Friday, 15 May 2026

THE GRANDMA, NO MATTER HOW MUCH TIME GOES BY

Today, The Morgans and The Grandma have finished their theoretical training in English. They have been intense weeks full of hard work, a lot of effort, commitment, lots of smiles and lots of good times that will always remain in the memory of this fantastic family who will now face the last days of the course preparing Cambridge A2 exam models.

To learn a language there is nothing better than mixing with the community that speaks it, to understand what they are like, because language is the greatest living cultural reflection we have and if we understand how its speakers think, we will understand how they structure and use it.

The Grandma, who loves all languages, has recalled the importance of the Rosetta Stone, one of the great treasures of the British Museum, a stone that reminds us how important it is to know the past and learn from it, knowing that nothing past will ever return, but it will leave us knowledge and memories.

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The Rosetta Stone is a granodiorite stele inscribed with three versions of a decree issued in Memphis, Egypt in 196 BC during the Ptolemaic dynasty on behalf of King Ptolemy V Epiphanes.

The top and middle texts are in Ancient Egyptian using hieroglyphic and Demotic scripts respectively, while the bottom is in Ancient Greek. The decree has only minor differences between the three versions, making the Rosetta Stone key to deciphering the Egyptian scripts.

The stone was carved during the Hellenistic period and is believed to have originally been displayed within a temple, possibly at nearby Sais. It was probably moved in late antiquity or during the Mameluk period, and was eventually used as building material in the construction of Fort Julien near the town of Rashid (Rosetta) in the Nile Delta.

It was discovered there in July 1799 by French officer Pierre-François Bouchard during the Napoleonic campaign in Egypt. It was the first Ancient Egyptian bilingual text recovered in modern times, and it aroused widespread public interest with its potential to decipher this previously untranslated hieroglyphic script.

Lithographic copies and plaster casts soon began circulating among European museums and scholars. When the British defeated the French they took the stone to London under the Capitulation of Alexandria in 1801. It has been on public display at the British Museum almost continuously since 1802 and is the most visited object there.

Study of the decree was already underway when the first complete translation of the Greek text was published in 1803. Jean-François Champollion announced the transliteration of the Egyptian scripts in Paris in 1822; it took longer still before scholars were able to read Ancient Egyptian inscriptions and literature confidently.

More information: The British Museum

Major advances in the decoding were recognition that the stone offered three versions of the same text (1799); that the demotic text used phonetic characters to spell foreign names (1802); that the hieroglyphic text did so as well, and had pervasive similarities to the demotic (1814); and that phonetic characters were also used to spell native Egyptian words (1822–1824).

Three other fragmentary copies of the same decree were discovered later, and several similar Egyptian bilingual or trilingual inscriptions are now known, including three slightly earlier Ptolemaic decrees: the Decree of Alexandria in 243 BC, the Decree of Canopus in 238 BC, and the Memphis decree of Ptolemy IV, c. 218 BC.

The Rosetta Stone is no longer unique, but it was the essential key to the modern understanding of ancient Egyptian literature and civilisation

The term Rosetta Stone is now used to refer to the essential clue to a new field of knowledge.

The Rosetta Stone is listed as a stone of black granodiorite, bearing three inscriptions... found at Rosetta in a contemporary catalogue of the artefacts discovered by the French expedition and surrendered to British troops in 1801.

At some period after its arrival in London, the inscriptions were coloured in white chalk to make them more legible, and the remaining surface was covered with a layer of carnauba wax designed to protect it from visitors' fingers.

This gave a dark colour to the stone that led to its mistaken identification as black basalt.These additions were removed when the stone was cleaned in 1999, revealing the original dark grey tint of the rock, the sparkle of its crystalline structure, and a pink vein running across the top left corner. 

Comparisons with the Klemm collection of Egyptian rock samples showed a close resemblance to rock from a small granodiorite quarry at Gebel Tingar on the west bank of the Nile, west of Elephantine in the region of Aswan; the pink vein is typical of granodiorite from this region.

