A. The simple question came from fank52 and the equally simple answer, Henry VII, came from AdminMan. Beerman expanded it with: Henry VII also known as Henry Tudor. He was married to Elizabeth of
00:00 Fri 08th Jun 2001A. In answer to Gutlord1's question, in many ways it was an earlier re-run of the Cold War. It was to stop what the West perceived as the advance of Russia. Q. Where was it fought A. The Crimean
00:00 Mon 12th Mar 2001A. Richard I (1157-99), son of Henry II. Thanks to crjoy for the question. Q. So how did he get the name A. The name of Richard Plantagenet, the warrior king, was earned through bravery, mainly in
00:00 Mon 12th Mar 2001 A. On 15 February 1971 - known as D Day (for Decimal Day). The United Kingdom adopted a decimal currency system with 100 pence to the pound sterling. This replaced the pound, shilling and pence
00:00 Mon 12th Mar 2001A. Joan of Arc (1412-1431), Jeanne d'Arc, also called the Maid of Orleans, a patron saint of France and a national heroine, led the resistance to the English invasion of France in the Hundred Years
00:00 Thu 08th Mar 2001 Q. Is there evidence that Vikings got to North America before Columbus A. Yes' plenty. In 982AD, Eric the Red was outlawed from Iceland and exiled to a great land to the north. Eric spent
00:00 Thu 08th Mar 2001A. Printing - a name used for several processes by which words, pictures, or designs are reproduced on paper, fabrics, metal, or other suitable materials. These processes consist of making numerous
00:00 Thu 08th Mar 2001 Thanks to Smartboy for his question and Marco for the thorough answer. Let's go into a bit more detail, though. The seven wonders of the ancient world, are: 1. The Great Pyramid of Giza This
00:00 Thu 01st Mar 2001A. This question has come from Jim Gregory. Sorry Jim ' wrong king. It was Henry I (1068-1135), William the Conqueror's youngest and ablest son (a stern critic of excess in others), who died from
00:00 Thu 01st Mar 2001asked Jim Gregory. Q. First of all what is cholera A. Cholera is an illness caused by a bacterium called vibria cholerae. It infects people's intestines, causing diarrhoea, vomiting and cramps
00:00 Thu 01st Mar 2001Boudica or Boadicea was British Queen and ruler of the Iceni - a tribe occupying East Anglia. She was married to Prasutagus and with him she ruled over the Iceni, but under Roman Authority. When was
00:00 Fri 23rd Feb 2001By Oliver Goggi 'What was the main cause of Germany's defeat in the Second World War ' asked Samri. Following are a summary of reasons why the Allies won the war. Firstly, and probably most
00:00 Mon 26th Feb 2001A. The Minotaur was the 'love child' of an affair between Queen Pasiphae and a bull. Pasiphae, wife of Minos King of Crete, fell in love with a bull that should have been scarificed to the gods, and
00:00 Mon 26th Feb 2001by Steve Cunningham RUSSIAN Revolution It's the staple diet of all political history students. The Chinese Revolution That's different. Press AssociationChina, at 1,243 million, has the
00:00 Thu 15th Feb 2001by Steve Cunningham ARTHUR, King of the Britons
our greatest hero. But did he exist The British king appears in a cycle of medieval romances as the sovereign of a knightly fellowship of the
00:00 Mon 12th Feb 2001by Steve Cunningham ON 27 February, Britain goes flipping crazy. And it's all a bit of a mystery to foreigners. For this is Pancake Day, an almost-baffling festival that has its roots in deep
00:00 Mon 12th Feb 2001by Steve Cunningham Londonstills.comTHE VICTORIANS thought it was the greatest building operation since the pyramids. The London Underground, in the news after transport unions called strikes
00:00 Thu 08th Feb 2001 1860-1869 Metropolitan and Metropolitan District lines open. 1880-1889 Extensions out to the north-west and south-west suburbs. 1890-1899 City & South London Railway. Waterloo & City opened
00:00 Thu 08th Feb 2001by Steve Cunningham ON 14 February many lucky people will receive a card adorned with a big red heart, filled with romantic words. And all in the name of a saint called Valentine. But who was
00:00 Thu 08th Feb 2001by Steve Cunningham THOUSANDS of people braved the biting wind and rain to see Queen Victoria's final resting place, 100 years after her burial. Lengthy queues gathered at the royal mausoleum at
00:00 Mon 05th Feb 2001