From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #15984 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Wednesday, April 30 2025 Volume 14 : Number 15984 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Roll over your IRA to physical gold tax-free ["American Gold Security" Subject: Roll over your IRA to physical gold tax-free Roll over your IRA to physical gold tax-free http://patriotpatril.sa.com/0vP-xKeucyMLipeR85gLdbXbCDWhue7-_4EwKvrOz5yRyVk5 http://patriotpatril.sa.com/YAhWK1bCSxBxZigrIJNFbHroZrHi-8RgjBs4wGZkqIGpxXFE erged after Alan Barbetorte's return to the region from England in 936. Barbetorte claimed the titles of the Count of Cornouaille and Nantes and, as Alan II, reigned as the new Brittonum dux. Using a network of small, defended towns and monastic sites, Alan pushed back the Viking advances. On 1 August 939, with the aid of Judicael Berengar, Count of Rennes, and Hugh I, Count of Maine, he defeated the Vikings in the Battle of Trans-la-ForC*t, completing their expulsion from Brittany. Alan's duchy was smaller than the previous Kingdom of Brittany, as, despite gaining Magues and Tiffauges in the south, the dukes no longer ruled over the regions of Cotentin, Avranchin, and Mayenne. Alan paid homage to Louis IV of France for Brittany in 942. Despite some older Celtic influences, the new duchy was in many ways similar to the other, post-Carolingian states forming across the region. Over the coming decades, a network of powerful local lords emerged across Brittany, occupying motte and bailey castles and owing a loose feudal loyalty to the duke. The east of Brittany was the first to change, but the practices spread over the next fifty years to the more remote regi ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Apr 2025 16:13:24 +0200 From: "Thick Hair" Subject: Shocking: This Popular Shampoo Causes Permanent Hair Loss Shocking: This Popular Shampoo Causes Permanent Hair Loss http://lotterysoftware.ru.com/2AaKS_hI6dL301P4gvwG4z281-5ORnvEuxmRvh7hEZGU5Ts2WQ http://lotterysoftware.ru.com/Pyl_J1-NwKmpISFEFAlEVhHaJFREk0i-5L3BQsJXZrT5ZkiLcg bellion in England, led incursions into Normandy from his base in Dol. In 1076, King William of England retaliated by leading an army into Brittany to eject Ralph, but was met with a rare defeat by an allied army of Bretons and French forces. In the peace negotiations which followed William offered his second daughter Constance in marriage to the Breton heir Alan IV, though nothing came of the betrothal at the time. By 1086, Alan IV was forced to abandon his duchy after an invasion launched by William I of England. However, a peace settlement was reached that same year and in the negotiations that followed Alan IV was forced into marriage with King William I's second daughter Constance of England. The marriage ceremonies may have taken place in Bayeux in Normandy. William of Malmesbury wrote that Constance was unp ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Apr 2025 11:19:52 -0500 From: "Get Huusk" Subject: WORLD'S GREATEST PREMIUM CONTROL Huusk KNIFE - SPECIAL DISCOUNT OFFER! WORLD'S GREATEST PREMIUM CONTROL Huusk KNIFE - SPECIAL DISCOUNT OFFER! http://thinsuper.sa.com/3-GSSsL5N_lT7NWPiyaDZoFMVqQv5wDK5fqhhC4aimx58wKV http://thinsuper.sa.com/_jXbzJFuTeh0rto_SDnkI6vRCQ324A_zUJgSdYLcYYrv28KW egion, Gallic tribes had occupied the Armorican peninsula, dividing it into five regions that then formed the basis for the Roman administration of the area, and which survived into the period of the Duchy. These Gallic tribes b termed the Armorici in Latin b had close relationships with the Britonnes tribes in Roman Britain. Between the late 4th and the early 7th centuries, many of these Britonnes migrated to the Armorican peninsula, blending with the local people to form the later Britons, who eventually became the Bretons. The reasons for these migrations remain uncertain. These migrations from Britain contributed to Brittany's name. Brittany fragmented into small, warring regna, kingdoms, each competing for resources. The Frankish Carolingian Empire conquered the region during the 8th century, starting around 748 taking the whole of Brittany by 799. The Carolingians tried to create a unitary administration around the centres of Rennes, Nantes, and Vannes using the local rulers, but the kings of Brittany's hold on the region remained tenuous. Carolingian technology and culture began to influence Brittany, and the church in Brittany also began to emulate the Frankish model. The greatest influence on the later Duchy, howe ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #15984 ***********************************************