The Rosetta Stone is 1,123 millimetres high at its highest point, 757 mm wide, and 284 mm thick. It weighs approximately 760 kilograms. It bears three inscriptions: the top register in Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs, the second in the Egyptian Demotic script, and the third in Ancient Greek. The front surface is polished and the inscriptions lightly incised on it; the sides of the stone are smoothed, but the back is only roughly worked, presumably because it would have not been visible when the stele was erected.

The Rosetta Stone is a fragment of a larger stele. No additional fragments were found in later searches of the Rosetta site. Owing to its damaged state, none of the three texts is complete. The top register, composed of Egyptian hieroglyphs, suffered the most damage. Only the last 14 lines of the hieroglyphic text can be seen; all of them are broken on the right side, and 12 of them on the left. Below it, the middle register of demotic text has survived best; it has 32 lines, of which the first 14 are slightly damaged on the right side. The bottom register of Greek text contains 54 lines, of which the first 27 survive in full; the rest are increasingly fragmentary due to a diagonal break at the bottom right of the stone.

The full length of the hieroglyphic text and the total size of the original stele, of which the Rosetta Stone is a fragment, can be estimated based on comparable stelae that have survived, including other copies of the same order.

The slightly earlier decree of Canopus, erected in 238 BC during the reign of Ptolemy III, is 2,190 millimetres high and 820 mm wide, and contains 36 lines of hieroglyphic text, 73 of demotic text, and 74 of Greek. The texts are of similar length. From such comparisons, it can be estimated that an additional 14 or 15 lines of hieroglyphic inscription are missing from the top register of the Rosetta Stone, amounting to another 300 millimetres.

In addition to the inscriptions, there would probably have been a scene depicting the king being presented to the gods, topped with a winged disc, as on the Canopus Stele. These parallels, and a hieroglyphic sign for stela on the stone itself, suggest that it originally had a rounded top.The height of the original stele is estimated to have been about 149 centimetres.

The stele was erected after the coronation of King Ptolemy V and was inscribed with a decree that established the divine cult of the new ruler. The decree was issued by a congress of priests who gathered at Memphis. The date is given as 4 Xandikos in the Macedonian calendar and 18 Mekhir in the Egyptian calendar, which corresponds to 27 March 196 BC. The year is stated as the ninth year of Ptolemy V's reign, equated with 197/196 BC, which is confirmed by naming four priests who officiated in that year: Aetos son of Aetos was priest of the divine cults of Alexander the Great and the five Ptolemies down to Ptolemy V himself; the other three priests named in turn in the inscription are those who led the worship of Berenice Euergetis (wife of Ptolemy III), Arsinoe Philadelphos (wife and sister of Ptolemy II), and Arsinoe Philopator, mother of Ptolemy V.

More information: The Guardian

However, a second date is also given in the Greek and hieroglyphic texts, corresponding to 27 November 197 BC, the official anniversary of Ptolemy's coronation. The demotic text conflicts with this, listing consecutive days in March for the decree and the anniversary. It is uncertain why this discrepancy exists, but it is clear that the decree was issued in 196 BC and that it was designed to re-establish the rule of the Ptolemaic kings over Egypt.

Napoleon's 1798 campaign in Egypt inspired a burst of Egyptomania in Europe, and especially France. A corps of 167 technical experts (savants), known as the Commission des Sciences et des Arts, accompanied the French expeditionary army to Egypt.

On 15 July 1799, French soldiers under the command of Colonel d'Hautpoul were strengthening the defences of Fort Julien, a couple of miles north-east of the Egyptian port city of Rosetta, modern-day Rashid. Lieutenant Pierre-François Bouchard spotted a slab with inscriptions on one side that the soldiers had uncovered. He and d'Hautpoul saw at once that it might be important and informed General Jacques-François Menou, who happened to be at Rosetta.

The find was announced to Napoleon's newly founded scientific association in Cairo, the Institut d'Égypte, in a report by Commission member Michel Ange Lancret noting that it contained three inscriptions, the first in hieroglyphs and the third in Greek, and rightly suggesting that the three inscriptions were versions of the same text.

