Prince Harry Dating Actress Sista

Bunchy Carter

I'll Take The Money Over The Honey
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Triple O.G. Bunchy Carter
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Has he found his princess?

Prince Harry and Suits actress Meghan Markle kept their romance under wraps for four months before it went public. A source exclusively reveals to Us Weekly that the royal "started texting her regularly" in June.

"They had gotten on when they first met but it was just as friends," the source tells Us. "They then developed romantic interests in each other and, before you knew it, they were texting every day." (As previously reported, Markle began to follow his private Instagram account at the end of the month.)

Prince Harry, 32, and Markle, 35, first met in May. Since then, the couple have gone on numerous low-key dates. According to the source, they went out to Soho House in London with a group of friends in early July, followed by two dates by themselves. She later became a regular visitor at his Kensington Palace residence.

The pair have a lot in common, which is a major plus for him. "Harry loves that she is so into philanthropy," the source tells Us. "One of the first things they spoke about was her shelter dogs. He loves that she's so caring."

Harry previously dated longtime girlfriend Chelsy Davy on and off for seven years until their split in 2010. He went on to date model-actress Cressida Bonas from 2012 to 2014.

Markle, meanwhile, separated from her husband, Trevor Engelson, in 2013 after two years of marriage, and divorced the following year. She most recently was linked to Canadian restauranteur Cory Vitiello. She's been filming her USA Network drama, which is in its seventh season, in Toronto since its 2011 debut.


Will the Royal family have their first Biracial princess? Stay tuned... :mjgrin:


This thread and article shows you how fukked up black people are. Black folks self-esteem is so fukked up, that bedwenches get happy to get fukked by a white boy and it goes for black men and white women.

I did now know @ChiefQueen was a bedwench, you get surprises everyday
 

⠝⠕⠏⠑

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Nikka look like an in-bred hick from W. Virginia. :scust: Do people care a lot about the royal family in Europe?
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No Jason Mamoa no care. That's bout the only white phenotype that looks remotely good to me.
And I've never seen a white dude in real life that remotely comes close to looking that fine.

On a sidenote, isn't there some blk chick that is apart of the royal family in some country in Europe?:yeshrug:
 

videogamestashbox.com

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When I win I bring we with me
Come on fam :stopitslime: we have a history section in the coli for a reason.:what:


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With features as conspicuously Negroid as they were reputed to be by her contemporaries, it is no wonder that the black community, both in the U.S. and throughout the British Commonwealth, have rallied around pictures of Queen Charlotte for generations. They have pointed out the physiological traits that so obviously identify the ethnic strain of the young woman who, at first glance, looks almost anomalous, portrayed as she usually is, in the sumptuous splendour of her coronation robes.

Queen Charlotte, wife of the English King George III (1738-1820), was directly descended from Margarita de Castro y Sousa, a black branch of the Portuguese Royal House. The riddle of Queen Charlotte's African ancestry was solved as a result of an earlier investigation into the black magi featured in 15th century Flemish paintings. Two art historians had suggested that the black magi must have been portraits of actual contemporary people (since the artist, without seeing them, would not have been aware of the subtleties in colouring and facial bone structure of quadroons or octoroons which these figures invariably represented) Enough evidence was accumulated to propose that the models for the black magi were, in all probability, members of the Portuguese de Sousa family. (Several de Sousas had in fact traveled to the Netherlands when their cousin, the Princess Isabella went there to marry the Grand Duke, Philip the Good of Burgundy in the year 1429.)

Six different lines can be traced from English Queen Charlotte back to Margarita de Castro y Sousa, in a gene pool which because of royal inbreeding was already minuscule, thus explaining the Queen's unmistakable African appearance.

Queen Charlotte's Portrait:
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The Negroid characteristics of the Queen's portraits certainly had political significance since artists of that period were expected to play down, soften or even obliterate undesirable features in a subjects's face. Sir Allan Ramsay was the artist responsible for the majority of the paintings of the Queen and his representations of her were the most decidedly African of all her portraits. Ramsey was an anti-slavery intellectual of his day. He also married the niece of Lord Mansfield, the English judge whose 1772 decision was the first in a series of rulings that finally ended slavery in the British Empire. It should be noted too that by the time Sir Ramsay was commissioned to do his first portrait of the Queen, he was already , by marriage, uncle to Dido Elizabeth Lindsay, the black grand niece of Lord Mansfield.

