. All Rights Reserved.

My family tree has been traced back to the early Kings of England from the 7th Century AD. I am also a direct descendent of Sir Christopher Wren which has given me an interest in English History which is great fun to research.

I have recently decided to write articles on my favourite subjects: English Sports, English History, English Icons, English Discoveries and English Inventions. At present I have written over 100 articles which I call “An Englishman’s Favourite Bits Of England” in various Volumes. Please visit my fun Blogs page http://Bloggs.Resourcez.Com where I have listed all my fun articles to date.

Copyright © 2010 Paul Hussey. All Rights Reserved.


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Asheville, North Carolina – Is This The Happiest City In The World?

Category : Region II

Asheville, North Carolina – Is This The Happiest City In The World?

Asheville, North Carolina boasts the biggest house in the United States, Biltmore House, on the Biltmore Estate to the south of the city. With its own indoor pool and bowling alley, this 250 room house was the work of the wealthy George Vanderbilt II. Completed at the end of the nineteenth century and originally built as a private residence, the house and adjacent gardens are now a top tourist attraction, not to be missed.

The citations for Asheville read like the blurb on a Happiness theme park brochure. How would you like to visit “The Happiest City For Women”, or one of “The Best Places To Re-invent Your Life”? Well, if you would, this is the place for you. Frommers guide books rank it in the top seven places to live in America and in the top twelve places in the world that you should visit in your life.

With the city now boasting a population of 83,318, according to recent figures from the U.S. Census Bureau, it has been labeled one of the nation’s top 25 arts destinations, by AmericanStyle magazine. Readers of this quality publication, devoted to art, craft, travel and interior design, also voted it number 1 in their list of the top 25 small cities in 2010. The city is proud of its Art Deco architecture, to be found the city hall and many other prominent buildings.

Asheville, North Carolina, is proud of its galleries – over 50 of them – that showcase every medium in the arts, crafts, music and more. As if to emphasize the city’s devotion to art, one recent program has seen local artists in the fields of bronze, wrought iron and blown glass, involved in creating over 300 signs, directing visitors to around 90 local attractions.

Having more than its fair share of festivals, Asheville is a destination for musicians, artists and sports lovers from around the country. The annual 3-day Moogfest honors the memory of Bob Moog, inventor of the Moog Synthesizer, the instrument that changed the world of music in the sixties and seventies. Bob was a research professor at the University of North Carolina at Asheville (UNCA), for thirty years, until his death in 2005. UNCA was also the home of the Bulldogs basketball team whose player Kenny George was the tallest in the history of college basketball, at an incredible height of 7 feet 8 inches.

Not to be outdone by artists and sports fans, food connoisseurs are well catered for by the Foodtopian Society in Asheville. Foodtopia is a unique commitment to fresh, locally grown and produced food and they certainly have a great infrastructure in place here. With up to twenty tailgate markets in the area, supporting sustainable agriculture and the farm-to-table movement, you can sample these gastronomic delights in some of the 250 restaurants in the area.

Asheville, North Carolina has, not surprisingly, attracted celebrities from all walks of life, with one hotel having played host to ten presidents of the United States, from President Taft right through to President Obama. This same hotel also numbers The Great Houdini, F. Scott Fitzgerald, George Gershwin and Henry Ford among its guests. If such luminaries as these can be attracted to Asheville, then you can rest assured you’ll find it lives up to your expectations when you decide to pay a visit.

John Winchester writes about Asheville windows, sunrooms, awnings and other supplies for home and business in the Western North Carolina area.


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The end of the world in 2012 is coming, are YOU ready?

Category : Region III

The end of the world in 2012 is coming, are YOU ready?

2012, Armageddon, is right around the corner and while there are many skeptics of the topic being the end of the world, there’s always the possibility that the whole movement is true. Whether you believe that 2012 will be the world’s end or if you’re just into the topic, it’s undeniable that it’s create a shockwave of interest in the people in the form of buying books and internet discussion. Another book has appeared on the internet in ebook form (a downloadable book) called “2012 Official Countdown” that gives the author’s thought provoking views on the end of the world in 2012 using logic and evidence.

On the book’s site they provide a list of points that the guide will bring up, but I will try to focus on only a few of them. The first point that may stand out as interesting on their site is that the author will provide food for thought in trying to make the world into a place with “universal racial harmony”. Of course, I think this guide’s thoughts on that subject are sure to make the reader think, but it could be because I enjoy thoughts on changing the world and how it can be achieved. This part alone makes this book interesting.

Another interesting point on this book’s front page is that it will tell the truth about “Government coverups, Swine Flu Pandemics, and known natural disasters”. This sounds like a conspiracy theory in the nature of the “loose change” theory that swept the nation not too long ago, but it is definitely worth a look whether you believe that the government is covering up what’s to come or you’re really into conspiracy theories. Either way, you’ll be entertained by this section.

The last point that sticks out as interesting is that it contains a guide on how to live after the end of the world in 2012, if we do survive it. This entire section is speculation (of course), but I think anyone who reads it will find it to be creative and possibly useful. This part is worth a read as well.

Armageddon is a very interesting subject and while truthfully I am a skeptic of the end of the world in 2012, I find theories and books like these interesting and thought-provoking material for a rainy day. This book does not disappoint its readers, showing on r.ecommended.com that it has a 4 out of 5 stars and that only 1.67% of its customers have ever asked for a refund. This book is recommended for anyone interested in the subject. For more information, go to its website: http://2012.myreviewnow.info

Drake Levoux is a product reviewer that tries to make his reviews interesting by keeping his reviews short and giving numbers to back up his reviews. He has reviewed everything from online guitar lessons to computer programs to video games and will be posting up more content in the near future.


Article from articlesbase.com

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Stubbs Restaurant Event Tickets – Austin Lives Up To Its Name As The Live Music Capital Of The World This May!

Category : Region IV

Stubbs Restaurant Event Tickets – Austin Lives Up To Its Name As The Live Music Capital Of The World This May!

