π blog!
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@Edent "If you've ever visited a foreign country's national history museum, I guarantee you've read this little snippet: ..."
"Foreign"?!?!? Sir, you live in the UK. Wars of succession are the national sport.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Succession_to_the_British_throne
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@Edent "If you've ever visited a foreign country's national history museum, I guarantee you've read this little snippet: ..."
"Foreign"?!?!? Sir, you live in the UK. Wars of succession are the national sport.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Succession_to_the_British_throne
@evan indeed! But people rarely visit their own country's museum having had all of that forced into them at school.
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@otfrom @Edent yes, definitely the same monarch!
My point was that one does not have to go overseas from the UK to find historical placards commemorating a war of succession.
It's interesting to ask if we have any such museum displays in Canada! I don't think there's been a war of succession in our monarchy since Confederation. Almost definitely not on Canadian soil.
But maybe earlier...?
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@otfrom @Edent yes, definitely the same monarch!
My point was that one does not have to go overseas from the UK to find historical placards commemorating a war of succession.
It's interesting to ask if we have any such museum displays in Canada! I don't think there's been a war of succession in our monarchy since Confederation. Almost definitely not on Canadian soil.
But maybe earlier...?
@otfrom @Edent so, I'd rule out The Anarchy, the Wars of the Roses and so on, since they occurred before Canada was discovered by Europeans.
The only contested succession I can think of during Canada's time as a colony was the Jacobite rebellions, and there doesn't seem to have been any battles on this side of the Atlantic.
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@otfrom @Edent so, I'd rule out The Anarchy, the Wars of the Roses and so on, since they occurred before Canada was discovered by Europeans.
The only contested succession I can think of during Canada's time as a colony was the Jacobite rebellions, and there doesn't seem to have been any battles on this side of the Atlantic.
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@otfrom @Edent I think the closest one can come to wars of succession in Canada would be disputed succession in Indigenous nations. I don't know enough about indigenous political structures to say whether there was ever a clear monarchy equivalent among any of our First Nations and if so, how succession worked. But that's the closest "maybe" I can come up with.
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@evan indeed! But people rarely visit their own country's museum having had all of that forced into them at school.
@Edent good point! As someone who went to American public schools, my knowledge of British internecine warfare was pretty spotty. Our coverage of European history basically goes something like:
- the ancient Greeks and Romans were good!
- the Middle Ages were *bad*
- the Renaissance, however, was good!
- one good thing about the Renaissance was discovering America, which was *very* good
- now, let's leave all that junk behind and talk about America -
@Edent good point! As someone who went to American public schools, my knowledge of British internecine warfare was pretty spotty. Our coverage of European history basically goes something like:
- the ancient Greeks and Romans were good!
- the Middle Ages were *bad*
- the Renaissance, however, was good!
- one good thing about the Renaissance was discovering America, which was *very* good
- now, let's leave all that junk behind and talk about America@Edent if you get into the 20th century, it can sometimes get as far as:
- Meanwhile, back in Europe, things had really gone off the rails! Fortunately, America came in to fix it!
- Then it went *really* bad! So we had to fix it again!
- Now, we just fix everything, and it's better for everyone. The end! -
@Edent if you get into the 20th century, it can sometimes get as far as:
- Meanwhile, back in Europe, things had really gone off the rails! Fortunately, America came in to fix it!
- Then it went *really* bad! So we had to fix it again!
- Now, we just fix everything, and it's better for everyone. The end!@evan What did you think about the blog post, Evan π
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@Edent if you get into the 20th century, it can sometimes get as far as:
- Meanwhile, back in Europe, things had really gone off the rails! Fortunately, America came in to fix it!
- Then it went *really* bad! So we had to fix it again!
- Now, we just fix everything, and it's better for everyone. The end!@Edent all of which is a prelude to saying that the History of England Podcast is great for people like me who don't know the difference between a Plantagenet, a Rump Parliament and a peasant revolt.
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@evan What did you think about the blog post, Evan π
@Edent I didn't finish the first paragraph
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@Edent I didn't finish the first paragraph
@Edent however, you didn't make a note on the very unique part of this change, which is that Gargron basically got back wages for his years of work on Mastodon. That's extremely unusual; Open Source developers often only have a chance to maybe someday get a submarket full-time job supporting their project (and usually to add Enterprise features). I hope it represents a change in that direction too.
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@Edent however, you didn't make a note on the very unique part of this change, which is that Gargron basically got back wages for his years of work on Mastodon. That's extremely unusual; Open Source developers often only have a chance to maybe someday get a submarket full-time job supporting their project (and usually to add Enterprise features). I hope it represents a change in that direction too.
@Edent and, also, I'm sorry for getting distracted and excited about British history. It's kind of toxic to change the subject in the comments.