Lancret's report, dated 19 July 1799, was read to a meeting of the Institute soon after 25 July. Bouchard, meanwhile, transported the stone to Cairo for examination by scholars. Napoleon himself inspected what had already begun to be called la Pierre de Rosette, the Rosetta Stone, shortly before his return to France in August 1799. 

After the surrender, a dispute arose over the fate of the French archaeological and scientific discoveries in Egypt, including the artefacts, biological specimens, notes, plans, and drawings collected by the members of the commission. Menou refused to hand them over, claiming that they belonged to the institute. British General John Hely-Hutchinson refused to end the siege until Menou gave in.

Scholars Edward Daniel Clarke and William Richard Hamilton, newly arrived from England, agreed to examine the collections in Alexandria and claimed to have found many artefacts that the French had not revealed. In a letter home, Clarke said that we found much more in their possession than was represented or imagined.

Hutchinson claimed that all materials were property of the British Crown, but French scholar Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire told Clarke and Hamilton that the French would rather burn all their discoveries than turn them over, referring ominously to the destruction of the Library of Alexandria. Clarke and Hamilton pleaded the French scholars' case to Hutchinson, who finally agreed that items such as natural history specimens would be considered the scholars' private property.

Menou quickly claimed the stone, too, as his private property. Hutchinson was equally aware of the stone's unique value and rejected Menou's claim. Eventually an agreement was reached, and the transfer of the objects was incorporated into the Capitulation of Alexandria signed by representatives of the British, French, and Ottoman forces.

It is not clear exactly how the stone was transferred into British hands, as contemporary accounts differ. Colonel Tomkyns Hilgrove Turner, who was to escort it to England, claimed later that he had personally seized it from Menou and carried it away on a gun-carriage.

In a much more detailed account, Edward Daniel Clarke stated that a French officer and member of the Institute had taken him, his student John Cripps, and Hamilton secretly into the back streets behind Menou's residence and revealed the stone hidden under protective carpets among Menou's baggage. According to Clarke, their informant feared that the stone might be stolen if French soldiers saw it. Hutchinson was informed at once and the stone was taken away -possibly by Turner and his gun-carriage.

The stone has been exhibited almost continuously in the British Museum since June 1802.

More information: Smart History

Prior to the discovery of the Rosetta Stone and its eventual decipherment, the ancient Egyptian language and script had not been understood since shortly before the fall of the Roman Empire.

The usage of the hieroglyphic script had become increasingly specialised even in the later Pharaonic period; by the 4th century AD, few Egyptians were capable of reading them.

Monumental use of hieroglyphs ceased as temple priesthoods died out and Egypt was converted to Christianity; the last known inscription is dated to 24 August 394, found at Philae and known as the Graffito of Esmet-Akhom. The last demotic text, also from Philae, was written in 452.

The Greek text on the Rosetta Stone provided the starting point. Ancient Greek was widely known to scholars, but they were not familiar with details of its use in the Hellenistic period as a government language in Ptolemaic Egypt; large-scale discoveries of Greek papyri were a long way in the future.

At the time of the stone's discovery, Swedish diplomat and scholar Johan David Åkerblad was working on a little-known script of which some examples had recently been found in Egypt, which came to be known as demotic. He called it cursive Coptic because he was convinced that it was used to record some form of the Coptic language, the direct descendant of Ancient Egyptian, although it had few similarities with the later Coptic script.

In 1811, prompted by discussions with a Chinese student about Chinese script, Silvestre de Sacy considered a suggestion made by Georg Zoëga in 1797 that the foreign names in Egyptian hieroglyphic inscriptions might be written phonetically; he also recalled that as early as 1761, Jean-Jacques Barthélemy had suggested that the characters enclosed in cartouches in hieroglyphic inscriptions were proper names. Thus, when Thomas Young, foreign secretary of the Royal Society of London, wrote to him about the stone in 1814, Silvestre de Sacy suggested in reply that in attempting to read the hieroglyphic text, Young might look for cartouches that ought to contain Greek names and try to identify phonetic characters in them.

Calls for the Rosetta Stone to be returned to Egypt were made in July 2003 by Zahi Hawass, then Secretary-General of Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities. These calls, expressed in the Egyptian and international media, asked that the stele be repatriated to Egypt, commenting that it was the icon of our Egyptian identity.