Austin, Texas doesn’t take its title as the Live Music Capital of the World lightly! Austin is home to over 200 live music venues, and you’d better bet that they are always bubbling over with eclectic live performances and packed crowds. This May in particular sees a batch of internationally touring artists stopping in Austin on their respective road trips.

Stubb’s Restaurant is one of Austin, Texas’ most beloved live music venues, and chanteuse Norah Jones will be performing a pair of dates at Stubb’s on May 1 and 2, joining a laundry list of eclectic acts that have stopped there over the years. Jones is in the midst of a 36-city tour in support of her latest album, The Fall, her fourth studio set. Jones launched her tour in Tulsa, Okla. on March 5 and will stop in cities scattered throughout the States and Canada this spring and summer. Fans with Stubbs Restaurant event tickets from StubHub.com can hear Jones perform songs like her hit single “Chasing Pirates” off The Fall when she stops in Austin.

After Norah Jones continues on from Austin on tour, Stubb’s Restaurant will host Blue October on May 8. Hailing from Houston, where the eclectic rock band formed in 1996, Blue October is currently on the road in support of their fifth studio album Approaching Normal, and fans will be flocking to the see the band perform in their home state. Blue October worked with Grammy-winning producer Steve Lillywhite (known for his work with U2) for their latest album, which is the follow-up to the band’s platinum-selling 2006 album Foiled, Blue October’s breakthrough album. Dubbed the Pick Up the Phone Tour, Blue October’s trek seeks to raise awareness of mental-health issues and benefit suicide-prevention services, according to Live Daily.

The University of Texas at Austin sits just north of downtown Austin, and in addition to Longhorns fans, the campus is packed with entertainment venues. The Frank Erwin Events Center at UT is one such venue, and one of country music’s leading ladies, Carrie Underwood, will stop there while on tour on May 8. Underwood kicked off her tour in support of her third album Play On in Reading, Pa. on March 11 and will remain on the road-with opening acts Craig Morgan and Sons of Sylvia in tow-until June 20, when she wraps things up in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. The American Idol winner is nominated for the coveted Entertainer of the Year honor at the upcoming 45th annual Academy of Country Awards, to be held on April 18, and is also planning her wedding to hockey star Mike Fisher. It’s a wonder she can find time to tour, but fans are happy she has!

The drive from Austin to San Antonio, the most-visited city in the Lone Star State, is definitely worth it! Aside from historical gems like the Alamo and La Villita, one of the first Spanish settlements, San Antonio is famous for the San Antonio River Walk. The River Walk snakes its way through central San Antonio along the San Antonio River and is lined with galleries, restaurants and shops. Built in 1929, San Antonio’s Majestic Theatre has remained a top venue and pillar in the South Texas city ever since. The Majestic will host Celtic Woman for two shows on May 2. San Antonio is known for its cultural diversity, and this tradition is continued when the Irish quintet comes into town. The female-powered phenomenon is on tour in support of Celtic Woman, Songs from the Heart, and fans of the talented lasses will be turning up to see them perform in San Antonio.

This article is sponsored by StubHub.com and was written by Kirby Brooks.  StubHub.com is a leader in the business of selling Stubbs Restaurant event tickets, sports tickets, concert tickets, theater tickets and special events tickets.


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World of Warcraft universe guide

Category : Region III

World of Warcraft universe guide

So your life needs a little spice and you want to escape to the solitude of your computer. Easily done – simply pick up a 10-day trial version of World of Warcraft. Soon you’ll find yourself immersed in a world of magic and mystery, and you’ll lose all interest in sleeping, eating, and anything mundane like work or school. Your standard catchphrase will morph into, “Just a minute! I have to finish this quest!” You’ll emerge triumphant, three years later, with epic loot and a haggard, pale face, to find that none of your real life friends remember who you are. But you’ll have a ton of friends in the game that respect you for your playing prowess.

Visit Best Alliance Leveling Guide AND a Horde Leveling Guide

Sound attractive? Step this way and let me explain some things. World of Warcraft is classified as a massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG). Millions of players just like yourself log on every day to interact with other players; either to cooperate with them or fight them. Often it’s your choice. There are four types of WoW servers:

 

player versus player (PVP) servers – you must always defend yourself against players from another faction; normal role-playing (RP) servers – the idea is to deep-play your character (i.e., if you’re a dwarf, you talk and act like one when chatting with other players); RP-PVP servers – you deep-play and must defend yourself; Normal servers – you don’t deep-play and don’t have to defend yourself unless you turn on PVP manually.

 

The casual player who wants a fun game should pick either normal or RP servers (if you want to pretend to be your character). If you’d like to pit yourself against other players every time you log on, which can be both stressful and exciting, you can pick a PVP server.

Visit Best Alliance Leveling Guide AND a Horde Leveling Guide

You should also note what your “server time” is before you start: server time is based on time zones, but not always yours (for instance, you might be playing on a PST server while living in Wisconsin, so 6:30 server time would be 8:30 for you).

Once you decide which server to choose, you need to decide on your faction. There are two factions: Alliance and Horde. Each has five different races to choose from. Once you choose a faction you are stuck with it: the two factions are pitted against each other and can only communicate superficially.

Alliance faction is composed of Night Elves, Humans, Gnomes, Dwarves, and Draenei (they sort of looks like blue satyrs).
Horde faction has Orcs, Taurens (cow people), Trolls, Undead, and Blood Elves (small, scornful relatives of Night Elves).

Each faction has capital cities and lands that belong to it. Factions may not enter one another’s cities (unless they want to encounter some very mean guards!). So if your friends are all rolling up Hordies, you’ll want to be on the Horde side too, or you’ll never be able to play with one another.

