You'er wrong, my ancestors had no land claim. They just farmed the land for the king or other ruling elite of the time. They were ignorant farmers for hundreds of years, they did learn the art of battle from the romans. All I was siting was the "Magna Carta"sorry, I didn't include it, hence your confusion. At least your ancestor got a land claim, problem is "William" was truly a bastard, his lies apparently were legendary as well as his ruthlessness no one wants to remember or were at the time to frightened of the boy king.Typical that you change the narrative of your post from how land was taken from your ancestors to "william" being a bad guy. Land that wasn't "theirs" but the kings in the first place.
Three police officers ended up being rescued by a group of suspected drug traffickers they were chasing at sea on Friday after their boats collided off the coast of Spain
https://www.scotusblog.com/case-files/cases/allen-v-cooper/Yo ho ho and ... Hey wait a minute... Hold on there that belongs to the State!
http://ipjournal.law.wfu.edu/2019/0...-court-blackbeards-law-and-modern-day-piracy/
Here in Georgia basically anything underwater belongs to the GA Dept. of Natural Resouces. Logs, stumps, shipwrecks, artifacts, you name it. 2 guys hauled up some cannons and tried to give them to a museum some time back and the DNR tried to send them to the State Penitentiary for it.
China has a message for “South Park”: You will respect their authoritah!
After Comedy Central aired an episode of the animated series that chided Hollywood for fearing Chinese censors, that country responded by stripping any mention of the show from internet providers and streaming services there.
A Japanese student of ninja history who handed in a blank paper was given top marks - after her professor realised the essay was written in invisible ink.
The name also made more sense to consumers back then, as corn was more known as feed for livestock, as opposed to the sweet corn most Americans are familiar with today.