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 Sinclair, 
    What does 
"falasise" mean it the quote that you sent? 
    
    Laurel 
      
    You are correct my hurried translation was in 
    error. "Au somme d'une falasise abrupte se dressent les 
    ruines de Chateau-Galliard, forteresse edifiee par Richard Coeur de Lion au 
    retour de croisade (1196-1197)." 
      
    Guide de La Route Selection de Reader's Digest S.A Paris 
    1997 
      
    Sinclair 
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    
    
    Sent: Friday, June 11, 1999 3:40 AM 
    Subject: Hold the Fort! --Andelys  
    
  >  > I have been reading the 
    description of Richard the Lionhearted's > imprisonment in the book 
    "Eleanor of Aquitaine and the Four Kings" by Amy > 
    Kelly.  This gives almost a day by day discription of the events and at 
    no > time was Richard in French territory. Richard  was moved 
    from Trifels to > Hagenau.  Then Emperor Henry Hohenstaufen sent 
    for him to be brought to > Worms.  There followed a long 
    negotiations that involved many countries, the > Pope and even 
    Eleanor, Richard's mother came.  "All wept.  Henry of > 
    Hohenstaufen condescdnded grandly; the captive's fetters were unloosed; 
    the > ransom was conveyed; the hostages were given over, among them 
    the Archbishop > of Rouen, who had been the queen's stay in so many 
    crises, her protector on > so many journeyings; and the queen herself, 
    worn with labor and anguish, > fell weeping into the arms of 
    Coeur-de-Lion.  She wa, as she had sritten to > Pope Celestine, 
    "worn to a skeleton, a mere thing of skin and bones, the sap > 
    consumed in her veins, tears all but dried in the fountains of her 
    eyes.' > All the bystanders let their tears flow at the spectacle of 
    this aged woman, > the most astute and venerable soverign in Europe, 
    still at seventy-two a > figure of significance in the counsels of 
    men, raining her tears on the > bosom of her glorious son.  There 
    may have been in that concourse some > patriarcal bishops who 
    remembered her as the young Queen of France getting > herself and her 
    baggage wains over the Rhine in this very city of Minz a > 
    half-century before on her way to the Holy Land, for she too had been 
    signed > with the cross; for the hyounger generation the mere sight of 
    her would > evoke the airs of troubgadours' and minnesingers' sons 
    that had kept her > name alive in all the intervening time with malice 
    or with praise." >     "the queen and her son 
    accepted the invitation of the Bishop of Cologne > to spend the end of 
    the week in the capital of his diocese on their way down > the Rhine 
    to the sea.  In Cologne the prelate did hs best with suptuous > 
    banquets and valley wines.....From Cologne.....it is related that 
    after > Richard had passed out of Swabia, Henry Hohenstaufen, 
    stimulated anew by > pressures from Philip of France, repented him of 
    having so lightly delivered > his captive and sent followers to pursue 
    and overtake him; and that Philip > cooperated in this plan by placing 
    ships in the Channel to intercept the > royal party.  However 
    this may have been, the king and queen avoided all > these traps and 
    came at last to Antwerp.....Richard's admiral, Stephen of > Turnham, 
    received the travelers on the famous ship Trenchemer.....they made > 
    their way among the islands by day.....and by night for greater comfort 
    and > security lay upon a great galley that came out from Rye.  
    On March 12 ...the > ships bore into the harbor of Sandwich. > 
     > So he was never in France at that time.  But then in 1196 he 
    returns to > build a fortress upon a peerless height that should 
    surpass anything yet > seen in Europe.  A very mountain of 
    defiance to obstruct the valley of the > Seine by river and by 
    road.  2/3 of the distance, as the crow flies from > Paris to the 
    sea, the river described a deep loop, washing the chalky cliffs > of 
    an abrupt eminence that offered a panoramic survey of the whole region 
    to > its remote horizons.  This height, the "Rock of 
    Andelys," had not escaped > the appraising eye of Philip, but it 
    loomed a few leagues beyond his reach. >     The 
    Angevin genius for building stirred mightly in Coeur-de-Lion as he > 
    reconnoitered this matchless site.  >From the days of his earliest 
    memory he > had prowled about the massy ancient piles reared by 
    Foulques the Black, > William the Conqueror, Henry Beauclerc, Geoffrey 
    the Fair and Henry > Fitz-Empress (Richard's father) on the heights of 
    Loches, Falaise, Chinon, > and many another dominating lookout.  
    In the Latin Kingdom he had explored > with Amazement and delight the 
    newest military construction of the TEMPLARS > and hospitallers at 
    least in Margab and Acre, Ramleh and Ascalon. >     
    (info on the construction)  "Behold," exclaimed the architect 
    king to > his amazed liege men at the end of 1196. "how fair my 
    daughter has grown in > a single year."  With raillery he 
    named the pile "Chateau Gaillard.  Saucy > Castle, or 
    Petulant Castle, it has been called, though the English hardly > 
    renders the mocking challenge of the French. >  > ====== > 
        The town of Gisors is nearby and this is said about it. 
    "Gisors, where > once the vast elm had marked the place of parley 
    between Capetian kings and > the Norman dukes" >  > 
    Laurel >  >  > [ This is the Sinclair family discussion 
    list, sinclair@jump.net. > [ To 
    get off or on the list, see http://www.mids.org/sinclair/list.html 
 
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