Visit Best Alliance Leveling Guide AND a Horde Leveling Guide

Best World of Warcraft Guides

Warcraft Millionaire is one of the most popular WoW gold guides available on the internet. It is the system that has outsold and outshone all of its competitors ten fold. Warcraft Millionaire is a gold guide written by Brad Johnson. Out of all the WoW gold guides on the market Warcraft Millionaire definitely has a twist to it. Not only has the author decided to make a guide on how he makes massive amounts of gold in WoW but he is also the first player ever to reach 1,000,000g.

Nyhm’s Warcraft Guides package contains best strategies for making WoW gold, speed leveling, profession leveling and PvP. Nyhm’s guides will allow you to make over 250 gold per hour, level from 1 to 80 in less then 7 days, level professions lightning fast and become a PvP master killer. Package includes In-Game MapMod, updated for World of Warcraft Wrath of The Lich King, that serves for both leveling and gold mining.

Warcraft Wealth is a new gold guide for World of Warcraft. Wayne Williams wrote it based on his experiences as a gold seller. While I already have a couple of different gold guides, I figured I might as well take a look at this one too because I’m always looking for ways to get more gold. The guide itself is well put together and is very easy to follow. There is noobie section which shows some simple and effective ways to get gold straight away.


Article from articlesbase.com

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New World Tapestry

Category : Region I

New World Tapestry

The panels

The New World Tapestry, which in its entirety measures 267 ft x 4 ft (81.3 m x 1.2 m), consists of twenty four panels, each of which depicts the narrative of a particular phase in the period between 1583 and 1642.

Each panel measures 11 ft x 4 ft (3.4m x 1.2m).

The figures of the tapestry are rendered in an unmistakably modern, cartoon-like style, but it also follows in the tradition of Tudor and Jacobean canvas work embroidery. The panels are worked in gobelin stitch which entirely covers the ground, and along with pictures of the main scenes of the story, the panels also feature birds, animals, flowers and insects all beautifully worked in bold colours.

“Bristol and the New World”, Aztecs at MexicoLore        

The 24 Panels of the New World Tapestry

Years

Narrative

People

Plants

1583

  (1)

Expedition to Newfoundland

Humphrey Gilbert, Captain William Winter, Robert Davis, Edward Hayes, Richard Clarke, William Cox, Captain Cade, Thomas Edmondes, Thomas Aldworth, Gilbert Staplehill

Common Mallow, Soapwort, Dandelion, Thrift, Daisy, Jessamine, Bistort, Purple Iris, Cleavers, Heartsease, Yarrow

1584

  (2)

First Expedition to Roanoke

Walter Raleigh, Philip Amadas, William Grenville, John Wood, Richard Hakluyt, Henry Greene, William Sanderson, Josias Calmady, John Dee, Thomas Harriot, John Sparke

Foxglove, Plum, Dock, Peach, Corn Marigold, St John’s wort, Pear, Succory, Hollyhock, Cowslip, Tobacco

1585

  (3)

Second Expedition to Roanoake

Richard Grenville, Edward Kelley, John White, Thomas Wise, Robert Masters, John Stukley, Christopher Broking, John Arundel, Edward Gorges, Thomas Cavendish, Walter Raleigh

Honeysuckle, Dovesfoot, Saxifrage, Bramble, Melilot, Peppermint, Oxeye daisy, Wild Pink, Mullein, Potato, Hop

1586

  (4)

Roanoke Colony and Fort Raleigh

Francis Walsingham, Ralph Lane, John Harris, Francis Drake, Philip Sidney, Richard Grenville, Thomas Ford, Thomas Luddington, George Raymond, Marmaduke Constable, David Williams

Scabious, Parsley, Broad Leaved Dock, Good King Henry, Betony, Weld, Alkanet, Crosswort, Columbine, Hazel, Nonesuch

1587

  (5)

Fourth year on Roanoke Island

John White, George Howe, Edward Spicer, Roger Pratt, Edward Stafford, Roger Bayle, John Humphrey, George Maynard, Ananias Dare, Eleanor Dare, Virginia Dare

Bird-foot-trefoil, Burdock, Houseleek, Chervil, Forget-me-not, Bugle, Tutsan, Bladder Campion, Pimpernel, Strawberry, Thyme

1588- 1590

  (6)

End of the Roanoke Colony

Richard Grenville, William Winter, John Hawkins, Francis Drake, Anthony Cage, George More, Martin Frobisher, Robert Hughes, Lord Howard of Effingham, Christopher Cooper, Thomas Stevens

Basil, Briar Rose, Bay, Periwinkle, Feverfew, Tansy, Willow Herb, Elder, Borage, Alexanders, Comfrey

1595- 1596

  (7)

Expedition to the Guyanas

Walter Raleigh, Lawrence Kemys, Anthony Ashley, John Donne, Thomas Howard, John Hartington, Robert Devereux, Francis Vere, Charles Howard, George Carew, Thomas Bodley

Globe Thistle, Stitchwort, Orpine, Water lily, Black Poplar, Wormwood, Winter savory, Dill, Bell heather, Flax, Sneezewort

1602- 1603

  (8)

Expedition to Cape Cod

Bartholomew Gosnold, Gabriel Archer, William Strete, John Brereton, John Popham, John Hele, William Parker, Bartholomew Gilbert, Thomas Walker, Edward Hayes, Walter Raleigh

Red Valerian, Squill, Toadflax, Plymouth Thistle, Archangel, Vervain, Hedge mustard, Lily of the Valley, Self heal, Buttercup, Majoram

1605

  (9)

Expedition to Maine

George Waymouth, Henry Wriothesley, Walter Mathew, Wiliam Rosecarrock, Ferdinando Gorges, John Popham, Robert Martin, Thomas Arundell, Richard Aldworth, Thomas Smythe, James Rosier

White Rose, Violet, Groundsel, Rest Harrow, Knapweed, Lady Bedstraw, Bluebell, Fennel, Clowns Ringwort, Lady Mantle, Tare

1606

(10)

Plymouth Company and London Company

John Popham, William Parker, George Popham, Raleigh Gilbert, Thomas Hanham, John Maddock, John Dodderidge, William Waad, James Bagg, Henry Challons, Martin Pring