He repeated the proposal two years later in Paris, listing the stone as one of several key items belonging to Egypt's cultural heritage, a list which also included: the iconic bust of Nefertiti in the Egyptian Museum of Berlin; a statue of the Great Pyramid architect Hemiunu in the Roemer-und-Pelizaeus-Museum in Hildesheim, Germany; the Dendera Temple Zodiac in the Louvre in Paris; and the bust of Ankhhaf in the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.

More information: Egypt Independent

 

And no matter how much time goes by
And no matter how much we grow up
For worse or for better, from now 'til forever
I'll always remember you young.
 
Thomas Rhett

Thursday, 14 May 2026

STING & THE MORGANS WERE WALKING ON THE MOON

Yesterday, The Morgans and The Grandma visited Wallsend, an English town known for one of their favourite sons: Sting. The family had a fantastic day in the company of this exceptional musician, who made them walk on the moon.

Today, The Morgans have studied English grammar with the Past Continuous and Some & Any Compounds. They have finished the grammatical part and will spend more time listening, reading and speaking.

More information: Past Continuous

More information: Some-Any Compounds

Download A2-B1 Summing Up

Sting, whose real name is Gordon Matthew Thomas Sumner, is an English musician, singer-songwriter, actor, and activist. He was born in 1951 in Wallsend, England, and became famous as the lead singer, bassist, and principal songwriter of the rock band The Police. The group achieved worldwide success between the late 1970s and early 1980s with hits such as Every Breath You Take, Roxanne, and Message in a Bottle.

After the breakup of The Police in the mid-1980s, Sting launched a highly successful solo career. His music combines many styles, including rock, pop, jazz, reggae, classical, and world music. Some of his best-known solo songs include Englishman in New York, Fields of Gold, and Shape of My Heart. Over his career, he has sold more than 100 million records both as a solo artist and with The Police.

Sting has received numerous awards and honours, including 17 Grammy Awards, a Golden Globe, an Emmy, and several Oscar nominations. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of The Police in 2003 and has also received recognition for his contributions to music and humanitarian causes.

Beyond music, Sting has acted in films and theatre productions and is known for his activism on environmental and human rights issues. He has also supported rainforest conservation projects and other charitable causes throughout his career.

More information: Sting

The Police was a British rock band formed in London in 1977 by Sting, Andy Summers, and Stewart Copeland. They became one of the most influential and successful bands of the late 1970s and early 1980s thanks to their unique mix of punk, reggae, jazz, and pop-rock.

Their debut album, Outlandos d’Amour (1978), included hits such as Roxanne and Can’t Stand Losing You, which helped launch their international career. Later albums like Reggatta de Blanc, Zenyatta Mondatta, Ghost in the Machine, and especially Synchronicity (1983) made them global superstars. Their best-known song, Every Breath You Take, became one of the biggest hits of the decade.

The band was admired for combining catchy pop melodies with sophisticated musicianship. Sting's distinctive vocals and songwriting, Summers's atmospheric guitar style, and Copeland’s energetic drumming created a sound that strongly influenced later rock and pop artists.

Despite their enormous success, tensions within the group led to their breakup in 1984, with Sting later pursuing a highly successful solo career. The band reunited briefly in 1986 and again for a major world tour in 2007-2008.

Overall, The Police sold more than 75 million records worldwide, won several Grammy Awards, and were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003. They remain one of the defining bands of the new wave era.

More information: The Police

I see music as one language.
If one musical form eats its own tail, it dies. 
So it needs to be a mongrel, it needs to be hybridised.

Sting

Wednesday, 13 May 2026

THE ROLLING STONES & THE MORGANS, 'AS TEARS GO BY'

Yesterday, The Morgans and The Grandma met The Rolling Stones, one of the best rock bands of all time, in Hyde
Park. 
 
It was a fantastic meeting where they were able to talk about the origins of the band and their great songs, especially As Tears Go By one of the most beautiful songs ever written about childhood and memories of the past, wonderfully performed by Marianne Faithfull.
 
