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POLYNESIAN PORK CENTENNIAL
Servings: 6 servings

6 pork chops
1 can pineapple chunks in juice
1 onion --, chopped
1/4 cup celery leaves --, minced
1 garlic clove --, minced
12 prunes --, pitted
2 tsp soy sauce
1/2 tsp marjoram
1 cup celery -- diagonally, sliced
1 cup rice
1 tsp ginger

Directions: 1. trim excess fat from chops; lightly grease heavy skillet wtih fat from 1 chop. brown chops on both sides; drain off excess fat. season lightly with salt and pepper. 2. drain pineapple (medium can, use sweetened or in its own juice as you desire). combine the juice, onion, celery leaves, garlic, prunes, soy sauce and marjoram. pour over chops. simmer, covered, for 20-30 minute (depending on thickness of chops). 3 prepare rice according to package directions; add ginger, stirring to blend. serve pork over rice. recipe by : jo anne merrill
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He was the son of Robert, Duke of Normandy, his mother, Herleva, the daughter of a tanner of Falaise. In 1035 William's father Robert, Duke of Normandy, went on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, in which he died. Before starting the pilgrimage, he presented to the nobles his seven year old child demanding their allegiance. "He is little", the father said, "but he will grow, and, if God please, he will mend." William, after a period of anarchy, became the ruler of Normandy in his father's place at the age of nine. William had a youth of clean life and of much natural piety, while the years of storm and stress through which he passed gave him an endurance of character which lasted to his life's end. During the time of anarchy in Normandy he became a skilled military leader and defeated his enemies, uniting his duchy. Once he began fighting, rumor has it that he never lost a battle.
In 1047 a serious rebellion of nobles occurred, and William with the aid of King Henry of France, gained a great victory at Val-ès-Dunes, near Caen. Which led to the capture of the two strong castles of Alençon and Domfront. Using this as his base of operations, the young duke, in 1054 made himself master of the province of Maine and became the most powerful vassal of the French Crown, able on occasion to bid defiance to the king himself. William even married Matilda, the daughter of the Earl of Flanders, in 1053,in spite of the papal prohibition.
In 1066 when his claim to the English throne was threatened by Harold Godwinson. Due to the fact that Harold Godwinson overlooked the dead king's wishes. Edward the Confessor, sworn his loyalty to William of Normandy when he died not to Harold. Harold Godwinson promptly had himself proclaimed king. It was only a matter of months before William, Duke of the large and powerful duchy of Normandy in France, paid Harold a visit to bring to his remembrance his own claim to the throne. William raised an army of Normans by promising them land and wealth when he came into his rightful kingship. October 14th 1066 he and William fought at the famous battle of Hastings. William and his army of Normans came, saw, and conquered. True to his promise to his fellow warriors, William systematically replaced the English nobility with Norman barons and noblemen who took control of the land, the people, and the government. As before, they were given rights to build castles for the protection of their families and for the enforcement of their laws of feudal lordship.
Having at last reduced the country to submission, William set to work with statesmanlike deliberation to establish his government on a firm and lasting basis. After several years of suppressing revolts by Saxons, William, in an effort to determine the expanse of his new domain, ordered a survey of England. The result was a comprehensive two-volume manuscript which came to be known as the Domesday Book. Named because in the minds of the citizens, this census was not unlike that which is being compiled for the final judgment, the Day of Doom. These volumes still exist today and you can see them, at the museum section of the public record office in London. Such official documents as Shakespeare's will, Francis Drake's report of his defeat of the Spanish Armada, and even a letter from George Washington to King George III can be found in the Domesday Book. Inspite of heavy taxation, the new government was not altogether unpopular, for the Conqueror had confirmed "the laws of Edward", and the people looked to him as their natural protector against feudal oppression. The least acceptable part of the Norman regime was probably the enforcement of the cruel forest laws.
William the Conqueror's reign could be called one of war and consolidation. Yet he carried out such wise reform. His appointments of bishops were excellent and the separation of the secular and spiritual courts was a measure of supreme importance. Perhaps it took such a strong and brutal warrior to bring about the changes necessary to unite the kingdom. Certainly nothing like the Domesday census would have been attempted by the Anglo-Saxon kings. But for all his success in England, William was faced with defending his lands in Normandy and it was during one of those battles that he was badly wounded. His death in 1087 meant the united kingdoms of Normandy and England would be split once again, and in time his own offspring would be the cause for further division.1.)The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XV
William the Conqueror
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/15642c.htm

2.)http://www.fastlane.net/homepages/greatexp/monscr08.htm






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