Cotton Lavender, Lemon balm, Bittersweet, Willow Tree, Celandine, Meadowsweet, Red Campion, Bugloss, Woad, Thistle, Fumitory

1607

(11)

Jamestown Settlement

Christopher Newport, Bartholomew Gosnold, Henry Montagu, Robert Cecil, John Smith, Chief Powhatan, George Percy, John Ratcliffe, Walter Cope, Edward Maria Wingfield, Robert Killigrew

Lady Smock, Furze, Poppy, Privet, Primrose, Pink Rose, Bindweed, Pellitory, Cornflower, Rue, Plantain

1607- 1608

(12)

Expedition to Maine, Popham Colony (Sagadahoc)

Francis Popham, William Parker, Matthew Sutcliffe, Richard Champernoune, Thomas Horner, Edward Rodgers, John Mallet, Raleigh Gilbert, George Popham, Roger Warre, Abraham Jennings

Ground Ivy, Ragwort, Great Willowherb, Agrimony, Teasel, Rocket, Germander, Oak, Dovesfoot, Ribwort, Sage

1609- 1610

(13)

Bermuda claimed after Sea Venture shipwreck

Thomas Campbell, William Godolphin, William Shakespeare, William Strachey, Thomas Gates, William Craven, George Somers, Matthew Somers, Henry Wriothesley, Richard Frobisher, Robert Aldworth

Yellow Iris, Orach, Rose, Hawkweed, Wood Sorrel, Water mint, Yellow Poppy, Gentian, Biting Stonecrop, Solomon Seal, Goldenrod

1613- 1614

(14)

Jamestown Settlement grows

Samuel Argall, Pocahontas, John Rolfe, Thomas Dale, Thomas Smythe, John Borlase, Prince Charles, John Scobie, Richard Buck, Thomas Hayes, Thomas Savage, John Smith

Spurge, Horehound, Tormentil, Love in a Mist, Sloe, Eyebright, Red Clover, Oxlip, Marshmallow, Garlic, Sow Thistle

1616

(15)

John Rolfe brings Pocahontas to England

Michael Drayton, John Rolfe, John Smith, Thomas West, William Shakespeare, John Leman, Edward Lawrence, Thomas Dale, John King, George Yeardley, Ben Jonson

Clary, Rhubarb, Great Burnet, Mercury, Scurvy-grass, Sea holly, Wallflower, Purple loosestrife, Water Ragwort, Figwort, Lime Tree

1617- 1618

(16)

Failure of Raleigh Expedition to the Guyanas

Roger North (Oyapoc), Robert Trelawney, Henry Rolfe, Lewis Stukley, Henry Montagu, Robert Tounson, Samuel Argall, Nicholas Frankwell, Walter Raleigh, John Bingley, Edward Coke

Tamarisk, Nepeta, Tarragon, Hellebore, Sweet William, Cherry, Prince of Wales Feathers, Holly Tree, Gooseberry, Mouse Ear, Mulberry

1619

(17)

House of Burgesses, Slaves and Bartered Brides

George Yeardley, William Paget, Henry and Thomas Lyle, William Cavendish, William Herbert, John Mason, Edward Seymour, William Cockayne, Robert Spencer, William Tucker, Edwin Sandys

Chickweed, Wortleberry, Service Tree, Cocks Head, Woodrush, Opium poppy, Avens, Onion, Yam, Beech, Orchis

1620

(18)

Mayflower Compact

John Robinson, Edward Winslow, William Brewster, Henry Wallis, Ferdinando Gorges, William Bradford, Gerryt Lanaertz, Edward Richards, John Plumleigh, Thomas Fownes, John Carver

Speedwell, Chamomile, Mayflower, Valerian, Rosemary, Lavender, Nettle, Herb Robert, Wild Arum, Ivy, Spearmint

1621- 1623

(19)

Indian Raids, beginning of New Hampshire

David Thompson, Leonard Pomeroy, John Mason, Thomas Hobson, Robert Rich, Abraham Colmer, Edward Hilton, Robert Gorges, Alexander Shapleigh, Myles Standish, Thomas Weston

Indian Corn, Crab Apple, Barberry, French Lungwort, White clover, Barren Strawberry, Lungwort, Runner bean, Currant, Horse Chestnut, Lilac

1624- 1630

(20)

Massachusetts Bay Colony, Dorchester Company

John White, John Warham, John Wolstenholm, Roger Conant, Thomas Morton, Edward Rossiter, Thomas Holcombe, Roger Clap, Jonathan Gillett, John Endecott, James Gould

Rocket, Snowdrop, Pasque flower, Garlic Mustard, Hyssop, Wolf Bane, Cranesbill, Dead Nettle, Elm, Leopard’s bane, Fritillary

1630

(21)

Massachusetts Bay Colony, John Winthrop

Adam Winthrop, William Laud, Richard Saltonstall, Hugh Peter, Matthew Craddock, Isaac Johnson, John Winthrop, Emmanuel Downing, William Coddington, William Pynchon, John Underhill

Loosestrife, Musk Mallow, Hounds-Tongue, White Bryony, Hairless Catmint, Spindle, Organy, Jacob Ladder, American Winter Cress, Brooklime, Campion

1628- 1634

(22)

Calvert family and the Province of Maryland

George Calvert, Cecil Calvert, Leonard Calvert, Richard Blount, Thomas Dorrell, Thomas Cornwallis, Richard Gerard, Jerome Hawley, Henrietta Maria, Edward Winter, Jerome Weston, Nicholas Ferfax

Dyer Greenweed, Quince, Scarlet Pimpernel, Nettleleaved Bellflower, Sea Beet, Asparagus, Sand Spurrey, Meadow Clary, Marsh Marigold, Monkshood, Sweet Cicely

1635- 1641

(23)

