Simon & Garfunkel - Barbriallen descargar videos gratis


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Duración: 04:02
Subido: 2007/12/01

Simon and Garfunkel singing "Barbriallen". It's a demo.

Comentarios

9 years ago

Harvey Feenstra

Sounds like the Everly Brothers.

9 years ago

Maggie Reeves

Simon should not be given any credit for this piece.

9 years ago

Sri Chinmoy 27

There is a hidden Message inside this Song! it's about a man who found True Divine Love!

9 years ago

sandyzmz

Beautiful

10 years ago

Gabriel Russo

I love this song I Love you for up it on YT!

10 years ago

Kevin Michael

better yet, @johntaylor, why are u hogging the entire page. others have a say, too, buddy.

10 years ago

Groovy Reflections

Paul and Art with their version of this 1600's Scottish folk songSimon & Garfunkel - Barbriallen

10 years ago

John Taylor

The Angles and Saxons began to increasingly raid and settle the southern and eastern coast of Britain and in the north their initial settlement somewhere along the Tyne gradually developed into the Anglo Saxon kingdom of Bernicia. This kingdom and its people slowly expanded northward towards Bamburgh and Edinburgh where they considerably influenced the language and customs of Scotland. Later Bernicia expanded south towards the River Humber until it ultimately developed into a great kingdom

10 years ago

John Taylor

A ninth century document entitled the Historia Brittonum records that the Ancient British king called Vortigern despatched forty keels (boats) of Anglo-Saxons under Ochta and Ebissa to fight the Picts in return for land `in the North by the Wall'. If this is true then some of the very earliest Anglo-Saxon settlements in Britain were in the Wall Country. The granted land may well have been somewhere in the area we now call Tyneside. lowlands of scotland

10 years ago

John Taylor

In the 16th century, the language of the Scottish Lowlands, including the towns and royal court, was Scots; it was closely related to contemporary English. Since Scottish Lowlanders spoke a very similar language to the English and historically had had similar cultural influences, as well as varying degrees of contact with England, 16th century Scottish Lowland names were very similar in general to 16th century English names

10 years ago

John Taylor

northern english and lowland scots . border reivers of which my dad is one one. anglo saxon

10 years ago

John Taylor

An estimated 90% of Appalachia's earliest European settlers originated from the Anglo-Scottish border country— namely the English counties of Cumberland, Westmoreland, Northumberland, Durham, Lancashire, and Yorkshire, and the Lowland Scottish counties of Ayrshire, Dumfriesshire, Roxburghshire, Berwickshire, and Wigtownshire. Most of these were from families who had been resettled in the Ulster Plantation in northern Ireland in the 17th century

10 years ago

John Taylor

The "British tenants",[4] a term applied to the colonists,[5] were mostly from Scotland and England. They were required to be English-speaking and Protestant.[6] The Scottish colonists were mostly Presbyterian[4] and the English mostly members of the Church of England. The Plantation of Ulster was the biggest of the Plantations of Ireland. Ulster was colonised to prevent further rebellion, as it had been the region most resistant to English control during the preceding century.

10 years ago

John Taylor

why are you so anti british ... when in fact you have british heritage. in my eyes you have become yet another anti british american .. here's to another 9/11 and boston bomb . fingers crossed

10 years ago

John Taylor

they weren't all scottish you thick cunt .. i fucking hate american's, and the protestants in ulster today, do not see themselves as irish. go and watch a 12th of july march or an orange parade and look at what flag they are waving .. THE PEOPLE FROM THE LOWLANDS OF SCOTLAND WERE ANGLO SAXON .. if the scotch irish were treated as shit BY THE NASTY BRITISH. why would the they be GRANTED LANDS IN IRELAND.

10 years ago

John Taylor

oday, Scotch-Irish is an Americanism almost unknown in England, Ireland or Scotland. The term is somewhat unclear because some of the Scotch-Irish have little or no Scottish ancestry at all, as a large number of dissenter families had also been transplanted to Ulster from northern England. Smaller numbers of migrants also came from the southeast of England,

10 years ago

John Taylor

Scots is the Germanic language variety spoken in Lowland Scotland and parts of Ulster (where the local dialect is known as Ulster Scots). It is sometimes called Lowland Scots to distinguish it from Scottish Gaelic

10 years ago

John Taylor

Bernicia (Old English: Bernice, Beornice; Latin: Bernicia) was an Anglo-Saxon kingdom established by Anglian settlers of the 6th century in what is now southeastern Scotland and North East England.

10 years ago

John Taylor

its not difficult to look up ... but, you sound like one of those american's who is desperate to be irish

10 years ago

John Taylor

a couple of basics for you, the scotch irish originally came from the lowlands of scotland and northern england, they were the descendants of angle settlers to the lowland's of scotland and northern england

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