Edwynn
Posts: 4105
Joined: 10/26/2008 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Lucylastic quote:
ORIGINAL: Edwynn quote:
ORIGINAL: Lucylastic Richard II of england married his bride who six...in 1396 , Catholic wedding My tolerance for stupid, is getting less and less So is mine. There were nothing but Catholics in Western Europe (or in any case England) at the time of Richard II. But the Protestants, who didn't exist at the time nor the next ~ 120 years yet would never have done such a thing, you would have us to understand. Got it. Please post where I said anything of the kind...read what I said and not what you want to think I said Aside from that, 'marrying' at an early age was common at that and even later times among royalty, as part of agreements made as settlement to current wars or in effort to avoid future hostilities, or for land/realm grabbing by inheritance. The marriages were not meant to be consummated until appropriate age, which nevertheless was a bit younger then as it is now considered to be. Henry VII's mother was 14 when she delivered him. Oh, I forgot ... that's all on the Catholics.LMNAO, its monday I understand the lack of comprehension, but my whole point was that paedophilia as we understand it to be now in the 21st century, ( as mentioned in an earlier post by another poster) was "acceptable" in the 1300s, and not just in islam, but catholicism too... for whatever reasons as you pointed out, I believe I even said, political /alliances etc etc in this post http://www.collarchat.com/fb.asp?m=4520016 but you go on with your bad ignorant self OK, so when do the ex parte and ex post facto reparations from the Catholics to the Anglicans start here, and where do you want the checks sent to? Setting fire to your strawman for not having a brain Were you to have said "Christian wedding" instead of "Catholic wedding" concerning a time when they were one and the same in England, until Henry VIII, it would have been more historically accurate and certainly more meaningful to the issue of the OP. "Catholic" has a quite different connotation today than it did in 1200 or 1500. Sorry you missed that.
< Message edited by Edwynn -- 8/12/2013 9:49:14 PM >
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