New England, Harvard College and Taunton

Nicholas Frost, Anne Hutchinson, John Eliot, Nathaniel Eaton, Henry Dunster, Thomas Gorges, Roger Williams, Drapers Company, John Harvard, Elizabeth Pole

Pennyroyal, Scabwort, Astrantia, Vetch, Wayfaring Tree, Dark Mullein, Centaury, Green Alkanet, Saxifrage, Corn Cockle, Sweet Woodruff

1642

(24)

Great gardeners and herbalists. English Civil War begins

William Turner, Edward Seymour, Henry Lyte, Robert Cecil, Thomas Johnson, Nicholas Culpeper, John Gerard, John Tradescant the elder, John Parkinson, Henry Danvers, John Tradescant the younger

Simpson, Fleabane, Pot Marigold, Scots Rose, Stag Horn Sumach, Larkspur, Navelwort, Wild Candytuft, Spiderwort, Charlock, Aster

The creation of the tapestry

The designer was Tom Mor, who also designed the Plymouth Tapestry at Prysten House, Plymouth, the Adventurers for Virginia (London) Tapestry, and was the consultant on the Jersey Liberation Tapestry (St Helier, Channel Islands) and the Plympton Tapestry (Plympton, Devon). The panel was researched by Tom Mor, Tom Maddock, Paul Presswell and Freda Simpson. Chief tapissiers were Joan Roncarelli and Rene Harvey. A New World Tapestry Website has been developed as of December 2008 and will soon include 120 pages, showing all complete panels.

Research for the New World Tapestry twenty four panels began in 1980. Tom Mor was joined by Tom Maddock, a retired friend from Ivybridge. Over the months they travelled hundreds of miles together, researching the two hundred sixty four people who would be named on the tapestry. Heraldic expert Paul Presswell of Buckfastleigh identified all the Coats of Arms of the people, colleges and companies involved. The result has been the creation alongside the tapestry of a library of files on each person and a collection of reference books of great use to researchers, scholars and teachers.

Two hundred sixty four armorial shields run along the top and bottom tapestry borders throughout its length, alternating with illustrations of the same number of flowers of herbs, medicinal plants, trees and shrubs. The latter are shown because the colonists took ointments and cure-alls with them on their voyages and plant hunters returned with such things as the potato and tobacco.

All the flowers and florets depicted were drawn from nature by Tom Mor, who studied them under a watchmaker glass. He was helped from the very early days by Freda Simpson of Plymouth, who was passionately interested in herbs and old herbal remedies. She identified and gave him over 230 flower specimens in the years that Mor lived with his wife and family in Plymouth. Later they moved to Cambridge were he was able to complete the set of 264 drawings with the help of Clive King and Caroline Lawes of the Cambridge University Botanic Garden, Lady Jane Renfrew of Lucy Cavendish College and Alison Davies, Monica Stokes and Edna Norman.

The stitchers

Tom Mor could not have seen his canvasses brought to life without the help of his friends and the expertise of the dedicated tapissiers. When the very first stitch was made in the New World Tapestry in 1980, the team working in Prysten House numbered 20. By the time the last stitch was made in March 2000, the number of tapissiers had increased to 256 with the addition of another eight centres. In Devon there was a second in Plymouth at HMS Drake (the Royal Navy panel), Ivybridge, Chillington, Exeter, Bideford, Totnes and Tiverton Castle. Dorset Tapestry centre was in the Guildhall at Lyme Regis and it was there that the Great Gardeners and Herbalists panel was stitched.

The first Oblique Gobelin stitch was made on 26 September 1980 in Prysten House in Plymouth, by U.S. Ambassador the Hon. Kingman Brewster. The coat of arms of His Excellency’s ancestor, Pilgrim leader William Brewster, appears on the 1620 Mayflower Panel.

The last Oblique Gobelin stitch was made by HRH Prince Charles on 3 March 2000 in the Orchard Room of his home at Highgrove House in Gloucestershire. Most fittingly, with his interest in history and a keen gardener himself, the Prince put his golden wool stitch in the date of the 1642 Great Gardeners and Herbalists Panel.

Stitches have also been added by HM the Queen, HM the Queen Mother, HRH Prince Philip, HRH the Princess Royal and HRH the Duchess of Gloucester.

The Library

The New World Tapestry Library material includes histories of the years 1583-1642, much of it original research, files on the two hundred sixty four people named on the tapestry, plus heraldic information on over three hundred individuals, companies, towns, counties and universities.

Supporters

Supporters of the New World Tapestry include the Adventurers for Virginia patrons of the New World Tapestry and Library. Their names are inscribed for posterity in the Adventurers for Virginia Record Book. Supporters who join the Adventurers for Virginia may also:

In London, celebrate the Adventurers for Virginia Day every 10 April to commemorate the granting of Royal Charters by James II of England to the London Company and the Plymouth Adventurers (Plymouth Company) in 1606 to establish colonies in Virginia

Help fund the production of the book, The Jamestown, Sagadahoc and Bermuda Story, for schools and researchers.

Help fund the production of the Yeardley/Flowerdew Brasses for presentation in England and America.

Help make grants to the British Empire and Commonwealth Museum at Temple Meads in Bristol to create the permanent exhibition of the New World Tapestry, expand and enhance the New World Tapestry Library and help the development of three-way educational research between England, the Americas and Bermuda.

Receive a tie showing the Adventurers badge plus a lifetime pass to view the tapestry at the museum in Bristol.

References

^ Caron Parsons (27 September 2004). “Art and Exhibitions: Setting sail for a pow-wow”. BBC News. http://www.bbc.co.uk/bristol/content/articles/2004/09/27/powwow_event_feature.shtml. “Helping to illustrate the story is the New World Tapestry; which, created in the West Country, is a detailed record of the early colonial period and the largest such embroidery in the world.” 

