2016年6月6日月曜日

フン族

Hurrah! No Hun name for me, the future British king
Nicholas Hellen, Social Affairs Editor

June 5 2016, 12:01am, The Sunday Times

The Queen’s uncle revealed his delight at the royal family “abolishing the Hun” surname in a letter that has emerged almost a century after they adopted the name Windsor to play down their German roots.

Writing to a trusted friend ahead of a royal proclamation that dropped the name Saxe-Coburg-Gotha in July 1917, the future Edward VIII , then serving in France as a 23-year-old staff officer, said: “What a splendid thing abolishing the Hun name in my family and everyone must be very pleased.”

Edward’s letter, dated June 29, 1917, was addressed to Sir Bryan Godfrey-Faussett, a naval aide-de-camp
http://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/hurrah-no-hun-name-for-me-the-future-british-king-gknpstcxt

20th-century use in reference to Germans

On 27 July 1900, during the Boxer Rebellion in China, Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany gave the order to act ruthlessly towards the rebels: "Mercy will not be shown, prisoners will not be taken. Just as a thousand years ago, the Huns under Attila won a reputation of might that lives on in legends, so may the name of Germany in China, such that no Chinese will even again dare so much as to look askance at a German."[114]
The term "Hun" from this speech was later used for the Germans by British propaganda during World War I. The comparison was helped by the spiked Pickelhaube helmet worn by German forces until 1916, which would be reminiscent of images depicting ancient Hun helmets. This usage, emphasising the idea that the Germans were barbarians, was reinforced by Allied propaganda throughout the war. The French songwriter Theodore Botrel described the Kaiser as "an Attila, without remorse", launching "cannibal hordes".[115]

The usage of the term "Hun" to describe Germans resurfaced during World War II. For example, Winston Churchill 1941 said in a broadcast speech: "There are less than 70,000,000 malignant Huns, some of whom are curable and others killable, most of whom are already engaged in holding down Austrians, Czechs, Poles and the many other ancient races they now bully and pillage."[116] Later that year Churchill referred to the invasion of the Soviet Union as "the dull, drilled, docile brutish masses of the Hun soldiery, plodding on like a swarm of crawling locusts."[117] During this time American President Franklin D. Roosevelt also referred to the German people in this way, saying that an Allied invasion into Southern France would surely "be successful and of great assistance to Eisenhower in driving the Huns from France."[118] Nevertheless, its use was less widespread than in the previous war. British and American World War II troops more often used the term "Jerry" or "Kraut" for their German opponents.


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6 件のコメント:

匿名 さんのコメント...

http://www5.tok2.com/home2/okunouso/0210.htm

少し前に見つけたサイト面白かったので貼っときますねw

匿名 さんのコメント...

アベシンゾーはパールハーバーで毛〆インシデントすべき

匿名 さんのコメント...

ケルン大聖堂
都庁

ドM

GABRIEL さんのコメント...

調べてた途中のw
有難うございましたw

匿名 さんのコメント...

YouTubeで昔のヨーロッパのポップス検索してたら、ジンギスカンが出てきて、このエントリを思い出しました。
子供の頃、なんで白人さんがモンゴル人の事を楽しそうに歌ってるんだろう?と思っていたのを覚えています。
ヨーロッパでフン族と言えば、ハンガリーとフィンランドと思ってましたが、ドイツもそうだったんですね。
そういえば、ドイツにはルビンスタインという名前があるんでしたっけ。
団長さんのおかげでまた一つ子供の頃からの謎と疑問が解けました。ありがとうございます。

色の謎解きを、そろそろ教えていただきたいな~と思って います。(厚かましくてごめんなさい)
フン族のルーツは黄色、日本は青かなぁ…と自分では考えてます。
歴史の謎解き、気長に期待してます。いつもありがとうございます。

匿名 さんのコメント...

パラスがクリクリ頭をわしゃっと掴むの図
弓を持ってるし、、
といっても弓は他にもあるのでどうしよう

一方はフランキスカに見えるんですよね
いろいろ混じって分からないので
Richard 1 (といっても Sans-Peur) が持ってらっしゃるようだし、、
たぶん団長さん分かっていらっしゃるあのドラマで
Richard 3 が構えてたのも斧でした
ということで強引に繋げてみました