Angevin (IPA: ) is the name applied to the residents of Anjou, a former province of the Kingdom of France, as well as to the residents of Angers. It is also applied to three distinct medieval dynasties which originated as counts (from 1360, dukes) of the western French province of Anjou (of which angevin is the adjectival form), but later came to rule far greater areas including England, Ireland, Hungary, Poland, Naples and Sicily, and Jerusalem (see Angevin Empire). The first of these Angevin dynasties ruled England in some form or another from the reign of Henry II, beginning in 1154, until the House of Tudor came to power when Richard III fell at the Battle of Bosworth Field in 1485.
Plantagenet
The original House of Anjou was the dynasty established by the viscounts and counts of Angers at the beginning of the
10th century. It became extinct in the male line in 1060, but was inherited through a daughter by the House of Gâtinais, which came to rule both Anjou and
Maine by the early 12th century. This became the first royal Angevin dynasty, known from the
12th century as the
Plantagenet dynasty in England, came (with its
Lancastrian and
Yorkist branches) to rule
Jerusalem (1131–1205),
England (
1154–
1485),
Normandy (
1144–
1204,
1346–
1360 and
1415–
1450), and
Gascony and
Guyenne (
1153–
1453), but lost Anjou itself to the French crown in
1206.
The name "Plantagenet" is derived from the broom flower (planta genesta). It originated with Geoffrey of Anjou, father of King Henry II of England, because he adopted the flower as his emblem, often wearing a sprig of it.
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BBC News | UK | World EditionBrown holding bank crisis talks Tue, 07 Oct 2008 16:20:17 -0000
Gordon Brown is meeting Bank of England Governor Mervyn King to discuss plans to stabilise the banking system.
Officer fears repeat of Menezes Tue, 07 Oct 2008 13:57:44 -0000
An innocent person could be killed by police again, a senior officer tells the inquest into the death of Jean Charles de Menezes.
Mosley plans European Court bid Tue, 07 Oct 2008 16:10:32 -0000
Motorsport boss Max Mosley will take his breach of privacy case to the European Court, he tells the BBC.
Cage fighters 'behind £53m raid' Tue, 07 Oct 2008 17:02:40 -0000
Two cage fighters masterminded the £53m robbery on a Securitas depot in Kent before fleeing to Morocco, a court hears.
M40 killers 'waited for victim' Tue, 07 Oct 2008 14:48:30 -0000
The killers of a biker shot dead as he rode home from a festival had lain in wait until a target came by, a court hears.
Scotland hit by rail staff strike Tue, 07 Oct 2008 13:25:21 -0000
Rail disruption hits Scottish commuters as signal workers walk out in the first of two 24-hour strikes.
The Economist: BritainEducation policy: Swedish lessons Thu, 02 Oct 2008 12:11:45 -0000
The Tories assume the mantle of social democracyTHE word “Sweden” was much in evidence when the shadow schools secretary, Michael Gove, addressed the Tory party conference on September 30th. That country’s free-market education reforms, he said, would immediately be copied in England were his party to gain power. In the 14 years since Sweden’s government started paying private schools to educate children at the taxpayer’s expense, 900 new schools, teaching 15% of all children, have opened. Mr Gove conjured up visions of innovative entrants “selling themselves to parents” and driving up standards to previously unimagined heights.The Swedish precedent is a gift to the Tories. They have been keen for some time to open up the supply side in schooling: their 2005 manifesto promised a “voucher” equal to the cost of a state education to any private school willing to charge parents no more than that. But the policy seemed other-worldly, as the likely value of the voucher was less than the fees at any existing private school. Now that it has been reframed as a mechanism for creating new schools, the fact that it has worked elsewhere makes it seem less implausible. And the example of social-democratic Sweden moves it out of the realm of swivel-eyed free-marketry and into that of cuddly, compassionate New Conservatism. ...
Supermarket finance: A mortgage from Tesco? Thu, 02 Oct 2008 12:11:45 -0000
A retailer branches outMORTGAGE banks may be falling like ninepins, but that does not matter to Tesco, Britain’s leading supermarket chain. “Mortgages are looking quite attractive as a line of business,” said an official this week, as the firm reported buoyant half-year profits to August 23rd. Later this month Tesco expects to take full ownership of Tesco Personal Finance (TPF), its 11-year-old joint venture with RBS, a retail bank, and has big plans for it. TPF now has around 5.6m customer accounts with deposits, savings, loans and credit cards. It made a relatively modest GBP71m profit over the past six months, but wants to increase that, along with profits from other services including telecommunications, to GBP1 billion a year. Tesco has the freedom to expand into banking, touting its well-known brand, because its main business is thriving, even in tough markets. Global retail sales grew by 14% and profits by 11% compared with the same period last year. It has seen particularly strong growth in Malaysia and Poland, and rapid expansion (but a small loss) in China. Even in its embattled British home market (which accounts for over 70% of its business), turnover in its seasoned stores rose by 3.7%. Its upmarket rival Marks & Spencer, by contrast, has seen a 6.1% drop in sales over the past quarter. ...