^ a b “World’s biggest tapestry on move”. BBC News. 5 October 2003. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/bristol/somerset/3165712.stm. “The 267-feet-long New World Tapestry, which depicts the colonisation of the Americas between 1583 and 1642, has been on display at Coldharbour Mill in Devon for 10 years. Now the 39 million stitch tapestry, which was 23 years in the making, is to have a new home at the British Empire and Commonwealth Museum in Bristol.” 

^ “New World Anniversary Tapestry in Bristol, July 2006″. VisitBritain Press Centre. http://www.visitbritain.com/corporate/presscentre/presscentrebritain/britaincalling/July2006/Attractions/newworld.aspx. “More than 260 adventurers are named in total and their coats-of-arms displayed, along with a similar number of herbs, medicinal plants, trees and shrubs used by the early settlers. There are several humorous touches in the manner of ancient tapestries and almost 39 million stitches, including one made by Prince Charles.” 

^ Photograph of 1617-1618 panel. “Bristol and the New World”. Aztecs at MexicoLore. http://www.mexicolore.co.uk/index.php?one=azt&two=aaa&id=274&typ=reg. 

^ “Prysten House: Frommer’s Review”. Frommer’s. http://www.frommers.com/destinations/plymouth/A25436.html. 

^ “Ceremonies in London mark 400th anniversary of Virginia Charter”. Richmond Times-Dispatch. History News Network. 10 April 2006. http://hnn.us/roundup/entries/23820.html. “The Adventurers for Virginia group, based in southwest England, displayed pieces of its New World Tapestry, which depicts the lineage of the families who traveled to settle the colony as well as other well-known aspects of history.” 

^ a b c d “City marks 400th anniversary of England’s American adventure”. City of London media centre. 4 April 2006. http://www.cityoflondon.gov.uk/Corporation/media_centre/files2006/54_06.htm. “Today Adventurers for Virginia are also backers of England ayeux Tapestry, The New World Tapestry, which, together with its Library, is a unique source of Anglo-American historical reference and an important international teaching tool. Designed by Tom Mor in 1978 and stitched by 256 volunteer Westcountry tapissiers, the massive work was completed in 2000 with a stitch made by Prince Charles.” 

^ www.newworldtapestry.co.uk

^ “Cash appeal for tapestry casing”. BBC News. 13 May 2002. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/1984302.stm. “Mr Mor has created a fund-raising group called Adventurers for Virginia, which will work on both sides of the Atlantic. The group takes it name from a tapestry panel, specially created for the fund-raising drive, which was made by a group of volunteers in Lyme Regis, Dorset. The panel is dedicated to the work of 18 London livery companies that, in 1620, gave money to support settlements in Virginia.” 

^ “Artifacts collection: Excavations have uncovered over 200,000 artifacts.”. Website of the Flowerdew Hundred (Virginia historic landmark on the James River) Foundation. http://www.flowerdew.org/Artifacts.html. 

External links

New World Tapestry Website

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Categories: Tapestries | Embroidery | Culture of the Americas | Arts in the United Kingdom

I am an expert from China Crafts Suppliers, usually analyzes all kind of industries situation, such as fennel seed extract , jasmine dragon pearl.


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The Music Scene in Austin Texas Music Capital of the World

Category : Region IV

The Music Scene in Austin Texas Music Capital of the World

When you mention Austin Texas to most people the first thing that usually comes to mind is music. Since 1976, the television show Austin City Limits has brought music into living rooms around the world. It is no wonder that music is the first thing we think of when we hear Austin, Texas. Austin officially became known as the music capital of the world in 1991. It got this distinction because compared to all areas nationwide, Austin has more live music venues per capita. With over 200 live music venues and thousands of artists calling Austin home, you can see a live music show at just about any time you want.

The Austin City Limits television show that is still filmed today on the University of Texas at Austin campus might have been the initial start of this city’s music claim to fame but the sheer volume of artist and venues makes this town truly musical. Not only are there daily live venues but there are festivals that bring out all kinds of music and entertainment. The most popular festival is The Austin City Limits Festival. With over 100 artists filling Austin’s Zilkner Park, this annual festival brings out the best of the best in talent. Groups like Pearl Jam, Tom Petty, and Bob Dylan have all made appearances at this annual festival. For out of towners who wish to travel to see the festival have many local Austin Hotel Packages to take advantage of.

Music Venues in Austin Span the Entire City

There are other festivals as well, the Pachanga Festival is the area’s Latin-themed festival and Urban Music fest is a celebration of urban culture. You don’t just have to go to festivals for music in Austin, as every day venues of all kinds across the city offer just about any kind of music a person could possibly be looking for.

Music in Austin is much more than festivals and music venues, however. There are dozens of music cafes and restaurants around the area. The thing a lot of people will find interesting is that the music doesn’t stop there. In Austin you can expect to find music performances at the airport, city hall, and even grocery stores such Whole Foods Market with its “Music at the Market” series held in the spring.

Austin is music. The venues, restaurants, city locations all cater to the music scene. You can’t go to Austin and not enjoy the music. Luckily, when you travel, affordable and comfortable Austin TX lodging makes your stay relaxing as well as entertaining.

Do you ever want to just get away from the house? Austin TX lodging has a great Austin Hotel Packages for you and your family!


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Boston Mercedes dealership supports a trip around the world

Category : Region III

Boston Mercedes dealership supports a trip around the world

In an effort to promote and prove the abilities of its B-Class electric fuel-cell vehicle, Mercedes-Benz has announced they will put the vehicle to the ultimate test: a trip around the world.  The journey was recently announced at the Detroit Auto Show and is set to commence January 30th.  Needles to say, from every Boston Mercedes dealership to those in LA, the entire Mercedes-Benz community, as well as supporters of a greener environment are excited to see what this new technology could offer the automobile industry.

The journey is scheduled to be 125 days long and the route will pass through 14 countries, including the southern part of the United States.  Additionally in America, the B-Class F-Cell vehicle will run from LA, up the coast of California and into Vancouver.  An exact route and the corresponding dates have yet to be released by Mercedes-Benz.

