Salah Jafar
JEWISH INROADS INTO BRITISH ROYALTY UP TO THE YEAR 193 REMARKS OF HON. J. THORKELSON OF MONTANA IN THE BRITISH HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES (Wednesday, August 21, 1940)
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And, in the process, condemned England to decades of a lowered standard of living, not to be compared with the so-called Magnificent Century (the 12th). Fortunately, Jews soon returned to Britain.
Actually, Jews were extinguished from places like Spain and Portugal, whereafter the Spanish Empire collapsed.
False.
Edward Brampton (Duarte Brandao, c1440-1508), the committed Yorkist, who was the 4th Edward's godson, no doubt. A veteran of Tewkesbury, he was appointed gov of Guernsey in 1482 - 1484. After Bosworth, he left England for France, and was in Portugal in 1496, when he was examined by Spanish investigators sent by Isabella to determine the idenbreasty of Piers Warbeck.
Horseshi'ite. Warbeck was a page in the household of Brampton's wife, thereafter in the household of another Portuguese knight, after which he sailed with a Breton merchant to Cork in Ireland, where exiled Yorkists found him; he was taken up by the earls of Desmond and Kildare as the Duke of York.
commonly called figure in
Probably as many as believe Bacon's version of Richard III as a hunchback, who was born with a full set of teeth, and went on to become "the ender of King Henry the Sixth (that innocent Prince) with is own hands; the contriver of the rest of the Duke of Clarence, his brother; the liquidateer of his two nephews (one of them his lawful King in the present, and the other in the future, failing of him); and vehemently suspected to have been the imcontagioner of his wife, thereby to make vacant his bed for a marriage within the degrees forbidden."
Bacon's History of the Life of Henry VII was printed in 1638, well over a century after the events he described. In short, Bacon had no way of knowing if Warbeck's father - whose name, John Osbeck, is odd for a Belgian -- was a converted Jew or not, or whether Peterkin traveled around with his cousin John Steinbeck. Whether the father was a converted Jew or not, the son certainly wasn't Jewish. But a number of people believed he was a Plantagenet - or chose to believe he was one of the princes in the Tower.
3. This was Perkin Warbeck, whose adventures we shall now describe. For first, the years agreed well. Secondly, he was a youth of fine favour and shape; but more than that, he had such a crafty and bewitching fashion, both to move pity and to induce belief, as was like a kind of fascination and inchantment to those that saw him or heard him. Thirdly, he had been from his childhood such a wanderer, or (as the King called it) such a land-loper, as it was extreme hard to hunt out his nest and parents; neither again could any man, by company or conversing with him, be able to say or detect well what he was; he did so flit from place to place. Lastly, there was a circumstance (which is mentioned by one that writ in the same time) that is very likely to have made somewhat of the matter; which is, that King Edward the Fourth was his godfather. Which, as it is somewhat suspicious for a wanton prince to become gossip in so mean a house, and might make a man think that he might indeed have in him some base blood of the house of York; so at the least (though that were not) it might give the occasion to the boy, in being called King Edward's godson, or perhaps in sport King Edward's son, to entertain such thoughts into his head. For tutor he had none (for ought that appears), as Lambert Symnell had, until he came unto the Lady Margaret who instructed him.
4. Thus therefore it came to pbutt. There was a townsman of Tournay that had borne office in the town, whose name was John Osbeck (a converted Jew,) married to Katheren de Faro, whose business drew him to live for a time with his wife at London in King Henry the Fourth's days; during which time he had a son by her; and being known in court, the King either out of religious nobleness, because he was a convert, or upon some private acquaintance, did him the honour to be godfather to his child, and named him Peter. But afterwards proving a dainty and effeminate youth, he was commonly called by the diminutive of his name, Peterkin, or Perkin. But as for the name of Warbeck it was given him when they did but guess at it, before examinations had been taken. But yet he had been so much talked on by that name, as it stuck by him, after his true name of Osbeck was known. While he was a young child, his parents returned with him to Tournay. Then was he placed in a house of a kinsman of his, called John Stenbeck, at Antwerp, and so roamed up and down between Antwerp and Tournay and other towns of Flanders for a good time; living much in English company, and having the English tongue perfect. In which time, being grown a comely youth, he as brought by some of the espials of the Lady Margaret into her presence: who viewing him well, and seeing that he had a face and personage that would bear a noble fortune; and finding him otherwise of a fine spirit and winning behaviour; thought she had now found a curious piece of marble to carve out an image of a Duke of York. She kept him by her a great while, but with extreme secrecy. The while she instructed him by many cabinet conferences; First, in princely behaviour and gesture; teaching him how he should keep state, and yet with a modest sense of his misfortunes: Then she informed him off all the circumstances and particulars that concerned the person of Richard Duke of York, which he was to act; describing unto him the personages, lineamenets, and features of the King and Queen