Today, the family has been reminiscing about yesterday's fantastic encounter before reviewing some English grammar with the Past Simple (Irregular Forms) and Had/Didn't have.

The Rolling Stones are an English rock band formed in London in 1962. Active across seven decades, they are one of the most popular and enduring bands of the rock era.

In the early 1960s, the band pioneered the gritty, rhythmically driven sound that came to define hard rock. Their first stable line-up consisted of vocalist Mick Jagger, guitarist Keith Richards, multi-instrumentalist Brian Jones, bassist Bill Wyman, and drummer Charlie Watts. During their early years, Jones was the primary leader of the band.

After Andrew Loog Oldham became the group's manager in 1963, he encouraged them to write their own songs. The Jagger-Richards partnership became the band's primary songwriting and creative force; this alienated Jones, who developed a drug addiction that by 1968 interfered with his ability to contribute meaningfully.

Rooted in blues and early rock and roll, the Rolling Stones started out playing covers and were at the forefront of the British Invasion in 1964, becoming identified with the youthful counterculture of the 1960s. They then found greater success with their own material, as (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction, Get Off of My Cloud (both 1965), and Paint It Black (1966) became international number-one hits. Aftermath (1966), their first entirely original album, is often considered to be the most important of their early albums.

In 1967, they had the double-sided hit Ruby Tuesday/Let's Spend the Night Together and experimented with psychedelic rock on Their Satanic Majesties Request.

By the end of the 1960s, they had returned to their rhythm and blues-based rock sound, with hit singles Jumpin' Jack Flash (1968) and Honky Tonk Women (1969), and albums Beggars Banquet (1968), featuring Sympathy for the Devil and Street Fighting Man, and Let It Bleed (1969), featuring You Can't Always Get What You Want and Gimme Shelter.

Jones left the band shortly before his death in 1969, having been replaced by guitarist Mick Taylor. That year they were first introduced on stage as the greatest rock and roll band in the world.  

Sticky Fingers (1971), which yielded Brown Sugar and Wild Horses and included the first usage of their tongue and lips logo, was their first of eight consecutive number-one studio albums in the US. It was followed by Exile on Main St. (1972), featuring Tumbling Dice and Happy and Goats Head Soup (1973), featuring Angie.

Taylor left the band at the end of 1974, and was replaced by Ronnie Wood. The band released Some Girls in 1978, featuring Miss You, and Tattoo You in 1981, featuring Start Me Up.

Steel Wheels (1989) was widely considered a comeback album and was followed by Voodoo Lounge (1994). Both releases were promoted by large stadium and arena tours, as the Stones continued to be a huge concert attraction; by 2007 they had recorded the all-time highest-grossing concert tour three times, and they were the highest-earning live act of 2021.

Following Wyman's departure in 1993, the band continued as a four-piece core, with Darryl Jones becoming their regular bassist, and then as a three-piece core following Watts' death in 2021, with Steve Jordan becoming their regular drummer. Hackney Diamonds, the band's first new album of original material in 18 years, was released in October 2023, becoming their fourteenth UK number-one album.

The Rolling Stones' estimated record sales of 200 million make them one of the best-selling music artists of all time. They have won three Grammy Awards and a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.  

They were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1989 and the UK Music Hall of Fame in 2004

Billboard and Rolling Stone have ranked them as one of the greatest artists of all time.

More information: Rolling Stones

 
Lose your dreams
and you might lose your mind.

Mick Jagger

Tuesday, 12 May 2026

OH, YESTERDAY. I'M NOT HALF THE PERSON I USED TO BE...

Yesterday, The Morgans and The Grandma were evoking the past, remembering good times and great friends, and looking back is always thinking about yesterday.

Today, they all have continued studying English grammar with Past Simple (Regular Verbs), Used to and So/Such.

More info: Past Simple (Regular Verbs)

More info: Used to I, II, III, IV & V 

More information: So/Such 

It has been an intense session for a family that continues working on the birthday celebration party of Cristina Morgan and Vanessa Morgan next week in Kingston, Jamaica.

Happy birthday, sisters!

