Jump to content

Talk:Charles II: Difference between revisions

From British Culture
Pankratz (talk | contribs)
Created page with "Derogatory statements like "Whatever troubles or embarrassments affected him, he left the anxiety and care to his ministers and council and just enjoyed himself with his experiments, mistresses, dogs, and perpetual fun" need substantiation either by quotes from historical documents or reference to secondary literature."
 
Pankratz (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
Derogatory statements like "Whatever troubles or embarrassments affected him, he left the anxiety and care to his ministers and council and just enjoyed himself with his experiments, mistresses, dogs, and perpetual fun" need substantiation either by quotes from historical documents or reference to secondary literature.
Derogatory statements like "Whatever troubles or embarrassments affected him, he left the anxiety and care to his ministers and council and just enjoyed himself with his experiments, mistresses, dogs, and perpetual fun" need substantiation either by quotes from historical documents or reference to secondary literature.
"Charles got the nickname ‘Merry Monarch’ by Clarendon’ son, Laurence, First Lord of the Treasury": really? source?

Revision as of 20:36, 20 December 2022

Derogatory statements like "Whatever troubles or embarrassments affected him, he left the anxiety and care to his ministers and council and just enjoyed himself with his experiments, mistresses, dogs, and perpetual fun" need substantiation either by quotes from historical documents or reference to secondary literature.

"Charles got the nickname ‘Merry Monarch’ by Clarendon’ son, Laurence, First Lord of the Treasury": really? source?