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Old Saturday, September 22nd, 2007
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Default Re: End of Belgium should be a warning to Gordon

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dr Fred View Post
I am sick of hearing from ignorant Brits that Belgium has no history, as if the soil we call Belgium and the people we call Belgians appeared magically in 1830 out of nowhere. Of course, Belgium as a factice nation is no significant and has no history since it is barely two centuries old, but Belgium is an ARTIFICIAL country (and the people inhabiting it are no BELGIANS) made up of centuries old cultures... and this is hard for Brits to figure out, since their countries are naturally delimited by sea and cannot technically be "artifical", they have no notion of what is an "artificial nation"... (Great Britain didn't suddenly merge from the sea, if you know what I mean)...
That's a very good point.
For a "British" person of all people to brand another country as "artifical" is irony taken to the extreme. This is the nation which somehow manages to have four national football teams.

What a bizarre little oddity it is, and for it to brand anywhere else as "artificial" can only be attributed to that peculiar English sense of humour.
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The traditions of the Irish people are the oldest of any race in Europe north and west of the Alps, and they themselves are the longest settled on their own soil
- Edmund Curtis (A History of Ireland: From Earliest Times to 1922)

The Irish are one of the most ancient nations that I know of at this end of the world, and are from as mighty a race as the world ever brought forth.
For it is certain that Ireland hath had the use of letters very anciently and long before England; that they had letters anciently is nothing doubtful, for the Saxons of England are said to have their letters and learning, and learned men, from the Irish.
- Edmund Spenser (writer, and British Government Official in Ireland, AD 1596).

The renaissance began in Ireland seven hundred years before it was known in Italy. And Armagh, the ecclesiastical capital of Ireland, was at one time the metropolis of civilisation.
- Arsene Darmesteter, Professor of Old French and Literature

Ireland can indeed lay claim to a great past; she can not only boast of having been the birthplace and abode of high culture in the fifth and sixth centuries . . . but also of having made strenous efforts in the seventh and up to the tenth century to spread her learning among the German and Romance peoples, thus forming the actual fountain of our present continental civilisation.
- Heinrich Zimmer, Professor of Celtic and Sanskrit, Member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences
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