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The Shadow of Great Britain

“Next, we have the most noble recipient of the Order of the Garter, the Grand Cross of Saint Michael and Saint George, the Grand Cross of the Bath, the Victoria Cross and the lower grades of Knighthood, the leader of the anti-colonial movement, the bell-ringer of the East India Company, the hero of the Crimean War, a Fellow of the Royal Society, a lifelong dear friend of literary giants such as Dickens and Great Dumas, a steadfast supporter of scientific luminaries like Faraday and Darwin, having served as assistant under-secretary, deputy under-secretary, and permanent under-secretary in departments of the Home Office and the Navy Department of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, the inaugural Cabinet Secretary and head of the civil service, the first graduate and most distinguished alumnus of our school. Please welcome Sir Arthur Hastings to deliver a speech on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the University of London.” Arthur's gaze swept across the crowd before him, looking at the young faces and murmured, “Agares, what do you think I should say?” The Red Devil's wraith hovered behind him, saliva almost dribbling from the corner of his mouth, “Look at these ignorant souls; they still worship you as a hero. Why not say something they'd like to hear?” Arthur took a deep breath and let out a deafening roar, “Oxford is a bunch of whores' bastards!” “Oh!!!!” The audience erupted into thunderous applause. “Cambridge is the same!” he added immediately. The applause grew even more fervent... (The protagonist, possessed by a devil, travels through 19th-century Britain in a world without magic)

Chasing Time · Fantasía
Sin suficientes valoraciones
351 Chs

Chapter 76: The Return of the Hero

On the deck of the Conqueror, General Cordington passionately introduced to Arthur the city emerging on the horizon and its long history.

It was indeed the base of the Channel Fleet and the oldest naval base in the history of Great Britain—Portsmouth Naval Base.

As the birthplace of the Royal Navy, Portsmouth Naval Base carried a fine tradition of foreign combat.

Even during the Roman Empire, Portsmouth had already been established as a fortress, and Parchester Castle to the north of the harbor was one of the remnants left by the Romans.

In the subsequent Viking Age, it served as a frontline fortress against Viking invasions.

By the 14th century, during the Hundred Years' War between England and France, Portsmouth acted as the forward base for the Plantagenet dynasty's operations against France.

Its naval tradition began in 1496 with the founding of the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, and in 1540, the Royal Navy officially declared its establishment there.