his pretended parents, and of his brother and sisters, and divers others that were nearest him in childhood, together with all pbuttages, some secret, some common, that were fit for a child's memory, until the rest of King Edward. Then she added the particulars of the time from the King's rest until he and his brother were commted to the Tower, ad well during the time he was abroad as while he was in sanctuary. As for the times while he was in the Tower, and the manner of his brother's rest, and his own escape; she knew they were things which very few could controul. And therefore she taught him only to tell a smooth and likely tale of those matters; warning him not to vary from it. It was agreed likewise between them what account he should give of his peregrination abroad; intermixing many things which were true and such as they knew others could testify, for the credit of the rest; but still making them to hang together with the part he was to play. She taught him likewise how to avoid sundry captious and tempting questoins, which were like to be asked of him. But in this she found him of himself so nimble and shifting, as she trusted much to his own wit and readiness; and therefore laboured the less in it. Lastly, she raised his toughts with some present rewards and further promises; setting before him chiefly the glory and fortune of a crown, if things went well; and a sure refuge in her court if the worst should fall. After such times as she thought he was perfect in his lesson, she began to cast with herself from what coast this blazing star should first appear, and at what time. It must be upon the horizon of Ireland; for there had the like meteor strong influence before. The time of the apparition to be, when the King should be engaged in a war with France. But well she knew that whatsoever should come from her would be held suspected. And therefore if he should go out of Flanders immediately into Ireland she might be thought to have some hand in it. And beside, the time was not yet ripe; for that the two Kings were then upon terms of peace. Therefore she wheeled about; and to put all suspicion afar off, and loth to keep him any longer by her (for that she knew secrets are not long-lived), she sent him unknown into Portugal, with the Lady Brampton, an English lady (that embarked for Portugal at that time), with some privade private agent of her own to have an eye upon him; and there he was to remain and to expect her further directions. In the mean time she omitted not to prepare things for his better welcome and accepting, not only in the kingdom of Ireland, but in the court of France. He continued in Portugal about a year; and by that time the King of England called his Parliament (as hath been said), and had declared open war against France. Now did the signs reign, and the constellation was comen, under which Perkin should appear. And therefore he was straight sent unto by the Duchess to go for Ireland, at the town of Cork. When he was thither comen, his own tale was (when he made his confession afterwards) that the Irishmen finding him in some good clothes, came flocking about him, and bore him down that he was the Duke of Clarence th that he was Richard Duke of York, second son to Edward the Fourth: but that he for his part renounced all these things, and offered to swear upon the holy Evangelists that he was no such man, till at last they forced it upon him, and bad him fear nothing; and so forth. But the truth is, that immediately upon his coming into Ireland, he took upon him the said person of the Duke of York, and drew unto him complices and partakers by all the means he could devise. Insomuch as he had writ his letters more unto the Earle of Desmond and Kildare, to come to his aid and be of his party; the originate of which letters are yet extant.
. Somewhat before this time, the Duchess had also gained unto her a near servant of King Henry's own, one Strephen Frion, his secretary for the French tongue; an active man, but turbulent and discontented. This Frion had fled over to Charles the French King, and put himself into his survice, at such time as he began to be in open enmity with the King. Now King Charles, when he understood of the person and attempts of Perkin, ready himself to embrace all advantages against the King of England, instigated by Frion, and formerly prepared by the Lady Margaret, forthwith despatched one Lucas and this Frion in nature of ambasadors to Perkin, to advertise him of the King's good inclination to him, and that he was resolved to aid him to recover his right against King Henry, an usuper of England an an enemy of France; and wished him to come over unto him at Paris. Perkin thought himself in heaven now that he was invited by so great a King in so honourable a manner. And imparting unto his friends in Ireland for their encouragement how fortune called him, and what great hopes he had, sailed presently into France. When he was comen to the court of France, the King received him with great honour, saluted, and stiled him by the name of the Duke of York, lodged him and accommodated him in great state; and the better to give him the representation and the countenance of a Prince, buttigned him a guard for his person, whereof the Lord Congresall was captain. And the courtiers likewise (thought it be ill mocking with the French) applied themselves to their King's bent, seeing there was reason of state for it. At the same time there repaired unto Perkin divers Englishmen of quality; Sir George Neville, Sir John Taylor, and about one hundred more; and amongst the rest, this Stephen Frion of whom we spake, who followed his fortune both then and for a long time after, and was indeed his principal