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Bertrand du Guesclin
Bertrand du Guesclin: The Black Dog of Brittany IN the main square of the Breton town of Dinan there...
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Branchage
The branchage: Modern methods and traditional skills help to ensure that Jersey’s hedges are k...
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Cider apples
AN apple a day may keep the doctor away, but the rhyme may not count when the apple comes in the for...
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Clameur de Haro
The Channel Islands are the only place where this Norman custom of crying for justice still survives...
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Constitutional History
Timeframe for an Island constitution 1066 Jersey becomes an English possession because it is part of...
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Corbière lighthouse
COMPARED with structures such a the Eddystone light off Plymouth or Scotland’s Bell Rock, Corb...
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David Bruce
WHO was responsible for founding the Jersey Militia? Indirectly, it was David Bruce, otherwise known...
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Don Pero Niño
IN 1403 a truce between England and France was broken when English pirates plundered merchant ships ...
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Durrell
MOUNTAIN Chickens and Livingstone’s Fruit Bats may not be species particular to Jersey but the...
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Eustace the Monk
ONE of the more colourful characters associated with 1204 and Jersey’s 800-year links with the Eng...
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Family history
People with roots in the Channel Islands live all over the world, and are often interested in tracin...
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Finance industry
THE thrifty Jerseyman, who understands the value of money, works hard and spends wisely, is an Islan...
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George Carteret
AT a time when the Island is celebrating its 800-year bond with the Crown it is appropriate to remem...
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German Occupation
For nearly five years, Jersey was under German rule and, along with the rest of the Channel Islands,...
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Giant cabbage
FIELDS of giant cabbages are not something you often see in Jersey any more, but a century ago they ...
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Glass church
THE exterior of St Matthew’s Church at Millbrook scarcely merits a second glance. Its rectilin...
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Gorey Harbour
THE beach has been used for loading cargo since at least the Middle Ages. In 1685 Dumaresq wrote tha...
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Granite
JERSEY is not exclusively a granite island, but the masses of this hard crystalline rock dominate th...
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Harry Vardon
‘Don’t play too much golf. Two rounds a day are plenty.’ It may well have been thi...
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Howard Davis
A FLOWER garden, playground, concert hall and sun-trap, Howard Davis Park is the one slice of quiet ...
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Hundred Years War
THE Hundred Years War between England and France put the Channel Islands in the front line of a conf...
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Jèrriais
For 1,000 years Jersey has had a language of its own. Known to anglophones as Jersey Norman-French a...
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Jersey flag
THE JERSEY flag is as much a mystery as it is a cause for debate and disagreement. Once referred to ...
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Jersey Royals
IT was just a meat and two veg dinner round at farmer Hugh de la Haye’s house, and it made his...
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La Cotte
IF you stand on the headland overlooking Ouaisné today you will enjoy a fine view of sands stretchi...
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La Hougue Bie
FOR generation after generation, the people of Jersey gazed at the strange mound rising abruptly fro...
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Legends
Pictures of ghosts and witches are easily conjured up in Jersey. The ancient lanes overhung with veg...
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Lillie Langtry
Emilie Charlotte Le Breton may have been born in Jersey in 1853 and buried in St Saviour’s chu...
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Maistre Wace
IN the Royal Square, near the Old Library, is a plaque commemorating one of the first Jerseymen who ...
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Napoleonic defences
SCATTERED around the coast of the Island are a series of towers which once protected Jersey’s shor...
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Orchid Foundation
TUCKED away down a side road near Victoria Village is the Eric Young Orchid Foundation, an instituti...
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Ormers
IN California they are called abalone, in New Zealand paua, in South Africa perlemoen and in Japan a...
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Parishes
JERSEY’S 12 parishes date back almost a millennium and are a defining characteristic of the Is...
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Philippe de Carteret
THE civil strife between the houses of Lancaster and York known as the Wars of the Roses did not lea...
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Railways
TODAY there are only old bridges and nature walks left to remind Islanders of the steam trains that ...
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Railway walk
IN the United Kingdom, where the railway line closures begun in the 1960s by Dr Richard Beeching hav...
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Royal Mace
DESPITE taking the great-est pride in its individuality, its high level of independence and its sepa...
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Surfing
THE surf has been up around Jersey for eighty years now and at one stage the Island was the surf cap...
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The Jersey Cow
Jersey seems to have been a cow-exporting Island for centuries ÷ Islanders emigrating to the Americ...
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Valleys
MOST people would say that the geography of Jersey is dominated to the exclusion of almost all else ...
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Violet Bank
BACK in the 1980s the Violet Bank, that vast area of rock, shingle and sand off the Island’s s...
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Vraic
THE Jersey Royal potato and the once-famous Jersey tomato offer ample proof that the land of this Is...
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Wonders
THERE is one traditional form of Jersey food that no summer fair would be complete without ÷ the Je...
The Queen's Diamond Jubilee
JEP Jubilee Editions
Saturday 2 June: Guide to Celebrations
Wednesday 6 June: Souvenir of Events
View The Queen in Jersey supplement
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