Thus, from just a cursory look at the social awareness and political activism at that level of English society, it would be surprising if the Queen's negroid physiogomy was of no significance to the Abolitionist movement.

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Lord Mansfield's black grand niece, for example, Ms. Lindsay, was the subject of at least two formal full sized portraits. Obviously prompted by or meant to appeal to abolitionist sympathies, they depicted the celebrated friendship between herself and her white cousin, Elizabeth Murray, another member of the Mansfield family. One of the artists was none other than Zoffany, the court painter to the royal family, for whom the Queen had sat on a number of occasions.

It is perhaps because of this fairly obvious case of propagandistic portraiture that makes one suspect that Queen Charlotte's coronation picture, copies of which were sent out to the colonies, signified a specific stance on slavery held, at least, by that circle of the English intelligencia to which Allan Ramsay, the painter belonged.

  • MORE ON QUEEN CHARLOTTE
  • Revealed: the Queen's black ancestors
    The Times of London reports that a Portuguese descendent of Queen Charlotte confirmed Valdes' research into her heritage. (June 6, 1999)
  • Was this Britain's first black queen?
    "The suggestion that Queen Charlotte was black implies that her granddaughter (Queen Victoria) and her great-great-great-great-granddaughter (Queen Elizabeth II) had African forebears. Perhaps, instead of just being a boring bunch of semi-inbred white stiffs, our royal family becomes much more interesting." (The Guardian, March 12, 2009)
For the initial work into Queen Charlotte's genealogy, a debt of gratitude is owed the History Department of McGill University. It was the director of the Burney Project (Fanny Burney, the prolific 19th century British diarist, had been secretary to the Queen), Dr. Joyce Hemlow, who obtained from Olwen Hedly, the most recent biographer of the Queen Charlotte (1975), at least half a dozen quotes by her contemporaries regarding her negroid features. Because of its "scientific" source, the most valuable of Dr. Hedley's references would, probably, be the one published in the autobiography of the Queen's personal physician, Baron Stockmar, where he described her as having "...a true mulatto face."

Perhaps the most literary of these allusions to her African appearance, however, can be found in the poem penned to her on the occasion of her wedding to George III and the Coronation celebration that immediately followed.



Descended from the warlike Vandal race,
She still preserves that title in her face.
Tho' shone their triumphs o'er Numidia's plain,
And and Alusian fields their name retain;
They but subdued the southern world with arms,
She conquers still with her triumphant charms,
O! born for rule, - to whose victorious brow
The greatest monarch of the north must bow.


Finally, it should be noted that the Royal Household itself, at the time of Queen Elizabeth II's coronation, referred to both her Asian and African bloodlines in an apologia it published defending her position as head of the Commonwealth.

More about Research into the Black Magi:
In the Flemish masterpieces depicting the Adoration of the Magi, the imagery of the black de Sousas had been utilized as both religious and political propaganda to support Portugal's expansion into Africa. In addition, the Flemish artists had drawn from a vocabulary of blackness which, probably due to the Reformation and the Enlightenment, has long since been forgotten. There was a wealth of positive symbolism that had been attributed to the black African figure during the Middle Ages. Incredible as it would seem to us today, such images had been used to represent not only Our Lady - evidence of which can be found in the cult of the Black Madonna that once proliferated in Europe - but in heraldic traditions, the Saviour and God the Father, Himself.



Researched and Written by Mario de Valdes y Cocom, an historian of the African diaspora.

Queen Charlotte | FRONTLINE | PBS

Queen Charlotte






Dido Elizebeth Belle








In the final analysis I put this up there with...

Jay Electronica & that Rothschild chick
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NoGutsNoGLory

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She's one of those bi-racial chicks that probably grew up around more white people than anything.

Royal family would never let it run anyway, Princess Diana was dating an Arab and look what happened to her :sas2:

These CAC's aint tryna fukk up the royal bloodline.
Nah that was an accident. Princess Diana had no royal blood she was just royal through marriage and wasn't very important to them. I agree though they will not let this happen with Harry.
 

pickles

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This thread is going to do numbers. :skip:


US Weekly? What kind of chatty patty bullshyt is this? :dame:
 
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