A tank vehicle will follow the B-Class vehicle since Hydrogen filling stations are not abundant throughout the world.  Hydrogen is what the vehicle runs on and the journey is, in part, an effort to increase awareness of the need for this kind of infrastructure around the world, if vehicles like the B-Class F-Cell are going to make it in the public market.  In all, Mercedes-Benz said the point of the adventure is to demonstrate the “technical maturity of the B-Class F-Cell, as well as to underscore the need for a global hydrogen filling station network.”

The B-Class F-Cell that your local Boston Mercedes dealership hopes to have on its lot in the near future uses only hydrogen and oxygen to go.  A group of fuel cells, called a fuel stack, generates electricity to propel the car.  Hydrogen enters this fuel stack on one side and oxygen enters on the other.  The fuel cells then cause the electron and the proton of the hydrogen cell to separate and electricity is created as a result.  The only by product leftover is water.  Thus, this means the B-Class F-Cell is 100% an emissions free vehicle.  Furthermore, if the hydrogen is produced in an environmentally friendly process such as through a wind-powered turbine, the entire process can be emissions free.  Most importantly, the entire process is sustainable.

Mercedes-Benz has been testing this technology for nearly four years now with vehicles leased by individuals to use as personally needed, as well as through a University Police Department at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan.  Mercedes-Benz chose Detroit, Michigan specifically because of the cold climate.  Critics are skeptical of many alternative fuel vehicles’ ability to perform in extremely cold climates.

The Wayne State University Police Department had no complaints.  In fact, they were so happy with their experience with the B-Class F-Cell vehicles that they wrote to Mercedes-Benz asking to be considered for future test vehicles.  Mercedes-Benz plans for the B-Class F-Cell vehicle to become mainstream in the market exist in the next few years.

In the mean time, for residents of Boston, Mercedes’ ML Class may be a good alternative.  The small SUVs travel well in the snow and are a great size: not too big and not too small for the streets of Boston.  Mercedes ML Class SUVs start at just over ,000.

Check www.mbusa.com for updates about the B-Class Fuel-Cell vehicle’s trip around the world.

Russell Levron is a freelance writer and auto buff aiding a local Boston Mercedes dealership. Personally, he feels his M Class SUV is perfect for the roads of Boston. Mercedes ML-Class vehicles are reliable, of high quality and perform well.


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England Soccer Jersey for The 2010 World Cup

Category : Region I

England Soccer Jersey for The 2010 World Cup

    Even though England has not hoisted the World Cup Trophy above their heads since 1966, they are one of the most popular teams anywhere!  Every 4 years when the World Cup comes calling again and the perennial red and white contenders take the pitch there is no shortage of passionate fans donning an England Soccer Jersey or a St Georges Cross Flag on their back or both!  Whether the World Cup is being held in South Africa, South America, or the Far East, the Army of loyal English football fans grab their England Soccer Jersey, hop on a flight, and come out in large numbers to support their fabulous England National Team!  England has a rich history of qualifying for every World Cup in recent history, but as rich as their qualification history is for the World Cup they are in the midst of a 44 year drought when it comes to winning the prestigious event, despite, the legions of fans watching them on TV or in person wearing their    prized possession, their England Soccer Jersey.  The last time they had the pleasure of being annointed champions, they had the double pleasure of doing it on their home turf, in the 1966 World Cup that was hosted in England, and as you can imagine the stadium was filled to the brim with red and white england soccer jerseys!

     Looking back in history nearly 1200 men have represented England at the highest level since 1872 wearing their Authentic Umbro England Jersey, but none is as universally revered as the late Bobby Moore. the captain of the England National Team for the famed 1966 World Cup Victory, and duelling so memorably with Pele in Mexico four years later, he also started and finished every single one of his 108 international appearances. It is hard to imagine that he never came off the bench and was never substituted, maybe the power was in the england soccer jersey he was wearing??. His final 90 minutes came in a 1-0 defeat by Italy in November, 1973 on an evening when the winning goal was scored by a midfielder named Fabio Capello. Once and future king of the 2010 England Squad!

     Now for the specifics of this years England National Team Soccer Jersey.  As always the product is exteremely well made, durable and tough, beautiful in its simplicity. With the new England Jersey style meets performance. The new England kit is the proud result. Honouring the past, looking forward to the future. The right shirt at the right time.

Shirt features:
- New Three Lions badge
- New Umbro logo
- Tailored fit
- Underarm gusset cut to move with the body
- Anatomically tailored sleeve
- Underarm zone ventilation
- Climate Control fabric
- Lumbar zone ventilation

     If you want to support your team this summer for the 2010 World Cup in S Africa, and you like what you have heard about the new England Jersey, make sure you purchase an authentic one today and become a small part of the offficial history of England Football!


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The Scientific World is Turning to God

Category : Region V

The Scientific World is Turning to God

“As people have certainly been influenced by me, I want to try and correct the enormous damage I may have done.” (Anthony Flew)

The newspapers these days are echoing with these regret-filled words by Anthony Flew, in his time a well-known atheist philosopher. The 81-year-old British professor of philosophy Flew chose to become an atheist at the age of 15, and first made a name for himself in the academic field with a paper published in 1950. In the 54 years that followed, he defended atheism as a teacher at the universities of Oxford, Aberdeen, Keele and Reading, at many American and Canadian universities he visited, in debates, books, lecture halls and articles. In recent days, however, Flew has announced that he has abandoned this error and accepts that the universe was created.

The decisive factor in this radical change of view is the clear and definitive evidence revealed by science on the subject of creation. Flew realised, in the face of the information-based complexity of life, that the true origin of life is intelligent design and that the atheism he had espoused for 66 years was a discredited philosophy.