Yesterday is a song by the English rock band the Beatles, written by Paul McCartney and credited to Lennon-McCartney. It was first released on the album Help! in August 1965, except in the United States, where it was issued as a single in September. The song reached number one on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart. It subsequently appeared on the UK EP Yesterday in March 1966 and made its US album debut on Yesterday and Today, in June 1966.

Yesterday is a melancholic ballad about the break-up of a relationship. The singer nostalgically laments for yesterday when he and his love were together before she left because of something he said.

McCartney is the only member of the Beatles to appear on the track. The final recording was so different from other works by the Beatles that the band members vetoed the song's release as a single in the United Kingdom. However, other artists quickly recorded versions of it for single release. The Beatles' recording was issued in the U.K. as a single in 1976 and peaked at number 8 on the UK Singles Chart.

Yesterday
All my troubles seemed so far away
Now it looks as though they're here to stay
Oh, I believe in yesterday

Suddenly
I'm not half the man I used to be
There's a shadow hanging over me
Oh, yesterday came suddenly

Why she had to go? I don't know
She wouldn't say
I said something wrong, now I long
For yesterday

Yesterday
Love was such an easy game to play
Now I need a place to hide away
Oh, I believe in yesterday

Why she had to go? I don't know
She wouldn't say
I said something wrong, now I long
For yesterday

Yesterday
Love was such an easy game to play
Now I need a place to hide away
Oh, I believe in yesterday

More information: UDiscoveredMusic

I can't go back to yesterday 
 -because I was a different person then.

Lewis Carroll

Monday, 11 May 2026

ADELE, GOD THIS REMINDS ME OF WHEN WE WERE YOUNG

After an intense weekend visiting Mount Saint Michel in Normandy, today, The Morgans and The Grandma have returned to London and they have met Adele, one of the best singers of all time. They have been very excited and happy.

Before this wonderful visit, the family has studied some English grammar with To Be (Past) and Could/Couldn't, and they have talked about the importance of school and teaching to create critical citizens.


More information: To Be (Was/Were)

More information: Could/Couldn't

More information: Cambridge

More information: American & British Academy

I remember when I was a teenager. After leaving my hometown, Andorra La Vella, my family and I lived in a little town in the Garraf coast near Barcelona. 

It was a fishermen village with large beaches of white sand and a quiet sea.

I met him there. He was the most famous clown in the world, and I fell in love immediately. 

We were very young and our story was very short, but I still remember him, I still remember when we were young. Now, he is like a shadow that accompanies me everywhere. I will never forget him. He will be always on my mind and my memories.

The Grandma


Adele Laurie Blue Adkins (born 5 May 1988), known mononymously as Adele, is an English singer-songwriter. She is known for her mezzo-soprano vocals and sentimental songwriting.

Adele has received numerous accolades including 16 Grammy Awards, 12 Brit Awards (including three for British Album of the Year), an Academy Award, a Primetime Emmy Award, and a Golden Globe Award.

After graduating in arts from the BRIT School in 2006, Adele signed a record deal with XL Recordings. Her debut album, 19, was released in 2008 and included the UK top-five singles Chasing Pavements and Make You Feel My Love.

19 has sold over 2.5 million copies in the UK and was named in the top 20 best-selling debut albums of all time in the UK. She was honoured with the Grammy Award for Best New Artist.

Adele released her second studio album, 21, in 2011. It became the world's best-selling album of the 21st century, with sales of over 31 million. 21 holds the record for the top-performing album in US chart history, topping the Billboard 200 for 24 weeks, with the singles Rolling in the Deep, Someone like You, and Set Fire to the Rain heading charts worldwide, becoming her signature songs. The album received a record-tying six Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year.

In 2012, Adele released Skyfall, a soundtrack single for the James Bond film Skyfall, which won her the Academy Award for Best Original Song.

Adele's third studio album, 25, was released in 2015, breaking first-week sales records in the UK and US. In the US, it remains the only album to sell over three million copies in a week. 25 earned her five Grammy Awards, including the Album of the Year. The lead single, Hello, achieved huge success worldwide. Her fourth studio album, 30, released in 2021, contains the chart-topping and Grammy-winning single Easy on Me. 25 and 30 became the best-selling albums worldwide, including the US and the UK, in 2015 and 2021, respectively.