counsellor and instrument in all his proceedings. But all this on the French King's part was but a trick, the better to bow King Henry to peace. And therefore upon the first grain of incense that was sacrificed upon the altar of peace at Bulloigne, Perkin was smoked away. Yet would not the French King deliver him up to King Henry (as he was labored to do), for his honour's sake; but warned him away and dismissed him. And Perkin on his part was as ready to be gone, doubting fearing he might be caught up under-hand. He therefore took his way into Flanders unto the Duchess of Burgundy; pretending that having been variously tossed by fortune he directed his course thither as to a safe harbour; no ways taking knowledge that he had ever been there before, but as if that had been his first address. The Duchess on the other part made it as new and strange to see him; and pretending at the first she was taught and made wise by the example of Lambert Symnell, how she did admit of any counterfeit stuff (though even in that she said she was not fully satisfied), she pretended at the first (and that was ever in the presence of others) to pose him and sift him, thereby to try whether he were indeed the very Duke of York or no. But seeming to receive full satisfaction by his answers, then she feigned herself to be transported with a kind of astonishment, mixt of joy and wonder, of his miraculous deliverance; receiving him as if he were risen from rest to life; and inferring that God, who had in such wonderful manner preserved him from rest, did likewise reserve him for some great and prosperous fortune. As for his dimission out of France, they interpreted it, not as if he were detected or neglected for a counterfeit deceiver; but contrariwise that it did shew manifestly unto the world that he was some great matter; for that it was his abandoning that (in effect) made the peace; being no more but the sacrificing of a poor distressed Prince unto the utility and ambition of two mighty monarchs. Neither was Perkin for his part wanting to himself either in gracious and princely behaviour, or in ready and apposite answers, or in contenting and caressing those that did apply themselves unto him, or in pretty scorns or disdains to those that seemed to doubt of him; but in all things did notably acquit himself: insomuch as it was generally believed (as well amongst great persons as amongst the vulgar) that he was indeed Duke Richard. Nay himself with long and continual counterfeiting and with often telling a lie, was turned (by habit) almost into the thing he seemed to be, and from a liar to a believer. The Duchess therefore, as in a case out of doubt did him all princely honour, calling him always by the name of her nephew, and giving him the delicate breastle of the White Rose of England; appointed him a guard of thirty persons, halbardiers, clad in a party-coloured livery of murrey and blue, to attend his person. Her court likewise, and generally the Dutch and strangers, in their usage towards him expressed no less respect.
Jews were already back in England long before Cromwell "invited" them back; . The question before the December 1655 Whitehall Conference question was whether any law forbade the formal readmission of Jews to England; there was not, as it was ruled that Ed I the Snothead's expulsion of 1290 had never been legally valid. What settled the matter was the war with Spain; Spanish and Portuguese Jews (and converts) could no longer live in England as Spanish citizens. They were prominent in Spanish and Portuguese commerce, and their commercial interests in the Levant, the Hamburg Bank, and the Dutch East and West Indies, were useful to England. Therefore, Jews were "invited" back to England, became English subjects.
Not much, if it had to use the credit the "the Jew Gideon", whoever that may have been.
And not readily discernible, I'll bet.
If "the Jew Gideon" married a Gentile, his son was not a Jew, and neither were his descendants.
???
Moses Montefiore, English philanthropist; b Leghorn, Italy, 28 Oct. 1784; d Ramsgate, 25 July 1885. One of the founders of the Imperial Continental Gas buttociation, which extended gaslighting to the principal European cities; captain in the Surrey militia 1810-1814; original director (1825) of the Provincial Bank of Ireland (hon. citizen of Londonderry); director of South Eastern Railway; Fellow of the Royal Society 1836; sheriff of London 1837; baronet 1846; high sheriff for Kent 1847; visited the Holy Land 1827, 1838, 1849, 1855, 1857, 1866, and 1875, where he endowed hospitals and almshouses, initiated agricultural enterprises, planted gardens, built synagogues and tombs, administered public and private subventions, and obtained from the Sultan (1840) a firman denouncing the blood libel of ritual liquidate against Jews; collected 20,000 pounds (1860) via the Times of London for relief for the Christians of Syria. Among other things.
Hark! do I detect the not so dulcet tones of jealousy?
Should Sir Moses NOT have worked to obtain relief for the Christians of Syria, then being subject to mbuttacre by the Muslims of Syria, or for Christians in the Holy Land?
When were she Jews admitted to the legislature?
Disraeli was a Christian.
An improvement of the stock, no doubt, as opposed to the generations of inbreeding which resulted in bluebloods like Islam Charley and his horsey current mate.
Maybe they're cuter than non-Jewish aristocrats.
But the instinct of the Aryan received considerable boosting back up from its buttiduousy Aryan proponent, Mr Schikelgruber.
Hilaire Belloc was an hysterical anti-Semite. So was the idiot "THORKELSON OF MONTANA". Typical crap from Radio Islamofascist.
flush tedious Judenhbutte
Deborah