Flew announced the scientific reasons underlying this change in belief in these terms:

“Biologists’ investigation of DNA has shown, by the almost unbelievable complexity of the arrangements which are needed to produce [life], that intelligence must have been involved.” (1)

“It has become inordinately difficult even to begin to think about constructing a naturalistic theory of the evolution of that first reproducing organism.” (2)

“I have been persuaded that it is simply out of the question that the first living matter evolved out of dead matter and then developed into an extraordinarily complicated creature.” (3)

The DNA research which Flew cites as a fundamental reason for his change of opinion has indeed revealed striking facts about creation. The helix shape of the DNA molecule, its possession of the genetic code, the nucleotide strings that refute blind chance, the storage of encyclopaedic quantities of information and many other striking findings have revealed that the structure and functions of this molecule were arranged for life with a special design. Comments by scientists concerned with DNA research bear witness to this fact.

Francis Crick, for instance, one of the scientists who revealed the helix shape of DNA admitted in the face of the findings regarding DNA that the origin of life indicated a miracle:

An honest man, armed with all the knowledge available to us now, could only state that in some sense, the origin of life appears at the moment to be almost a miracle, so many are the conditions which would have had to have been satisfied to get it going. (4)

Based on his calculations, Led Adleman of the University of Southern California in Los Angeles has stated that one gram of DNA can store as much information as a trillion compact discs. (5) Gene Myers, a scientist employed on the Human Genome Project, has said the following in the face of the miraculous arrangements he witnessed:

“What really astounds me is the architecture of life… The system is extremely complex. It’s like it was designed… There’s a huge intelligence there.” (6)

The most striking fact about DNA is that the existence of the coded genetic information can definitely not be explained in terms of matter and energy or natural laws. Dr. Werner Gitt, a professor at the German Federal Institute of Physics and Technology, has said this on the subject:

A code system is always the result of a mental process… It should be emphasized that matter as such is unable to generate any code. All experiences indicate that a thinking being voluntarily exercising his own free will, cognition, and creativity, is required… There is no known natural law through which matter can give rise to information, neither is any physical process or material phenomenon known that can do this. (7)

Creationist scientists and philosophers played a major role in Flew’s acceptance of intelligent design, backed up by all these findings. In recent times Flew participated in debates with scientists and philosophers who were proponents of creation, and exchanged ideas with them. The final turning point in that process was a discussion organised by the Institute for Metascientific Research in Texas in May, 2003. Flew participated together with author Roy Abraham Varghese, Israeli physicist and molecular biologist Gerald Schroeder, and Roman Catholic philosopher John Haldane. Flew was impressed by the weight of the scientific evidence in favour of creation and by the convincing nature of his opponents’ arguments, and abandoned atheism as an idea in the period following that discussion. In a letter he wrote for the August-September, 2003, edition of the British magazine Philosophy Now, he recommended Schroeder’s book “The Hidden Face of God: Science Reveals the Ultimate Truth” and Varghese’s book “The Wonderful World.”(8) During an interview with the professor of philosophy and theology Gary R. Habermas, who also played a major role in his change of mind (9), and also on the video “Has Science Discovered God?,” he openly stated that he believed in intelligent design.

The “Intelligence Pervading the Universe” and the Collapse of Atheism

In the face of all the scientific developments outlined above, the acceptance of intelligent design by Antony Flew, famous for defending atheism for many years, reflects a final scene in the process of collapse being undergone by atheism. Modern science has revealed the existence of an “intelligence pervading the universe,” thus leaving atheism out of the equation.

In his book “The Hidden Face of God,” Gerald Schroeder, one of the creationist scientists who influenced Flew, writes:

“A single consciousness, a universal wisdom, pervades the universe. The discoveries of science, those that search the quantum nature of subatomic matter, have moved us to the brink of a startling realization: all existence is the expression of this wisdom. In the laboratories we experience it as information that first physically articulated as energy and then condensed into the form of matter. Every particle, every being, from atom to human, appears to represent a level of information, of wisdom.” (10)

Scientific research into both the functioning of the cell and the subatomic particles of matter has revealed this fact in an indisputable manner: Life and the universe were brought into being from nothing by the will of an entity possessed of a superior mind and wisdom. There is no doubt that the possessor of that knowledge and mind that pervade the universe at all levels is Almighty Allah. Allah reveals this truth in the Qur’an:

Both East and West belong to Allah, so wherever you turn, the Face of Allah is there. Allah is All-Encompassing, All-Knowing.” (Qur’an, 2:115)

Under the pen name of Harun Yahya, Adnan Oktar has written some 250 works. His books contain a total of 46,000 pages and 31,500 illustrations. Of these books, 7,000 pages and 6,000 illustrations deal with the collapse of the Theory of Evolution. You can read, free of charge, all the books Adnan Oktar has written under the pen name Harun Yahya on these websites www.harunyahya.com

___________________________________________

i Richard N. Ostling, “Lifelong atheist changes mind about divine creator,” The Washington Times 10 December 2004; http://washingtontimes.com/national/20041209-113212-2782r.htm

2- Antony Flew, “Letter from Antony Flew on Darwinism and Theology,” Philosophy Now; http://www.philosophynow.org/issue47/47flew.htm

3- Stuart Wavell and Will Iredale, “Sorry, says atheist-in-chief, I do believe in God after all,” The Sunday Times, 12 December 2004; http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-1400368,00.html

4- Francis Crick, Life Itself: Its Origin and Nature, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1981, p. 88

5- John Whitfield, “Physicists plunder life’s tool chest”, 24 April 2003; http://www.nature.com/nsu/030421/030421-6.html

6- San Francisco Chronicle, 19 February, 2001

7- Werner Gitt, In the Beginning Was Information, CLV, Bielenfeld, Germany, pp. 64-7, 79

8- Antony Flew, “Letter from Antony Flew on Darwinism and Theology,” Philosophy Now; http://www.philosophynow.org/issue47/47flew.htm

9- “Atheist Becomes Theist: Exclusive Interview with Former Atheist Antony Flew;” http://www.biola.edu/antonyflew/index.cfm

10- Gerald Schroeder, The Hidden Face of God, Touchstone, New York, 2001, p. xi