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Friday, 11 September 2015

Jersey

Jersey is a Crown Dependency officially ruled by the Duke of Normandy, a title currently held by the Queen. It has its own financial, legal and judicial systems, and the power of self-determination.

Sir Walter Raleigh was the Governor of Jersey from 1600-1603.

Charles II was proclaimed King when in exile in Jersey after his father Charles I was executed in 1649.

Claude Debussy wrote part of "La Mer" in the summer of 1904 while holiday in Jersey with his mistress Emma Bardac.

In recognition of Jersey's help during his exile, Charles II gave land in the colonies to George Carteret of Jersey, which he named 'New Jersey'.

Jersey and the other Channel Islands were the only part of the British Isles to be occupied by German forces during World War II. The occupation lasted for five years from June 1940.

The German occupation of the Channel Islands was a difficult time for the people of the islands. The Germans imposed strict regulations on the islanders, and they were subject to censorship and propaganda. The Germans also used the islands as a base for their operations in the English Channel, and they built a number of fortifications on the islands.

Despite the hardships, the people of the Channel Islands resisted the German occupation. They organized a resistance movement, and they helped to sabotage the German war effort. The people of the Channel Islands also showed great resilience and determination, and they never gave up hope of liberation.

The liberation of Jersey and the other Channel Islands came on May 9, 1945. The islands were liberated by British forces, and the people of the islands celebrated their freedom.


The island of Jersey is the largest of the Channel Islands. It would fit 189 times into the area of New Jersey.

In the 2011 census, the total resident population was estimated to be 97,857, of whom 34% live in Saint Helier, the island's only town.

Only half the island's population was born in Jersey; 31% of the population were born elsewhere in the British Isles, 7% in continental Portugal or Madeira, 8% in other European countries and 4% elsewhere.

Jersey residents are often called Islanders or, in individual terms, Jerseyman or Jerseywoman.

Along with English and French, more than two thousand people speak Jèrriais, a dialectal form of the Norman language.

The word 'jersey' for a pullover, comes from Jersey worsted, the knitted wool of Jersey cows.

Men are banned from knitting in Jersey during the fishing season of August-September.

Source Daily Express

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