"Here's a bangin lil' tune about takin' on The Man!"
(Check out my Super Special Awesome Servant Compendium here)
"Here's a bangin lil' tune about takin' on The Man!"
(Check out my Super Special Awesome Servant Compendium here)
But in Rome, dinosaur bones could probably be found.
It ate all the potatoes in Britain then died
The Summer Passionlip cycle
I'm making baseless accusations and passing them off as fact, of course, which is the basis of all enduring historiography. Or more honestly, going purely off of personal experience; it seemed to me that, while William is very much the Conqueror, by the time the Hundred Years' War rolls around it doesn't really get emphasized all that much that this is less France v. England and more France. v. other French guys who happen to control England (to begin with). But I have not undertaken significant academic study of English history nor sat through whatever national history curriculum the UK mandates its students take, so I don't really have any ground to stand my joke on.
Originally Posted by Koha-ACE
Also, somewhere in the Throne of Heroes, Mercadier is crying that he wasn't chosen to serve his lord Richard in battle.![]()
"Here's a bangin lil' tune about takin' on The Man!"
(Check out my Super Special Awesome Servant Compendium here)
So which shadow is it when he's shooting projectiles out of his cape? Are those Locksley's arrows or Nimue's magic bolts?
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It's probably Locksley actually. Or Basille. The one where he slams down and makes a big water explosion would be Nimue.
He does shout out Nimue really loud when calling for her help so there's no real doubt when she's being used. He also tells Pierre to take aim when using a skill and Pelleas to support him with swords
Last edited by Daemon; December 31st, 2024 at 02:42 PM.
I don't see why Lions are unusual. They used to be native to parts of Europe like Greece, and would have been in the cultural consciousness of many parts of Europe what with Aesop's Fables that had Lions, and stories of Christians and Lions.
Arthurian Myth too had Lions, like the Yvain the Lion Knight who tamed a lion.
And of course, the wealthy would keep lions as part of their menageries. We have sample skulls of Lions dated to the late 1200s found in the Tower of London.
Because lions are not native to Britain.Too cold and it is an island.So "Three lions of England" do not make sense.
Lions were used in the Colosseum right?