As of 2023, all of her studio albums, except 19, have topped the yearly best-selling albums chart worldwide in the 21st century.

Adele is one of the world's best-selling music artists, with sales of over 120 million records worldwide. The best-selling female artist of the 21st century in the UK, she was named the best-selling artist of the 2010s decade in the US and worldwide.

Her studio albums 21 and 25 were the top two best-selling albums of the 2010s in the UK and both are listed among the best-selling albums in UK chart history, while in the US both are certified Diamond, the most of any artist who debuted in the 21st century.

More information: Adele

 
It's hard to win me back
Everything just takes me back
To when you were there
My God, this reminds me
Of when we were young

Adele

Sunday, 10 May 2026

THE MORGANS VISIT MONT SAINT MICHÉ, NORMAUNDIE

Today, The Morgans and The Grandma are visiting Mont Saint Miché in Maunché, Normaundie

Normaundie in Norman, Normandy in English, is a geographical and cultural nation in northwestern Europe, roughly coextensive with the historical Duchy of Normandy. It comprises mainland Normandy (a part of France) and insular Normandy (mostly the British Channel Islands). It covers 30,627 square kilometres. The inhabitants of Normandy are known as Normans; the region is the historic homeland of the Norman language. Large settlements include Rouen, Caen, Le Havre and Cherbourg.

The cultural region of Normandy is roughly similar to the historical Duchy of Normandy, which includes small areas now part of the departments of Mayenne and Sarthe. The Channel Islands, in French Îles Anglo-Normandes, are also historically part of Normandy; they cover 194 square kilometres and comprise two bailiwicks: Guernsey and Jersey, which are British Crown Dependencies.

Normandy's name comes from the settlement of the territory by Vikings (Northmen" starting in the 9th century, and confirmed by treaty in the 10th century between King Charles III of France and the Viking jarl Rollo. For almost 150 years following the Norman conquest of England in 1066, Normandy and England were linked by having the same person reign as both Duke of Normandy and King of England.

Archaeological finds, such as cave paintings, prove that humans were present in the region in prehistoric times. Normandy also has many megalithic monuments.

Many still-visible megaliths are scattered quite regularly throughout the Norman countryside. The Rozel Archaeological Site presents exceptional traces of footprints and handprints of Homo neanderthalensis.

The testimony of Julius Caesar (in the Gallic Wars) allows us to identify the different Gallic groups occupying the region. In 56 or 57 BC, these populations gathered to resist the invasion of the Roman legions. After the Gallic defeat at the siege of Alesia, the peoples of Normandy continued the struggle for some time, but by 51 BC, all of Gaul was subdued by Rome.

Celts (also known as Belgae and Gauls) have populated Normandy since at least the Bronze Age. When Julius Caesar invaded Gaul (58-50 BC), there were nine different Celtic tribes living in this part of Gaul.

The Romanisation of this region partly included in the Gallia Celtica and in the Gallia Belgica (the Seine being more or less the limit between them) was achieved by the usual methods: Roman roads and a policy of urbanisation.

In the late 3rd century AD, Germanic raids devastated Lugdunensis Secunda, as the modern area of Normandy was known at the time. The Romans built a system of coastal defences known as Saxon Shore on both sides of the English Channel. The ecclesiastical province of Rouen was based on the frame of the Roman Lugdunensis Secunda, whose limits corresponded almost exactly to the future duchy of Normandy. In 406, Germanic tribes began invading from the east, followed by dispersed settlements mainly in the Pays de Bray, Pays de Caux and Vexin. As early as 487, the area between the rivers Somme and Loire came under the control of the Frankish lord Clovis.

Following the disintegration of Roman power in northern Gaul, the region that would later become Normandy passed under the control of the Franks. By the sixth and seventh centuries it was integrated into the Merovingian and later Carolingian realms. Large rural estates, episcopal sees such as Rouen, and fiscal centres marked Frankish authority. The Capitulary legislation and royal courts extended Frankish law and institutions into the area, though local aristocracies maintained significant autonomy.

