2017年3月7日火曜日

「森友」いわゆる「Les amis de Forest」の純子さん
















神戸女学院は表向きは米国系プロテスタントですが・・・




Jessé de Forest (1576 – October 22, 1624) was the leader of a group of Walloon Huguenots who fled Europe due to religious persecutions. They emigrated to the New World, where he planned to found New-Belgium.
Jessé de Forest was born in Avesnes (County of Hainaut, now Nord, France). The family name originated from the village of Forest in the canton of Landrecies near Avesnes. (A Sports Illustrated article incorrectly claims[1] that Jessé was a son of the French king Henri IV.) Around 1609 he left Avesnes for Sedan and Montcornet before settling in Leiden, the Netherlands.
In Leiden, he moved to obtain the right to emigrate with his own and other Walloon families to the New World. During his stay, he also met Pilgrim Fathers, future passengers of the Mayflower. De Forest served with Prince Maurice of Nassau as a lieutenant and captain.[2]
On February 5, 1621, Jessé de Forest sent a round robin petition, to Dudley Carleton, 1st Viscount Dorchester, English ambassador to The Hague. It applied for permission to settle about fifty Walloon and French Huguenot families that planned to follow the Puritans to America (then called the West Indies) in Virginia. De Forest asked to dispose over a territory of eight English miles radius. Known as the Round Robin, this document is now preserved in the British Public Record Office. On August 11, 1621, the Virginia Company gave an agreement in principle, but raised some restrictions. The worst one was the refusal to allow the settlers to dwell together in one autonomous colony. De Forest declined this proposition.

New-Belgium

It was de Forest's desire to establish a Colony in the New World, so that the Walloons could practice their Reformed Protestant Christianity without persecution. He then sought permission from the Dutch to establish a colony in what is now New York City. He was granted permission. He assembled approximately 60 families of Walloons and Dutch Protestants for the settlement in New Amsterdam, New Netherland. The first permanent settlers would arrive in New Amsterdam during May 1624 (without de Forest).
The foundation of the Dutch West India Company in 1621 had given rise to multiple opportunities. In 1581, Philip II of Spain had prohibited commerce within his realm with Dutch ships, including in Brazil. Since the Dutch had invested large sums in financing sugar production in the Brazilian Northeast, a conflict began for control of the area. Proposing his services and those of his fellow countrymen to the Dutch West India Company, de Forest informed them that a group of families practicing various trades had the opportunity to emigrate to America. The States of The Netherlands, realizing the importance of such an opening for future colonization, immediately consulted the Directors of the Company, who were meeting in The Hague.
On August 27, 1622, after efforts delivered by Willem Usselincx and Jessé de Forest, the latter finally received the authorization to emigrate with other families to the West Indies. Left on reconnaissance for the coasts of Guyana in 1623, Jessé de Forest died on the Oyapock River bank (present borderline between Brazil and French Guyana), on October 22, 1624. His daughter Rachel (who married Jean de la Montagne, a high class New Amsterdamer) and his sons Isaac and Henri and other family members joined New-Belgium ten years later in the territories surrounding the future New York City.[3]
Walloon Monument

There is a monument in the Battery Park section of lower Manhattan, New York City called the Walloon Settlers Memorial. That monument was given to the City of New York by the Belgian Province of Hainaut in honor of the inspiration of Jessé de Forest in founding New York City. Baron de Cartier de Marchienne, representing the government and Albert I, King of Belgium, presented the monument to Mayor John F. Hylan for the City of New York on May 18, 1924. There is also a monument in Jessé de Forest's honor in Avesnes, France, the College Jesse de Forest and Jesse de Forest Avenue.[4]










ロマカトで反英の汚乱田ラインなんですよ。(爆wwwwwwwwwwww

4 件のコメント:

匿名 さんのコメント...

>純子

これを隠蔽すべくなのか「戸籍上は籠池真美」と誤誘導があちこちで?

匿名 さんのコメント...

http://choukokusha.jp/news/20140327sotuen.html

http://choukokusha.jp/_src/2014/0327/0327sotuen_c_01a.jpg



匿名 さんのコメント...

658 :名無しさん@1周年:2017/03/03(金) 06:02:47.90 ID:MFZcXjto0
神戸芦屋西宮にある私学なんてほとんどB地区で当時の心理的瑕疵物件だからな
Bに隣接する山岳地だったりして二束三文で手に入れられたことは確か

瑕疵地じゃないのは唯一神戸女学院と武庫女だけ
しかし神戸女学院は尼崎藩武家地だった岡田山を
明治維新のどさくさで薩長と徳川に反抗する外様で伊勢の海賊だった、
ヤクザの白州一郎の三田藩の九鬼が
譜代尼崎藩主松平家から脅し取った

武庫川女子だけ尼崎藩領があった鳴尾村が誘致したが
それもその尼崎藩の名残の旧制尼崎中学に反抗して飛び出した校長が設立したわけ

そこにその尼崎藩の商人の鴻池に頼むって
籠池はアホかと思う

鴻池自信は旧制尼崎中学関係ではない神戸のそのB瑕疵地に
ある私学の出身やが、やはり鴻池の苗字が

匿名 さんのコメント...

20分で終わった大阪府の調査 森友学園・理事長妻のストーカー行為が原因 : J-CASTテレビウォッチ
http://www.j-cast.com/tv/2017/03/10292758.html

2017/3/10 09:58

国有地の超格安取得をはじめ疑惑続出の学校法人「森友学園」の新設予定小学校に対してきのう9日(2017年3月)、大阪府が行った現地調査が2時間のはずが20分で急きょ打ち切られた。「バタバタと帰って行ったのはなんですか、あれは」と怒りもあらわな籠池泰典理事長と、「正常な検査ができないので退出した」と言う大阪府教育庁の担当者。何が食い違ったのか。

調査は午後2時からの予定で、府の担当職員5人が10分前には校舎に入った。籠池理事長の立ち会いを待ったうえで午後2時40分過ぎから調査が始まったのだが、3時に終わってしまった。

司会の羽鳥慎一「20分間ですぐに、なんで?」

その後、報道陣の前に現れた籠池理事長は「書類は持ってきたが、原本をとは(事前に)言われていなかった」「話し合いどころじゃない」とぶちまけた。

担当者の写真、ネットにアップした理事長妻

府の担当者は打ちきりの原因を「原本」ではなく、籠池理事長の妻(幼稚園副園長)の行動をあげた。領収書をチェックする途中で籠池夫人が「マスコミに資料を出しているのはおまえやろ」と言ってガラケーで写真を撮り出したそうだ。「やめるように何回も求めたがやめなかった」という。その後、担当者の顔と名前がネットにアップされた。
20分

籠池氏の妻は旧姓森友で、実父が学園創始者。長く取材してきた平岩和之記者(大阪朝日放送からテレビ朝日出向)は「感情の激しい人で、保護者を罵倒したこともある。検査で都合のわるいところをつかれたのではないかとも考えられます」と話す。

すごい人と一緒になって籠池理事長もたいへんではあるが、静かに検査を受けたらいいではないか。
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