Mortgage malaise: Closer and closer to home Thu, 02 Oct 2008 12:11:45 -0000
As fear stalks the markets, the government may have to do more to steady nervesLITTLE more than a year after the run on Northern Rock, which was halted only by an unprecedented Treasury guarantee to the mortgage bank’s depositors, the government had to contemplate a similar drastic step this week to prop up Britain’s banking system. The renewed crisis shows how widely mistrust in banks has spread over the past 12 months. And it reflects growing anxiety about the exposure of British mortgage lenders to possible crippling losses on risky loans as the economy falters, the property market falls and borrowers get into trouble. The sense of foreboding intensified during the week despite the government’s firm action over the weekend to deal with Bradford & Bingley, another troubled mortgage lender. In contrast with the dithering over Northern Rock, ministers acted decisively to forestall another retail run and to ensure that deposits were placed in secure hands (see article). ...
The Conservative Party: A poisoned chalice? Thu, 02 Oct 2008 12:11:45 -0000
A return to power still looks likely for the Tories, if not entirely attractiveAT MOST of their annual conferences over the past decade, senior Conservatives have had to feign jollity in the face of dismal electoral prospects. So they must have been discombobulated by instructions to do just the opposite at this year’s gathering, which took place in Birmingham from September 28th. Despite their comfortable lead in the polls, they pulled it off. Champagne receptions and celebratory speeches were ditched to avoid seeming smug at a time of economic crisis. The Tory leader, David Cameron, even gave his set-piece speech on October 1st from a lectern, calculating that his usual gambit of roaming the stage without notes would be inappropriately showy.After avoiding triumphalism, the Tories’ main objective was to show a sure touch on the economy, and here their performance was mixed. An offer to co-operate with the government provided a welcome contrast to the partisan rancour in Washington. George Osborne, the shadow chancellor, briefly returned to London during the conference for a summit with Alistair Darling, his opposite number, and Vince Cable, the Liberal Democrats’ Treasury spokesman. After a Labour Party conference that sometimes sounded a little too pleased by capitalism’s travails, the Tories stood up for the market without exonerating bankers from the charge of irresponsibility. And Mr Osborne’s long-standing refusal to promise an overall cut in taxes looks vindicated, in the face of a burgeoning fiscal deficit. ...
Bradford & Bingley: Death of a one-trick pony Thu, 02 Oct 2008 12:11:45 -0000
The regulators get it rightUNLIKE the botched nationalisation in February of Northern Rock, a troubled mortgage lender, or the forced monster merger—which could still come unstuck—of Lloyds TSB and HBOS announced on September 18th, the neat filleting of Bradford & Bingley (B&B) ten days later seemed to show Britain’s financial regulators at last on the front foot. B&B is the last of those former building societies that demutualised after a 1986 law made it possible, and became publicly listed banks. Its assets have been nationalised and its retail deposits sold to Spain’s Banco Santander.The Treasury acted under a bank-rescue law passed after Northern Rock’s nationalisation, moving as soon as the Financial Services Authority declared B&B unlikely to meet its obligations. Attempts to sell the bank in its entirety to the usual suspects had failed. But Banco Santander agreed to pay GBP612m ($1.1 billion) for GBP20 billion in retail deposits and 197 branches. This will add 2.7m customers to those of Abbey, Santander’s subsidiary since 2004, and Alliance & Leicester, another once-mutual lender that Santander acquired in July. The combined bank will have about 10% of all retail deposits, less than Lloyds TSB/HBOS and RBS. Unlike previous rescues, this one puts depositors in the hands of a foreign bank with diverse businesses in Britain, Iberia and Latin America. ...
Political parties: Hero worship Thu, 02 Oct 2008 12:11:45 -0000
How parties see themselvesTHE hero a party chooses says something about its current view of the world—but what, exactly? Margaret Thatcher walked it as the Conservative delegates’ Greatest Tory at a fringe event on September 29th organised by the Guardian. But Winston Churchill, joint saviour of the free world only about 60 years ago, edged out the Whig philosopher Edmund Burke by just one vote. Benjamin Disraeli, the deft shaper of modern Conservatism, finished fourth.A week earlier Labour chose its favourite son. James Keir Hardie, the Scottish miner who helped found the Labour Party and first led it, beat Clement Attlee (whose legacy was the welfare state) and Aneurin Bevan (ditto the NHS), to say nothing of a powerful minister, Barbara Castle. Last year the Liberal Democrats, who started the craze for identifying party greats, elected the liberal philosopher John Stuart Mill over the reforming prime minister David Lloyd George. ...
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