From the late eighth century, Scandinavian raiders targeted the coasts of northern Gaul. Viking fleets exploited the navigability of the Seine and its tributaries, sailing upriver to raid Paris in 845 under a leader recorded as Ragnar.

Vikings started to raid along the river Seine during the middle of the 9th century. The fiefdom of Normandy was created for the Viking leader Hrólfr, known in Medieval Latin as Rollo. The name Normandy reflects Rollo's Viking (Norseman) origins.

Aside from the conquest of England and the subsequent invasions of Wales and Ireland, the Normans expanded into other areas. Norman families, such as that of Tancred of Hauteville, Rainulf Drengot and Guimond de Moulins played important parts in the conquest of southern Italy and the Crusades.

Over the tenth century the Scandinavian newcomers gradually merged with the Frankish population. Rollo's baptism and the establishment of a Norman episcopate symbolized Christianization, while intermarriage and bilingualism facilitated cultural assimilation. By the mid-eleventh century the dukes of Normandy commanded a polity that blended Scandinavian martial traditions with Frankish legal, ecclesiastical and feudal practices.

In the 1780s, the economic crisis and the crisis of the Ancien Régime struck Normandy as well as other parts of the nation, leading to the French Revolution. Bad harvests, technical progress and the effects of the Eden Agreement signed in 1786 affected employment and the economy of the province. Normans laboured under a heavy fiscal burden.

Following the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars (1792-1815), there was an economic revival that included the mechanization of textile manufacturing and the introduction of the first trains.

Also, with seaside tourism in the 19th century came the advent of the first beach resorts.

During the Second World War, following the armistice of 22 June 1940, continental Normandy was part of the German occupied zone of France. The Channel Islands were occupied by German forces between 30 June 1940 and 9 May 1945. The town of Dieppe was the site of the unsuccessful Dieppe Raid by Allied forces.

The Allies coordinated a massive build-up of troops and supplies to support a large-scale invasion of Normandy in the D-Day landings on 6 June 1944 under the code name Operation Overlord.

More information: Medieval Histories

Mont Saint Miché in Norman, Mont-Saint-Michel in English, is a small rocky island located off the coast of Normandy, famous for its spectacular medieval abbey and dramatic tides. Originally founded as a religious sanctuary in the 8th century after, according to legend, the Archangel Michael appeared to the bishop of Avranches, the site later became one of Europe's most important pilgrimage destinations.

The island is crowned by the impressive Mont-Saint-Michel Abbey, a remarkable example of Romanesque and Gothic architecture built between the 11th and 16th centuries. Over time, the abbey also served as a fortress during conflicts such as the Hundred Years' War, thanks to its strong defensive walls and strategic position.

Mont-Saint-Michel is known for having some of the highest tides in Europe. At high tide, the island appears surrounded by water, while at low tide vast sandbanks emerge around it. Because of its unique landscape and historical importance, the site was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1979. 

More information: OT Mont Saint Michel


Aprendre est un tresor ki suit son mestre partout.

Learning is a treasure that follows its master everywhere.

Norman Proverb 

Saturday, 9 May 2026

GETTING OVER A BREAKUP, HOW YOU BROKE MY HEART...

… I can tell by your eyes
That you've probably been cryin' forever
And the stars in the sky
Don't mean nothin' to you, they're a mirror

… I don't wanna talk about it
How you broke my heart
If I stay here just a little bit longer
If I stay here, won't you listen to my heart?
Oh, whoa, heart

… If I stand all alone
Will the shadow hide the color of my heart?
Blue for the tears, black for the night's
Fears the stars in the sky
Don't mean nothin' to you, they're a mirror

… I don't wanna talk about it
How you broke my heart
If I stay here just a little bit longer
If I stay here, won't you listen to my heart?
Oh, my heart

… I don't wanna talk about it
How you broke this old heart
If I stay here just a little bit longer
If I stay here, won't you listen to my heart?

Oh, my heart
My heart
Oh, my heart


Lyrics are coming to you all the time. 
I get inspiration in the middle of the night.

Rod Stewart