Thank you for your analysis of the supercounty situation. A new atlas I had 
purchased 
had them instead of the counties, and here in the states we don't always get 
news bites
on this type of stuff.  I also have both Channel Islands and Isle of Man, which 
makes even 
more confusion.  I will ignore the SC for now.
Rich in LA CA

-----Original Message-----
From: Alastair Lack <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Feb 12, 2005 1:06 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Historical Events in Timelines

Well, Rich,

I've not bothered with the new supercounties, because they are sufficiently 
new to have little historical significance. Let's wait a few years to see if 
they stick. The politicians are always playing silly b's with these things.

But on a little aside to that, there seems to be some confusion about the 
names of the collections of countries - England, Scotland and the 
Principality of Wales; those three make up Great Britain. Then if one adds 
Northern Ireland, one has the United Kingdom (of Great Britain and Northern 
Ireland). Add the Republic of Ireland, and we have the geographical unit of 
the British Isles. I think that Legacy's Geographical database seems unclear 
on those points.

As far as going back earlier than 1300 is concerned, my line has only a 
string of names without detail, and as such wasn't as interesting as the 
later stuff.


Warm regards ;-)

Alastair

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Rich from LA CA
To: [email protected]
Sent: Saturday, February 12, 2005 4:09 AM
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Historical Events in Timelines


I am not flaming you, good idea.
1. Children start learning linearly (?) (crawling one direction) then 
planelike (turning left or right)
then space-like (up and down).  They don't learn graphing until about 10 
years.
2.  The timeline, 'british version' gives good ideas. For my USA stuff, I 
have timelines in every
county location for the genealogies of the counties. Similarly, I have 
considered changing (AKA)
the English counties into the NEW supercounties.  But are the new records 
tied to the new or old counties?
3.  I would think that you could bring it down to 1066, or 800 
(Charlemagne). But before 1500, IMHO only noblity/royalty exists in any 
quantity, and these people are the entries.
Rich in LA CA 


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Rich in LA
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